Showing posts with label Infrared Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Infrared Photography. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Wiley Coyote

In the creation story of Idaho’s Nez Perce people it was Coyote who saved the creatures of Earth.
 
The monster Kamiah had stalked into the region and was gobbling up the animals one by one. The crafty Coyote evaded Kamiah but didn't want to lose his friends, so he let himself be swallowed. From inside the beast, Coyote severed Kamiah's heart and freed his fellow animals. Then he chopped up Kamiah and threw the pieces to the winds, where they gave birth to the peoples of the planet. 
 
 
The scientific name for the coyote is Canis latrans – literally barking dog. 
 
 
A diurnal or crepuscular creature (namely active during daylight hours or at dawn and dusk) coyotes that reside in closer proximity to people tend to be more nocturnal. Unless they become habituated to our presence wild coyotes will make every attempt to steer clear of people. If you were to inquire of a wildlife biologist they would tell you that there are nineteen subspecies of coyote that are exceedingly well-adapted to living in urban, rural and wild America. 
 

 Male coyotes tip the scales at about 44 pounds while females weigh-in slightly less. For scale our red-golden retriever, Ruby, weighs about the same. 
 
 
Coyotes dine on large prey and also eat snakes, insects, rodents, fruit and other mast. As an opportunistic hunter coyotes have been known to prey-upon small pets and livestock. In an urban setting they will eat garbage and pet food left on a deck or patio. 
 
 
The coyote is a gregarious animal - socially-inclined - like the wolf. This is likely a consequence of the need for a family unit or pack of animals combining to bring down large game.
 
Recent genetic studies suggest that coyotes are not native to the eastern United States - The implication is they largely evolved on the Great Plains. As the eastern old growth forests were cleared for settlement and agriculture coyotes adapted to the new environs. It is thought that coyotes dispersed to our neck of the woods early in the twentieth century. These canids are presumed to have come from the northern Great Plains and are unique in their genetic origins. 
 
 
Additional coyotes dispersed from here to New England via the northern Great Lakes region and southern Canada meeting in the 1940s in New York and Pennsylvania. These coyotes have inter-bred with gray wolf and Eastern wolf populations adding to their own unique genetic diversity and further contributing to their hybrid vigor and ability to adapt to an ever changing environment. Coyotes here are known as the Northeastern coyote.
 
Jill and I hear coyote vocalizations rather frequently. A live sighting is rare as in rural America coyotes share the same natural aversion to people that other wildlife do. 
 
They are scared-to-death of people. 
 
 
Nevertheless, digital trail camera images are common. Ruby and I ran the trail camera trap line recently and she sez that judging from the quantity of images over a couple of weeks that coyotes “are cheap” around here. 
 
These are all night IR images; not a single daylight photo. It’s mating season and maybe that has something to do with it?  
 
Coyote one followed by coyotes two.  A mated pair?

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Wile E. Coyote

Near the dawn of time, the story goes; Coyote saved the creatures of Earth. According to the mythology of Idaho's Nez Perce people, the monster Kamiah had stalked into the region and was gobbling up the animals one by one. The crafty Coyote evaded Kamiah but didn't want to lose his friends, so he let himself be swallowed. From inside the beast, Coyote severed Kamiah's heart and freed his fellow animals. Then he chopped up Kamiah and threw the pieces to the winds, where they gave birth to the peoples of the planet.  

– Nature


Yote - short for coyote, Wile E. Coyote, Canis latrans.   If you were to inquire of a wildlife biologist they would tell you that there are nineteen subspecies of coyote that are exceedingly well-adapted to living in urban, rural and wild America.   

Male coyotes top out at about 44 pounds while females weigh-in slightly less.  For scale my Lab is bulkier than the average coyote.   

Coyotes are known for how well they adapt to different habitats.  They are found living in and around large cities, the central plains, farmland, and northern forest, in the desert scrub of the Sonoran Desert, foothills and mountains as well as in populated ring suburbs. 

Coyotes dine on large prey and also eat snakes, insects, rodents, fruit and other mast.  As an opportunistic hunter coyotes have been known to prey-upon small pets and livestock.  In an urban setting they will eat garbage and pet food left on a deck or patio.  The coyote is a gregarious animal - socially-inclined - like the wolf.  This is likely a consequence of the need for a family unit or pack of animals combining to bring down large game. 

Recent genetic studies suggest that coyotes are not native to the eastern United States - having largely evolved on the Great Plains.  As the eastern old growth forests were cleared for settlement and agriculture coyotes adapted to the new environs.   It is thought that coyotes dispersed to our neck of the woods early in the twentieth century.  These canids are presumed to have come from the northern Great Plains and are unique in their genetic origins.  Additional coyotes dispersed from here to New England via the northern Great Lakes region and southern Canada meeting in the 1940s in New York and Pennsylvania. These coyotes have inter-bred  with gray wolf and Eastern wolf populations adding to their own unique genetic diversity and further contributing to their hybrid vigor and ability to adapt to an ever changing environment.  Coyotes here are known as the Northeastern coyote. 

