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- My husband has posted his third and fourth installments about our Alaska trip here.
- According to NASA, the 2008 Perseid meteor shower peaks on August 12th, and it should be a good show. "The time to look is during the dark hours before dawn on Tuesday, August 12th," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office at the Marshall Space Flight Center. "There should be plenty of meteors--perhaps one or two every minute." The complete article is available here. Oooo, la, la!
I like to unwind after work by settling down with my embroidery and a baseball game on the radio or TV. It's nice to see that the San Francisco Giants are doing another Stitch and Pitch event on July 22nd. Here's information from the Craft Magazine blog -- it includes coverage from last year's event and baseball-related crafts.
I wouldn't bring my embroidery to the stadium, though. I'd be too busy watching the live action.
Remember the interesting Nuttall's Woodpecker behavior? Well, here is a little from its account in The Birds of North America:
Swimming And DivingNot known to swim. (Something we have in common)Self-MaintenancePreening, Head-Scratching, Stretching, Bathing, Anting, EtcPreening movements not specifically described but likely similar to those used by most other small birds. No reports of anting.So nothing about bathing or drinking. Perhaps I have something to add under their "Self-Maintenance" heading. Then, again, my sample size is rather small. I might add that, although I have bad knees, for several days after I saw the woodpecker, I kept impersonating the bird's behavior by hopping forward with my knees bent and sort of thrusting my middle forward with each hop, trying to impersonate the woodpecker dragging its belly in the puddle. I know that I didn't look a thing like it, but I definitely enjoyed myself. Apart from doing the impersonation at work for a trusted co-worker, I kept my hopping at home.
My husband posted his second installment on our Alaska trip here.
Last weekend, we birded some beautiful places in Placer County. A couple of the people we were with had this awesome new field guide for the Sierra Nevada -- The Laws Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada. Talk about comprehensive -- it covers fungi, lichen, trees, shrubs, vines, ferns, wildflowers, spiders, insects (and other small animals), fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals, animal sign (tracks and scat), the weather, and the stars. I hotfooted it to the book store to order a copy. I picked it up yesterday. Can't wait to return to the Sierra!