Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Summer catch up! (part 1)

As the title suggest I need to do a little catch up.  I have been getting out in spurts again, not nearly as much as I would like.  As the weather has been heating up I have also had some time to do some night cruising. I'm hoping now with the heat of summer beginning I can get out and focus more attention on bats, butterflies, and dragonflies.  When I get more time Ill make a part two and include late spring finds. Until then here is some more herps found from the past 3 weeks.

Fox Snake - Butler County, Iowa - 6-23-2010
Northern Redbelly Snake - Bremer County - 6-23-2010
Eastern Massasauga Rattlesnake - Bremer County - 6-23-2010
Eastern Garter Snake - Grant County, Wisconsin - 6-23-2010
Eric and I spent a few hours night cruising. I had found Crayfish Snakes at this spot before and since he hadn't ever found one I had promised him that we would find one on this night. As my luck skill would have it we found one. The night started off slow, we saw a nice sized hit Fox Snake that was probably hit early in the day. It took awhile but we found our first live snake.
Brown Snake - Polk County - 6-17-2010
I think we actually caught this girl two or three times in the evening. Each time we would place her off the road, then when we came upon her would get excited only to realize it was the same snake. Our next find of the night was our target species.
Crayfish Snake - Polk County - 6-17-2010
While taking a bunch of photos of the Crayfish Snake our next snake crawled up next to us.
Plains Garter Snake - Polk County - 6-17-2010
We pressed on, finding a few more browns and garters. We capped off the night with a fairly good sized Fox Snake.
Fox Snake - Polk County - 6-17-2010

I found myself with a nice afternoon after finishing work stuff early and figured I would cruise on over to one of my hotspots. Found the usual fare here with about a half dozen milks and garters.
Milk Snake - Clarke County - 6-15-2010

Cruised on by another quick spot to flip some boards. Found nothing, but as I was leaving I drove up on a nice little garter.
Plains Garter Snake - Boone County - 6-15-2010

Then I was driving to a new tin site that we had set earlier and I cruised a new Iowa species for me. 
Slender Glass Lizard - Lucas County - 6-15-2010

Eric and I found a nice late Sunday afternoon with some daylight to burn and figured we would try our luck skills at finding some timbers. We not only found them but a decent number of ringnecks, milks and garters.
Prairie Ringneck Snake - Madison County - 6-6-2010
Milk Snake - Madison County - 6-6-2010
Timber Rattlesnake - Madison County - 6-6-2010

I was traveling from working a job in Missouri to meet Eric and on the way there stopped at a little hotspot I showed him earlier this year. Found the usual fare here; Northern Prairie Skinks, Northern Lined Snakes, and garter snakes.
Northern Lined Snake - Ringgold County 6-6-2010
Northern Lined Snake - Ringgold County 6-6-2010 (ventral)

There have been turtles found the past few weeks too.
False Map Turtle - Grant County, Wisconsin - 6-23-2010
Common Snapping Turtle - Lucas County - 6-15-2010
Common Snapping Turtle - Guthrie County - 6-21-2010
Blandings Turtle - Grant County, Wisconsin - 6-23-2010

Up the Nature Punx!

Friday, May 21, 2010

May Milks

Work has been a real bear lately and I haven't gotten out nearly as much as I would like.  I have had 30 minutes here or there and figured I would make a post to highlight some of the Milk Snakes I have found. So far this season I have found 120+ Milk Snakes. Someday I will gain the patience and skills to get some good shots. Until then enjoy.
Madison County  5-2-2010

Madison County  5-8-2010


Louisa County - 5-9-2010 (about to shed)

with Racer. Louisa County 5-9-2010

double under 1 rock. Clayton County 5-13-2010


Clayton County 5-13-2010


Madison County 5-15-2010

Clayton County 5-19-2010


Photo taken by Eric and posted without his permission. Clarke County 5-2-2010




Until next time Up the Nature Punx!

Hunx and His Punx - Gay Singles


Hunx and His Punx - Gay Singles (2009)
Download
"Hunx and His Punx make swooning bubblegum-punk, and though they aren't the first group to marry the effortless, sugary pop of 60s girl groups with the garage-rock revival, they might be the first whose skuzzy "My Boyfriend's Back"-like songs are explicitly homoerotic. There is a wry dissonance between the songs' easy three-chord strums, resonant vintage organ flourishes, and hand-clapped percussion and their plainspoken lyrics about getting into someone's pants. The songwriters (most tracks are credited to a combination of Bogart and Justin Champlin, the garage-punk character known as Nobunny) may think they're being shocking, but the lyrics are actually charmingly innocent. Hunx is interested in winning over straight guys ("I don't think he's gonna miss her/ Cuz I'm a really good kisser," Bogart sings on "Good Kisser"), and flipping 60s girl-pop tropes like waiting for boys to call.