More frequently Jill and I hear coyote vocalizations than we see them live and in person.  In rural America coyotes share the same natural aversion to people that other wildlife do.  They are scared-to-death of people.  However, from time to time I do capture a handful of digital photos on a trail camera.

 

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Local Critters

From a recent round of the trail camera trap line are these infrared (IR) photos of...

Mr. Buck

Mrs. Doe

Wiley Coyote



Monday, April 19, 2021

Wile E. Coyote

Last Wednesday I was out with Blonde Dog for a walk and a circuit trail cameras to swap out the SD cards.  Unremarkably deer were the most prolific of critters photographed followed by raccoons.  The third most popular image collected was that of the largest resident predator around these parts.  Canis latrans - Wile E. Coyote. 

If you paid attention to the behavior of my faithful companion the casual observer would take note that she would periodically stop in her tracks to give a particular spot on the trail a long and thorough sniff.  With each pause the denouement would be to pee at each location before resuming our walk. 

There is no mistaking this scent marking behavior and the need for canids to lay claim to their territory.

Anyway here are some additional trail camera photos taken this month - both IR captured at night and a couple of daytime photos as well.  Three different locations.  I did not crop the date and time stamp as as to lend a sense to the movement patterns......




 

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Rare Vistor Pays a Call

I stumbled-upon a technological hiccup with a recent upload of photos from our Snapshot Wisconsin (DNR) trail camera.  It would appear that back in February a routine upload to the cloud network failed to send all of the photos.  Last weekend that SD card found it's way back into the upload rotation and sure as shooting a big slug of photos from January and February showed-up.  Good thing because this infrared gem was in the collection......

click on image to enlarge

I captured my very first picture of one of these in February of 2019.  Again in March and October of last year.  And the end of January this year.  Woot Woot!   

This is Martes pennanti - the Fisher.  One of the larger members of the weasel family - only the river otter is bigger.    

Characterized by a soft and supple pelt this highly-prized furbearer was oft referred-to as the American Sable.  Once widely distributed across Wisconsin - the great cutover of our northern forests and unregulated trapping eventually led to the extirpation of this species.  Only very small remnant populations retreating to the northern-most reaches of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Nevertheless, the species persists as a consequence of reintroduction efforts and reforestation of marginal farmland.  Four photos over three consecutive years is not happenstance and it would appear that southern Door County is now part of an expanding range. 

These are habitually solitary animals and while a pregnant female will den-up for a period of time - males are always on the prowl with a typical boy requiring as much as 150 square miles of territory.  March and April is mating season for the fisher and is characterized by a reproductive curiosity featuring a delayed implantation period of 10 to 11 months.  Possibly stimulated by longer daylight - the blastocyst (the earliest stage of the embryo) is then implanted in the uterus.  Gestation is 6 weeks followed by the birth of three to four kits.  Since mom is capable of mating immediately afterwards females spend virtually all of their adult lives either pregnant or lactating.  By the end of summer the young will leave the den and disperse to establish their own territories.  Males contribute nothing to the raising of the young.

Another fun fact is that this critter is an accomplished swimmer and quite comfortable in the water.  You're probably thinking - how many fish can a fisher fish?  The answer is none.  The fisher does not fish.  Their smaller mink cousins are better fishermen than the fisher.  An opportunistic feeder this animal will
dine on mice, voles, dead fish, squirrels, rabbits, raccoons and an occasional house cat.  Seasonally they'll help themselves to reptiles, amphibians, nuts, berries, eggs and fruit.  Equipped with cat-like retractable claws this is one of the few predators that will take-down a porcupine with little to no ill-effect. 

I'm positively tickled to capture another photo with an ever-patient, motion-activated woodland sentinel.

Raising a toast to big weasels and second-rate fishermen....

Monday, December 7, 2020

Midnight Stinker

Meet Mephitis mephitis - the Striped Skunk. 

 

Generally nocturnal, this is a solitary and secretive animal that has a distinctive pungent scent.  Found throughout Wisconsin you'll smell it before your spot it.  

A member of the weasel family it is an omnivore that rambles-about in a shambling gait in search of food. This animal does not hibernate but it will hole-up in it’s den for weeks at a time during extended cold snaps. 

This is not an aggressive critter as a consequence of a unique defense mechanism.  If threatened it will stamp its feet, arch its back with tail raised, teeth chattering and launch a spray of oily stink from glands located near its anus. This critter can nail a bullseye at up to fifteen feet. Most predators give this animal a wide berth – the exception being the great horned and barred owl.  

Breeding season begins in February – March with 6-7 offspring born naked and blind in May – June.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Same Deer?

From the DNR Snapshot Wisconsin trail camera there is this.



Same day - obviously different times.

Same deer?

What would be the odds?

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Hairy Eyeball

Snow doe giving the trail camera the evil eye....
















