Category: Noony’s Blog

personal posts, life, seasonal notes

  • What Izzit!?

    Today It\’s Uromastyx!

    Uro-what?

    Yeah, that\’s what I said.

    \”Honey, I need a \’U\’ for my A to Z challenge.\”

    Husband:  \”Hmm.  How about Uromastyx?\”

    Me:  \”Huh?\”

    \”You know, Uromastyx.  C\’mon, I\’ll show you!\”

    And so, Dear Reader, I shall show you the letter for today:

    \"2016-04-25

    Cute little bugger, inne?  His other name is \”Spiny-Tailed Lizard,\” because he\’s got a spiny tail.

    \"2016-04-25

    Pugnacious stance, nu?

    \"2016-04-25

    My husband, the reptile whisperer.  He put his hand down slowly to attract the attention of the lizard.

    \"2016-04-25

    Of which there are two… o.O…

    \"2016-04-25

    I took this one to show off his spiny tail; but look at the bottom right of the photo.  Sneaky!

    Tomorrow it\’s the letter V.  What in the heck shall I pick for V?


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge. If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too. If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment. I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago. Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year. Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports. Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland. Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • The Trouble with Tigers

    \"2016-04-23

    The challenge with big cats is that they sleep twenty hours a day.  Take this fellow for instance, the Amur Tiger.  He\’s sleeping.

    A lot.

    \"2016-04-23

    He\’s also not the most friendly beast on the planet.  One of our visits, the zookeeper told us that he bit off his daughter\’s tail and killed his son, so they\’re obviously never on display at the same time.  I can\’t see closely enough to tell if this is the papa with tail or the daughter without, and he didn\’t get up to wander around on our visit.

    One amusing tidbit is that one visit while we were watching him, the tram went by.  The tram tours are narrated by the driver, and this particular driver had a heavy Southern accent.  He described this tiger as the \”Armor\” Tiger instead of Amur Tiger.

    Sorry today\’s post is tardy (another T word – hey!), this cold is kicking my butt.  I hope to get back on track tomorrow.  Sleep well!


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • Been Waiting ALL Month For This!

    \"2016-04-22

    And this, my Dear Reader, is Sarani, the queen snow leopard of the Brookfield Zoo.  Last year, she gave birth to two female cubs, Malaya and Daania.  I love watching these majestic animals, and the viewing glass lets me be near enough to practically touch them.

    \"2016-04-22

    One of our visits in December, we found all three of them curled up on each other.  Sarani\’s resting her head on one of her daughters, which is exactly how my cats sleep at home.

    And I was a little started to see I\’d taken over 100 shots of them on just one visit!  I picked my favorites for you today:

    \"2016-04-22

    Malaya and Daania wandering around, sniffing things.

    My cats do this all the time.

    \"2016-04-22

    Busted!

    Um…  I\’ll just stand here and look at the… log!  I\’ll look at the log, not the large predatory cat that just caught me spying…

    \"2016-04-22

    Look closely at this one.  The cub is curled up on TOP of Mamma\’s tail. o.O…

    \"2016-04-22

    Hunting!  My cats do this exact same thing.  \”What izzit?  Can I jump that high?  I wanna catch it.  I think I\’ll catch it.  Is anybody watching me?  No?  Go!\”

    \"2016-04-22

    \”Wait…  I\’d better check and see if I can climb up there first.\”  …  \”Nope.  Can\’t climb that.  Is anybody watching?  Go!\”

    \"2016-04-22

    Boing!

    \"2016-04-22

    Pounce!

    Turns out, somebody was watching.

    meant to do that.

    Uh-huh.

    Cats.

    🙂

    Tomorrow, it\’s T for pTerasaur!

    No, of course not, those are extinct.  Must be a typo.  Now what did I pick for T? Hmm…


     

    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • Six Inch Thick Skin

    \"2016-04-21

    Many years ago, when I was just a lass, I met a wonderful woman who was a Sales Director with Mary Kay Cosmetics.  She changed my life.  Her mascot, she said, was the rhinoceros, because their skin is six inches thick – and we all need thick skin when we build our dreams.