The outrageously tarty presentation plus faux naïve musical content highlights a winning group of influences-- John Waters, the Shangri-Las, the Ramones-- and the collection is surprisingly cohesive for a singles compilation. Bogart sings with a whining, nasal bray that may be off-putting or gratingly flat to some, but swathed in cheap, tinny reverb, it gets the rebellious, adolescent vibe right. After all the homoeroticism, this is at heart a record about the thrust and vitality of rock'n'roll: "You like Morrissey, you like U2/ What the Fuck is wrong with you?" Bogart sings on opener "You Don't Like Rock'n'Roll", and if you think it's a legit question you might want to sing it along with him.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Bremer County, IA 4-22-2010

I had just a bit of time to kill, so I hit a spot that I knew was supposed to have Massasaugas somewhere on it.  I cruised a bit and came across a field that looked perfect.

I found a few garters that dove into the grass to quick to get a handle on them.  I came across a few boards and flipped em. They were producing nothing, but then I came across the last one of the bunch,

And lo and behold to my suprise what do I flip, and Eastern Massasauga (Sistrurus catenatus catenatus). It looked like a large female, but it was to awkward to hold the board, not disturb her, and get a decent photo. These were the best from the bunch.



































Up the nature punks!

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Firsts of 2010

First Salamander of the Year
March 23, 2010 Black Hawk County, Iowa














Blue-spotted Salamander (Ambystoma laterale)
It was perfect weather and I was in the area for work this day. I got out a little early and figured I would hit a spot that I always find blue spots at, to feed my early season crave for finding some BD. I think I found this guy flipping my second log, and proceeded to flip about a hundred more logs with no results. I headed to the other little area that they are found and found a second after a few minutes. These guys were too squirmy and I couldnt get a good shot.

First Snake of the Year
March 29, 2010 Polk County, Iowa
Red-sided Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis)
The weather was beyond perfect, temps reaching 70, wicked sunny skies, barely a cloud in the sky. I had heard from others that they had seen some snakes out and about in Iowa already and seeing as I had struck out a few days prior, I was on a mission to find something. It didnt take long before I saw my first, second and third snake, all eluding my grasp and slipping into holes or deep grass. It wasnt until seeing my fourth garter that I was able to get a hand on it.  After that I proceeded to find about a dozen more garters.

First Frog of the Year
Chorus Frog. No picture. Started hearing these guys around the second week in March. Didnt bother getting a photo though.

First Turtle of the Year
Painted Turtle. All the pictures I have are kinda boring and from far away, not worth posting. The first turtle of the year I saw was on March 19th.

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings - I Learned the Hard Way

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings - I Learned the Hard Way  (Daptone Records 2010)
Produced by Bosco Mann and recorded on an Ampex eight-track tape machine by Gabriel Roth in Daptone Records’ House of Soul studios, this record drips with a warmth and spontaneity rarely found since the golden days of Muscle Shoals and Stax. Sharon’s raw power, rhythmic swagger, moaning soulfulness, and melodic command set her firmly alongside Tina Turner, James Brown, Mavis Staples, and Aretha as a fixture in the canon of soul music. From the lushPhilly-Soul fanfare that ushers in “The Game Gets Old” at the top of the record, to the stripped down Sam Cooke-style“Mama Don’t Like My Man” at the tail, the Dap-Kings dance seamlessly through both the most crafted and simple arrangements with subtlety and discipline. I Learned the Hard Way is the “Daptone Sound” at its finest.

Eddy Current Suppression Ring - Rush to Relax

Eddy Current Suppression Ring - Rush to Relax (Goner Records 2010)
Four Australian guys meet at their factory job, and decide to form a band. Favoring a more straight-ahead sound that looks back at mid-to-late ‘70s proto- and punk proper with hardly a sideways glance, they release a few singles, a couple of great albums, and even manage tour the States a couple of times, all to the acclaim of the punk/garage cognoscenti. A Pulitzer-worthy story this is most decidedly not, as the only thing more remarkable about Eddy Current Suppression Ring’s bare bones tracks is the absolutely unremarkable nature of the four gents who craft them. Not that that’s a problem, mind you — one suspects that a significant part of the band’s appeal and relative success (especially in their home country) is due to the fact that they’ve always written songs that mirror their own disposition as run-of-the-mill dudes.


It took Eddy Current Suppression Ring just six studio hours to craft a follow up to their sophomore LP, Primary Colours. That's less time than most Americans will spend at work in a day. While that pace created a final product much less polished than the band's previous work, Rush to Relax is also a more accurate, interesting sonic articulation of the band's frenetic frontman, Brendan Suppression. "Anxiety" picks up right where Colours left off-- its rubber-band riffs wrapped tightly around Suppression's existential babbling. The guitar sound is still a spring-loaded hybrid cobbled together from Saints and Stooges records.

