
Keeping with the Spring Creek canyon theme, Cassidy Rain presents her take on the scene as she moseys along with the band, after drinking, on the way to more grazing.

Keeping with the Spring Creek canyon theme, Cassidy Rain presents her take on the scene as she moseys along with the band, after drinking, on the way to more grazing.

Just another lovely June evening in the basin with also-lovely Temple and and her family. ๐ All seems right with the world when I’m out with the mustangs. … Some places do hold peace; I wish that could be true everywhere.

Maiku follows the family up from Spring Creek canyon. I was with another band, right along Spring Creek, when I happened to catch sight of them, at a fair distance, as they moseyed along the near horizon. Nice surprise. ๐

It’s a little hard to tell, but her shady side is Piedra’s muddy side! And still, she manages to look gorgeous.

The visit with Flash’s band a week or more about yielded several nice pix of the lad, which I hope you’re enjoying as much as I am. ๐

Terra moseys after the good green during an evening ramble a few evenings ago under a bit of localized cloud cover.
Maybe, eventually, one of those clouds will deliver some much-needed rainfall.

Mariah, minus her theatrical appaloosa spots, at sunset on a SUPER windy evening in Spring Creek Basin.
Less wind, more rain, please, Mother Nature.

Flash’s band was in an area abundant with waning prince’s plume wildflowers a few evenings ago, and I was trying to get something arty of Flash as he grazed along with his mares.
He didn’t quite give me the image I was after (!), but I liked the frame of one of his mares walking by while he grazed, the prince’s plume bunch between them. ๐
They’re still out there, but they’re past prime. … Given that they started blooming in โ what was it? March!? โ that’s a fairly long growing season for these lovely, bright flowers.

Yesterday morning, I spotted this handsome lark sparrow foraging on the ground near a road. Merlin helped me identify it by its song (and that of others nearby), and isn’t it a lovely little bird! I particularly love this description from Cornell’s All About Birds website: “This large sparrow may be brown, but its harlequin facial pattern and white tail spots make it a standout among sparrows. Males sing a melodious jumble of churrs, buzzes, and trills reminiscent of an Old World lark.” I’m not sure what an “Old World lark” sounds like, but I did enjoy listening to the variety of trills from a variety of birds!
I also saw these lovelies swooping and soaring and preening on a fence wire:


I wish I’d caught the “sidle closer” steps as the bird on the right moved closer to its friend. (I *think* these are both males, but I’d love to be corrected?)
All About Birds says this about them: “You can find the adaptable Barn Swallow feeding in open habitats from fields, parks, and roadway edges to marshes, meadows, ponds, and coastal waters. Their nests are often easy to spot under the eaves or inside of sheds, barns, bridges and other structures.”
They use mud to build their nests, and we’re a bit in short supply of mud at the moment. Though Disappointment Creek wasn’t too far away as the sparrow dives, so hopefully that mud is close (enough) at hand (err, wing).

A different pair, taken from the same place just a bit farther along on the same fence wire.

Aren’t they magnificent? Cornell says they’re the most abundant and widely distributed swallow species in the world, but that doesn’t stop them from being simply stunning little birds.
A couple of interesting facts (among a few), also from All About Birds:

What do they eat? “Barn Swallows feed on the wing, snagging insects from just above the ground or water to heights of 100 feet or more.” With gnat season upon us, feed, swallows, feed on those wings! ๐