    In researching for this post, I think that statement is apocryphal; most of the sources I found say between 1 and 5 cm (centimeters) thick, which is thinner than six inches but still quite strong.  Some people apparently believe it\’s actually bullet-proof, though I wouldn\’t want to test that theory.

    \"2016-04-21

    I believe this one is female, but I can\’t find it in my notes so I\’m not sure.  When we visited, s/he wandered around her/is enclosure, occasionally nibbling stuff but mostly roaming.

    \"2016-04-21

    Then s/he looked right at me.

    Gulp.

    I love their ears.  Fuzzy.  Makes me want to…

    Yes.  I know.  Pet them.  I want to pet everything.

    \"20160326_0240\"

    Okay.  Maybe not everything.

    Tomorrow, it\’s one of my favorite aminals in the whole zoo!!  It\’s S for…

    Well, you\’ll just hafta wait and see, won\’tcha?


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • The Q Files

    \"2016-04-20

    I was unsuccessful finding a Q animal at Brookfield, though I did find a species of Quail – but was so focused on the Jambu Fruit Dove that wasn\’t, I missed that those quail were Q and already posted them! ~fail~  (Which, when you think about it, rhymes with \”quail,\” so, really, it was inevitable.)

    This one made me chuckle because the main character in the first two novels of our Persis Chronicles series is named Quill, and this little fellow is covered in Quills, so there you go.

    It\’s even pertinent to my books, so there.  Take that, Q!

    But only one problem:  this is the only picture that turned out of my shy little quilled friend.  The lighting is very dark because he\’s a night dweller, so my camera just gave up on me.  Not to be deterred, I have some awesome shots of –

    The Argus Monitor

    \"2016-04-20

    All monitors are Varanids, or family Veranidae.  Remember high school biology?  \”Knights play chess on fine-grained sand,\” or Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species.  Unfortunately, scientists redid all the taxonomy, (taxonomy is the science of classifying species), so all the stuff I learned is now out of date.  Which annoys me, but is a story for another day.  Getting back to Mister Argus, here.

    \"2016-04-20

    Veranids are my husband\’s favorite of the herps and he interacted with this one while I was photographing him.

    \"2016-04-20

    As monitors go, this is a pretty large one.  The sobering thing to realize, is most of his head is mouth.  That jaw opens up for a good three inches or more and is all teeth.

    o.O…

    \"2016-04-20

    In this one, you can get an idea of his size.  Monitors are about half body and half tail, and they can use their tails as defensive weapons.  This monitor is about five feet long, for example.  Most of them are captive-bread due to their diminishing population in the wild.

    The most common kind of monitor, and one you might recognize, is the Komodo dragon; those get up to ten or fifteen feet long and weigh as much as three-hundred fifty pounds.  It\’s illegal to have them as pets and one must have direct permission from the government of Indonesia to own one or exhibit one in a zoo.  Chicago was privileged to have on on display at the Shedd Aquarium a couple years ago and we went with the Chicago Herpetological Society for a behind-the-scenes experience and to watch him get fed.

    Any doubts you may have as to whether these animals are fast under the right circumstances were dispelled by watching him go after the food.  Scary stuff.

    Tomorrow it\’s R.  Rrrrr.  RRRRRRrrrr.  rrrRRRRRRRR!


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • So Many P’s, So Little Time

    \"2016-04-19

    Those of you who\’ve been with me awhile know I adore peacocks.  I have peacock jewelry, bags, blouses, needlepoint, latch hooked rugs, and lots and lots of pictures from the zoo of the peacocks that wander around loose.

    But.

    This penguin touched my heart.

    \"2016-04-19

    We went to the zoo in December with our good friend E…, and he adores penguins.  He even suggested we go to the penguin house, but I had never heard of it.  I thought I had seen all there was to see at the zoo, but he confidently lead us right to a building, through a winding hallway, to this awesome little reef filled with denizens of the arctic.