Basic, unassuming, and calling to mind a grip of classic material without going to great lengths to mimic it, Rush to Relax, the band’s third LP, adds almost nothing new to Eddy Current Suppression Ring’s repertoire. There’s the band-cited Pagans and Troggs similarities, but also bits of the Fall’s slang rants and Wire’s early, deceptively simple primitivism. That’s largely a good thing, though — recorded in a day and often showing it, this album is loose and limber, sacrificing pinpoint precision for an unkempt energy few can match.

Quietly-laced and hardly lo-fi when quite a few of their contemporaries are anything but, Eddy Current Suppression Ring’s Rush to Relax is that rare record, asking nothing up front, but yielding more and more rewards with each passing listen.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Snake Road - Union County, Illinois April 1st, 2010
I got out of work early on Wednesday and had the next few days off. The weather was going to be perfect so some rad dudes and I decided to make the trek to southeastern Illinois to the infamous snake road. I had been wanting to check it out for the last few years after hearing the stories from many people. For those that don't know Snake Road is a 2.5 mile gravel B level road that runs between a swamp and some limestone bluffs. Each spring and fall there is a mass migration of herps when they come out of hibernation, so much so that the county shuts the road down. Its almost as if the road is paved with snakes. The allure of snakes everywhere was too great and so the mission began.

We traveled the some 6 or 7 hours through the night to our fabeled destination, passing the time with scrabble scratch offs. We arrived real late and pitched our tents and went to bed with snakes in our dreams. The next morning was a little chilly, but as the sun rose in the cloudless sky things started to heat up. We arrived at the road about 11 and I couldnt wait to jump out of the car and start searching. It was like Christmas morning to a 6 year old.
Road itself, limestone bluffs to the right, swamp to the left.
Limestone cliffs, tons of great holes and crevices for hibernation.
Swamps, home to tons of frogs and turtles.

Within minutes we had found our first snake, now while not a very impressive find it still filled us with the hope that this was going to be a great day.

Northern Redbelly Snake (Storeria occipitomaculata occipitomaculata)

This was just a small snake, about 8 inches, with a plain colored red belly. Unfortunately, I did not take any shots of the belly.

Next we found our first large snake of the day only a few feet down the road from our first find. It was a 4 foot Black Rat Snake. Unfortunately this is another species found in Iowa, but it was still a lifer snake for some of the guys in the group.
Black Rat Snake (Elaphe obsoleta obsoleta)

Next we found the species of snake that would prove to be the most plentiful of the trip and also our first venomous of the day, the Western Cottonmouth. Turns out you don't have to look for these guys here, you just have to look out for them. I think at last count we found close to 40 on the day. They were everywhere. I think at least each member of our group would be walking along only to be startled by one of these guys flashing the warning sign cottonmouth at us as we were about to step on it.
Most of the time they were found like this sprawled across the road trying to soak up some afternoon rays.
Defensive pose, hence the name.
Western Cottonmouth (Agkistrodon piscivorous leucostoma)

We only found one species of water snake on the day, the Yellowbelly Water Snake, another species found in Iowa as well. These guys were spotted basking up in a shrub about 3 feet above the water. This was the only good shot I got of them.
 
Yellowbelly Water Snake (Nerodia erythrogaster flavigaster)

We also found a few garters and a bunch of ribbon snakes on the day as well. I did hear a frog giving a distress call and followed the recognizable sound to a sight I had expected to see. A Western Ribbon Snake eating a Leopard Frog.
Western Ribbon Snake (Thamnophis proximus proximus)

We also found loads of amphibians on the day. Tons of frogs and toads were calling and those that we did find I was too anxious to get on and find stuff we couldn't in Iowa so I didn't any good shots. I did get the obligatory toads doing it shot though.
American Toad (Bufo americanus)

We also saw a few lizards.
Five Line Skink (Eumeces fasciatus)
Northern Fence Lizard (Sceloporus undulatus hyacinthus)

And flipped a bunch of salamanders.
The most common we found under almost every log was the Zigzag Salamander. With as many as we found I didnt really get any good shots.
Eastern Zigzag Salamander (Plethodon dorsalis dorsalis) lifer!
Northern Slimy Salamander (Plethodon glutinosus glutinosus) lifer!
Cave Salamander (Eurycea lucifuga) lifer!
Cave Salamander as found.
Longtail Salamander (Eurycea longicauda longicauda) lifer!

We also saw a bit of other cool wildlife. It was nice to see a bunch of butterflies out and about down there.
Zebra swallowtail (Eurytides marcellus)
Goatweed Leafwing (Anaea andria)

Hopefully I can make it back again soon and spend some more time here. I think in the one afternoon that we were there we ended with 28 total herp species, and this was still a few days before the big migration.


Up the nature punx!