Healthy-looking deer by any measure.  Probably pregnant too.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Buck

Another decent trail camera photo - this from one of the Moultrie cameras. 



Winter snow added to the black and white format of pictures taken in low-light conditions or after dark in infrared (IR) mode adds an ethereal almost ghostly quality to the photo composition.  The juxtaposition of the full moon back-lighting the deer is bonus.

Full disclosure - this photo was taken on January 18, 2014 in -22 F conditions.

My Google Photo App reminds me of stuff like this from time to time.  I had long forgotten about this pic - glad I got pinged by the Google. 

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Doe



Nice trail photo from the DNR trail camera.

Winter snow added to the black and white format of pictures taken in low-light conditions or after dark in infrared (IR) mode adds an ethereal quality to the photo composition.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Girls Night Out


A 15 second trail camera video vignette (no audio) of a couple of girl whitetails. 

Taken under low light conditions it is tastefully composed in black and white in infrared mode....

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Deer in the Headlights

Not exactly in the headlights - but similar.

This deer was simultaneously photographed by two trail cameras using an invisible flash - infrared night vision.  Because both cameras were triggered at the same time giving the animal got a double dose of infrared.

This technology does not trigger a blinding flash like we know it - rather a light wave length that is not visible to the subject.  This is known as electromagnetic radiation - or EMR - and happens to be a wavelength longer than that of visible light.  As a consequence it is general invisible to the human and animal eye.  One of the drawbacks is that night vision does result in an image reproduced only in varying shares of black and white.  Considering it doesn't spook the critter that is a reasonable trade-off.

In case you are wondering about the dual camera set-up - I've had a Moultrie trail camera located here for possibly more than four years.  Because it is close to water and sits at the confluence of three trails it is an excellent location.  Some would suggest a hot location.  When the Wisconsin DNR approved our hosting of a state camera for the Snapshot Wisconsin wildlife crowdsourcing program I located the DNR's Bushnell camera adjacent to the original camera.

Moultrie pic...


Bushnell pic...

Monday, October 28, 2019

Ghost Deer

Speaking of deer there is this very recent trail camera photo in infrared (IR) mode.  No visible flash.  Black and white result.  It's all in keeping with the spirit of Halloween.


I refer to these a 'ghost deer' because of the ethereal qualities imparted-upon the imagery as a consequence of the trail camera medium.

They're also stealthy animals and frequently sneak-up on the unwary and unwitting bow hunter just like a ghost.

Boo!

Sunday, August 25, 2019

Bandit

Nice IR photo of one of the top predators of bird nests and sweet corn nemesis.  Looks like the electric fence kept this critter out of the corn patch.  This winter I'll have to engineer something to better safeguard the occupants of my nest boxes.

click on image for a closer look
 

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Deer in the Headlights

Not really - as there are no headlights.  Only deer at twelve feet, with a Moultrie trail camera about a foot above the ground and flash-less, infrared illumination.

click on images to enlarge
 
A handful of shots from a lengthier series of a nervous doe.


Don't let anybody tell you that after the spectacular gun hunt there are no remaining deer here.


Amazing.


Absolutely amazing.....

Monday, December 10, 2018

Bedtime

I do not recall ever having a trail camera record a picture like this one.  

A whitetail bedding-down for a spell.   

click on the image for a better look
 
I find their beds all the time when scouting in the brush - a carefully matted-down depression in the taller grasses or a hollowed-bowl melted into the snow. 

Whitetail deer like to sleep in locations where they feel secure. Typically, where they have the wind at their back to smell danger and can see potential danger in front of them – a place that offers good cover.  A deer is quite vulnerable while they sleep if it were not for the sensitive sniffer and always swiveling ears.  Deer know what is happening around them at all times and if they smell or hear something out of place with the normal rhythms of their surroundings they will bolt and skedaddle.  In the wintertime deer prefer to bed amongst the thermal cover provided by dense stands of pines.  

Deer also prefer to bed near water and food sources.  Sometimes they sleep solo.  Sometimes they bed-down in groups.  Because they are creatures of habit if they find an optimal location it is not unusual for several return visits. 

Sleep is usually five to ten minutes in length - as in the case of the series of photos this camera captured.  Some trail camera surveillance supports the notion of up to twenty minutes of sleep.  The whitetail sleep cycle is not at all unlike that of the whitetail deer hunter – dozing-off for a few minutes and snapping to attention. 

Consider this too; bedded deer might not be dozing at all.  They might just be hanging out for a siesta to chewing their cud.
     

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Infrared Deer

click on images to enlarge







A handful of photos from after dark by the Moultrie cameras in infrared mode.  

Two different locations.








Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Deer Camp

The Girls and I left the Naked City and arrived late today.  

The 24th chapter of deer camp unfolds.  

And another paragraph of this year’s deer camp continues.  







From only a few days ago are these IR trail camera photos of El Coyote only a couple a hundred yards from the shack….