    \"2016-04-19

    They\’re really cute, too.  Sure, I\’ll post pictures of my favorite noisy majestic peacocks, and still try to convince my husband they make good pets (\”They scream like a woman in pain!\”  \”But they\’re PRETTY!\”  \”They\’re loud!\” \”But they\’re PRETTY!\”  \”They\’re not particularly friendly!\”  \”But they\’re PRETTY!\”) and therefore, I\’ll have more pictures of my favorite fowl for you on these pages.

    But for today, P is for Penguin.

    Tomorrow, you get to find out what I picked for \”Q.\”


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • Pictures Worth a Thousand Words

    \"2016-05-19

    Greetings, Dear Reader!  A. Catherine Noon here, with some thoughts on images.  Pictures.  Pics.  Snaps.  Cams.  They\’re ubiquitous now.  A great quote from a television show, \”Instagram is Twitter for people who can\’t read.\”  While funny, I think it\’s unfair.  What\’s charming about it is that we can share moments of our lives with each other.  The more we practice a thing, the better we get; this is as true for photography as anything else.  The more we take pictures in our daily round, the better we get at it.

    And then, the fun starts.

    For example, have you considered trying picture prompts for writing?  Take a photo of something, and then write a story about it.  It doesn\’t need to be long, just a story.  Try thinking outside the box.  If it\’s a picture of a tree, what if the tree were sentient?  \”One day, tree woke up and…\”  Or, alternatively, take a photo a day of a project on which you\’re working:  maybe a craft, or your daily walks, or meals you prepare for dinner.

    When I write, I like to use pictures to generate ideas.  I might look for male actors of a certain description, or browse model sites looking for people to cast in my next novel.  I also love lolcat images, which if you\’ve been reading me a while, you probably already know.  They have the added benefit of being copyright-free, so I can use them while blogging.  This is one reason I have so few mancandy images in my blog posts, because I don\’t own the images that I browse and unless I have rights to use them commercially, I can\’t put them in a blog post.

    But don\’t despair, there\’s Pinterest!  That\’s a way to browse online and collect images without needing to worry about attributions, because the images point back to their original posting location.  I\’m new to Pinterest, and hardly an expert, but I think it\’s a fun way to explore.  I know a lot of authors have expansive Pinterest worlds they use to share character inspirations with readers and to collect things like crafts or locations for settings in their books.

    The ways we can use images has expanded immeasurably from the days of film and darkrooms.  Now, we can snap shots with our smartphone and publish them to a global audience.

     

    What about you, Dear Reader?  What\’s your favorite subject to photograph?

    “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
    – E.E. Cummings
    Knoontime Knitting:  Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Ravelry
    Noon and Wilder links: Blog | Taurus and Taurus (NSFW) | Website | Facebook | Twitter
    The Writer Zen Garden:  The Writers Retreat Blog | Forum | Twitter | Meetup
    National Novel Writing Month: NaNoWriMo | ChiWriMo | Blog | Facebook | Twitter
  • The Secret Forest-Dweller

    \"20160319_0002\"

    This shy fellow is a forest-dwelling creature called an okapi.  From central Africa, they resemble a zebra crossed with a giraffe and are about the size of a tall but skinny horse.

    They also have long, skinny black tongues.

    \"20160319_0003\"

    I\’m disappointed because I can\’t find the series of photographs I took of the mother with a newborn, nor the ones of a single okapi over in the holding area in the back corner of the zoo.  However, on this particular day when we visited, I had my cell phone camera with me.  When we came into the building where the okapi live, there was a volunteer zookeeper there doing some research.  She told us that this okapi had been orphaned and was hand-raised by the zoo.  He will not be able to go back into the wild.

    \"20160319_0001\"

    I thought he was going to go back into his paddock, so I turned away to talk to the zookeeper.  Then my husband softly said, \”Honey.\”

    I turned back to find that the okapi isn\’t just shy, but also curious.  Unfortunately, I jiggled my camera when I tried to be sneaky about bringing it up to snap his photo.

