Okay. I'm going to cut to the chase. We found only the usual suspects. But it is always a good experience to wander Berry Springs Park with friends - many experts on frogs, snakes, birds, and the park.
I was able to grab some adequate photos of the team for future uses. I recorded Blanchard's Cricket Frogs (CI=3, American Bullfrog CI=1, and Rio Grande Leopard Frogs, CI=1 - and the squawk of the Great Blue Heron (which swooped by in the dark and almost gave me a heart attack).
I love these people and these parks. I learn something new every trip - even if the actual creatures are not "new."
The weather is warming up and I bow out of trips to the wild in the brutal heat of the summer. But I can swing evening trips to wade with snakes and capture frogs and toads.
[Note: We always try to arrive at a place with a little time to look around before the team shows up.]
Beaver chewed bark from trunk ringing tree for about 1 foot. None of us thought it would survive, but it is budding out.
Only just started blooming here
Berry Springs Park evening blitz (rains provided wet weather ponds and a reason for frogs/toads to call). Captured Blanchard's Cricket Frogs, Rio Grande Leopard Frog (.29), and the squawk of a Great Blue Heron (.59 - 1.02).
Captured audio for Blanchard's Cricket Frogs, Rio Grande Leopard Frog, (purr at .29) and AMERICAN BULLFROG from (.26 to .35)
Berry Springs Park evening blitz (rains provided wet weather ponds and a reason for frogs/toads to call). Captured Blanchard's Cricket Frogs, Rio Grande Leopard Frog (.29), and the SQUAWK of GREAT BLUE HERON (.59 - 1.02).
Captured audio for Blanchard's Cricket Frogs, RIO GRANDE LEOPARD FROG, (purr at .29) and American Bullfrog from (.26 to .35)
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