    \"20160319_0004\"

    He moved his head when I took the shot, so he\’s blurry, but you can see his striped legs.  Skinny little legs, aren\’t they?

    \"20160319_0005\"

    Squirmy little bugger, too.  He reached up to see what was up above in the enclosure, so all I got was his ear.  Phooey.

    \"20160319_0006\"

    He decided to wander back inside, and I got this picture of his back and ears in the light.  He has a lovely coat, like a bay horse but with giant satellite ears.

    And yeah, I wanna pet him.  🙂


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • North American River Otters… Were Busy?

    \"IMAG0395\"

    Okay, so, not every photographic expedition is a success.  Take this one, case in point:

    1. My big camera, the SLR, (Single Lens Reflex), couldn\’t handle the lack of lighting.
    2. I used the camera in my phone, which has much better performance in low lighting, but even it had trouble focusing on the very dark corner.
    3. The otters were… well…  Here.  Take a look at the sign:

    \"IMAG0396\"

    So we were, like, interrupting.  As I stood there, trying desperately to take a decent picture of them, one of the otters got up and grumpily wandered over to its little den cave thingie to hide.  The other one, clearly wanting to nap, curled up with a smug sort of \”And stay out\” attitude.

    Hmm.  There\’s only one problem.

    What am I going to use for \”N\” today?

    I know!  The Reticulated Python!

    It has an \”N\” in it, come on!  Granted, it\’s at the end, pythoN, but it\’s still an N.  Besides.  There\’s a story here.

    \"20160326_0237\"

    This isn\’t even a fully grown snake.  He\’s fricken huge.  A little background:  my husband is what they call a \”herper,\” short for the word \”herpetologist,\” meaning someone who studies reptiles and amphibians.  I\’ve learned, though him, that the herper community is filled with highly knowledgeable people because if one decides to keep these animals as pets, there\’s not a lot of information about them and so one must learn a lot about their care in order to do it properly.  It\’s a lot more complicated, therefore, than keeping, say, a puppy or a kitten.

    For those of you not familiar with our books, my coauthor Rachel and I have a series with snake shifters whose animal form is a Burmese python.  Burms are very popular in the pet trade because they can be socialized and are quite friendly if handled properly.  They get very large, with the females growing to between sixteen and twenty feet.  In these snakes, the females are larger then the males.

    In the pet trade, as I understand it, reticulated pythons, pictured above, are responsible for the largest number of pet-related deaths every year.  They are not friendly, and they are not socializable in the way that Burms are.  They trade off with the anaconda for the longest snake in the world.  Their natural diet in the wild is baboons, among other things.  And humans, you may have noticed, are awfully similar to baboons.  Why someone would want a pet that looks as one as a potential food source, I don\’t know, but there you go.

    I am mildly afraid of snakes.  I\’ve handled them, having grown up on a horse ranch; we had common garter snakes in our garden and rattlesnakes weren\’t uncommon in the forest where we lived, though I only ever saw one.  But even a large garter or rattler isn\’t all that huge; they certainly don\’t get as massive as this guy.  Every time we\’ve visited the zoo, he\’s been quiescent, either sleeping or… well, waiting.  o.O…

    \"20160326_0255\"

    I asked my husband how big they get, and he said that in theory, they don\’t stop growing.

    Like that\’s not seven kinds of creepy.

    \"20160326_0236\"

    Since I was doing shots for the challenge on this visit, I bent down to get a better angle.  Out of reflex, I started talking to him.

    Sue me.  I talk to everything.  Cats, people, dogs, birds, walls…

    Okay, maybe not walls.

    That I\’ll admit.

    Moving right along…

    Apparently, he realized I was talking to him and started moving.

    \"20160326_0240\"

    My hands started to sweat at this point.  I don\’t mind snakes, as I said, but moving snakes are unpredictable, at least to me, and I don\’t know what to do.

    Understand I\’m in absolutely no danger here; there\’s a very thick (3 inches or so) lucite barrier between me and him.

    There is, however, a thick screen grate thing over on the left front of his enclosure.

    \"20160326_0241\"

    I started talking to him at this point, because clearly he\’s looking at and responding to me in some way I don\’t understand.  He\’s not a mammal; I don\’t know how to read his body language.  My husband was off looking at the Galapagos turtles and, to be honest, by this point I was totally engrossed in what this fellow was doing.

    \"20160326_0247\"

    We are, at this point, nearly eye to eye.  I\’m 5\’8\”.  This is, shall we say, disturbing.  My mind kept gibbering, \”Retic – highest pet-related deaths – babboons – striking speed of … what\’s the number? … damn it, I have crappy number memory… hundreds of miles an hour… that can\’t be right… A THOUSAND!!… he\’s pretty…\”

    At which point my husband barks, \”Step back.\”

    My husband never barks at me, so when he does, it\’s serious.  I took a convulsive step backwards, still sweating.  Michael came up to me and said, \”He was hissing.\”

    I swear, I did not hear it.  I did hear something hiss-like, but I thought it was a water system in another enclosure.

    Michael was puzzled too, and watched the retic for a few moments.  Then he slowly extended his hand.

    \"20160326_0245\"

    They had a long moment of some kind of interaction I didn\’t understand.  Michael moved very slowly, and the snake just watched him.  Or at least, I assume he did.  One of the problems I have with understanding their body language is they don\’t have eyelids, so they can\’t close their eyes.  One cannot tell, or at least I can\’t, if the snake is awake or asleep or what.  He never opened his mouth to hiss, which I assumed he would (too many monster movies with really pissed off snakes); Michael said the small triangular black spot between his lower lip and upper lip is an opening through which they can hiss; he said that\’s what he heard.  He said the hiss sound was intermittent, though, not continuous, so he can\’t tell if that means I angered the snake or not.

    \"20160326_0253\"

    Before we left, I took this one just to show how big he is.  Michael and I talked it over when we left, because I still don\’t understand what happened or what the interaction meant.  It bothers me that I didn\’t hear him hiss, because I don\’t want to irritate him or something.  Michael said snakes have a very good memory, and it\’s likely he will remember me now.  After I got over the initial shock of that, I\’m curious to go back and see what that means.  Will he come over to see me again?  Did I make him mad?  Did he think I was there to feed him?  Michael pointed out that the screen thing was probably the food slot (you can see the padlock and sliding opening below left in the picture).  I was scared the whole time, but I can\’t help but feel … I\’m not sure the word.  Honored, maybe?  Something.  I feel honored that this huge animal came over to … what, talk? … to me.  I wouldn\’t have believed it if I didn\’t take the pictures to show myself what happened.

    And for the record?  This is a big damned snake.  lol

    Remember, no post tomorrow for Sunday.  We resume the challenge on Monday with the letter \”O\”.  This is one of my favorite new-to-me animals, one that wasn\’t discovered until comparatively recently because they are so shy.  Stay tuned!


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • Housekeeping, Under Constructions, Ch-Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes! ~la la la~

    \"2016-04-15

    We updated the theme on my websites to fix some problems, but in the process it overwrote the widgets (the stuff I have on the right sidebar, over there >>>) and did some other odd things, so we\’re fixifying it.  AND, I loaded a new books page but did something goofy, which Dayna fixed yesterday; I just haven\’t had time to finish setting it all up.

    Point being, stay tuned, more coming!  🙂  (This is the challenge of having a passionate love affair with writing but the reality of having a day job.)  ~crazy chicken dance~

  • Mexican Grey Wolves Are Sneaky

    \"20151220_0569\"

    Brookfield Zoo has a spectacular habitat for the Mexican Grey Wolves called Regenstein Wolf Woods. I learned something while reading about them on the Zoo\’s site:  \”All the types of wolves you’ve heard of, like timber, gray, Arctic, and Mexican, belong to the same species: the gray wolf.\”

    The habitat is large and affords the wolves much privacy; the downside is they\’re not always available for photographing.  We lucked out on one of our visits, though.

    \"20151220_0571\"

    Nap time (in the very center of the image).

    Again, from the Zoo:  \”Mexican gray wolves were considered extinct in the wild until their reintroduction into Arizona and New Mexico in 1998.\”  Brookfield successfully reintroduced the female they had to a wildlife park in New Mexico, and last year celebrated the birth of a litter of wolf cubs.  They even held a naming contest on their website!

    \"20151220_0572\"

    They won\’t, however, let one pet them.  ~pout~

    \"20151220_0573\"

    This one is, admittedly, difficult to spot.  It\’s the center knoll in their enclosure.  If you see the smaller tree in the foreground, travel up along its trunk to where the branches first start on the right of the trunk.  You\’ll see the wolf centered in the branches.

    \"20151220_0574\"

    Wolves have a strict hierarchical structure.  Whomever is at the highest point on the knoll is the alpha.

    \"20151220_0575\"

    Another one arrives on the knoll for a nap.

    \"20151220_0576\"

    The other wolves show deference to the alpha pair by lowering their heads and not making direct eye contact.

    \"20151220_0577\"

    It\’s fascinating to watch their body language as they move around.

    \"20151220_0579\"

    At first, it seems this one is hiding.  Then one realizes that it is, in fact, capable of seeing pretty much everything in the field of view – me and my husband photographing them by the fence, the front of their enclosure, the pedestrian path beyond that gate, all the way to the bald eagle.

    \"20151220_0580\"

    And when one looks back, they\’re nearly invisible.  Camouflage.  ~shiver~

    Check back tomorrow for the North American River Otter.  Or… not?  Stay tuned to find out!


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!

  • The King of the Jungle

    \"20151206_0098\"

    This ferocious young man is the pride of the zoo, the king of beasts, the lion of doom.

    Well, I added the, \”of doom,\” part.

    His wife, on the other hand, isn\’t impressed.  Snooze city.

    He\’s actually not all that young, and he\’s been at the zoo for a while.  They are seriously threatened in the wild and Brookfield Zoo participates in an international Species Survival Plan to try and conserve these majestic creatures.  They are African lions, mostly nocturnal, though we did get to hear him roar one evening long about closing time.

    \"20151220_0332\"

    Lions spend about 20 hours a day asleep.  Kind of like house cats, really.  In fact, in the book Tribe of Tiger: Cats and Their Culture, by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, biologists liken house cats\’ behavior most closely with that of lions.

    \"20151220_0333\"

    Just makes you want to pet her, doesn\’t she?

    \"20151220_0338\"

    Um.  Maybe… not?

    \"20151220_0342\"

    Tomorrow, we get to visit the Mexican Grey Wolves.


    Thank you for joining me for the A-Z Blog Challenge.  If you’re blogging in the challenge, please leave me a link so I can come visit you too.  If you have a moment, please check out these other fine blogs:

    My theme on my Knoontime Knitting craft blog is Letterforms In Nature and the Built Environment.  I’ll be exploring my daily round, looking for shapes in the natural world and build environment.

    The theme at Noon & Wilder is The A To Z of Chicago.  Since I live here in the city and we have our Chicagoland Shifters based here, I figured I’d share a window into the city, Noon & Wilder style.

    The Nice Girls Writing Naughty have a new home, and we’re blogging in the challenge again this year.  Throughout the month you’ll be hearing from each of the Nice Girls, and during the RT Booklovers Convention from April 12th to the 17th, you’ll be getting live convention reports.  Join the conversation!

    The Writer Zen Garden’s brand new website is up and running, and we’re bringing you posts from me, Noony; my partner in crime, Rachel Wilder (the Wilder half of Noon & Wilder); the talented Darla M. Sands – a blogger in her own right, see below; as well as Grace Kahlo, Evey Brown, and author Tina Holland.  Check it out!

    My friends who are participating in the challenge (and if you’re not on this list, tell me and I’ll add you!):

    Write on, and Happy Blogging!