Wild thing

11 07 2025

The incomparable Kestrel: epitome of wild wisdom and grace. 🙂





Pronghorn moon

10 07 2025

This handsome fellow is not the same handsome fellow from a couple of posts ago. He was near a small water source, and I happened upon him as he was walking away. Above, I *think* his attention was caught by a small band of mustangs away south and lower. He ended up turning all the way around to look at them, then watched them intently for several minutes before returning to his path away to nibble and browse.

A couple of hours later, this. 🙂

Hot, hot, hot. The temp hit 100 degrees in Spring Creek Basin yesterday. It’s not unusual as a summertime temp … but it’s still awfully miserable. There was some relief in the form of sunshine-blocking clouds, but not a drop of moisture did they produce.

By the time the moon rose, it was actually pleasant (if you don’t mention the gnats), and some little bird was singing its little heart out with a full medley of melody. I don’t know what it was, but it was a lovely serenade! 🙂





Almost just about

9 07 2025

In the basin the night before last, I realized I might be able to catch the moon rising from the space between McKenna Peak and Temple Butte if I could get myself into the right position in Spring Creek Basin.

I didn’t, but it was still cool (as it always is?!) to watch the almost-full “Buck Moon” rising in the very warm (the mercury hit at least 98F) July sky last night over the basin.





On alert

8 07 2025

The pronghorn buck Chipeta and the other mustangs were very interested in. Here, he’s literally right at the rimrock’s edge (a band of rimrock cliffs forms most of Spring Creek Basin’s western boundary). I spotted him first, from the far side of a little hump of ground. Then he spotted me and decided that the mustangs must be warned of the “stranger” in their midst! Fortunately, though I was a stranger to him, I am not a stranger to *them*.





The messenger

7 07 2025

If this pic looks similar to the one of the pronghorn buck a few posts ago, it’s because she’s watching him head down the hill from very near where he stood to “pose” for the pic.

Pronghorns – in Spring Creek Basin at least – try very hard to warn their mustang cousins about the dangers of the two-legged in their midst with a “bark” or more strident “huff” sound than what the mustangs make as a warning snort. … But really, it just makes the mustangs more curious about their pronghorn cousin and what all the fuss is about. 🙂





Breezin’

6 07 2025

Buckeye and Aiyanna settle into nap mode on a windy-windy day at the western edge of Spring Creek Basin.

A bit less wind, a LOT more rain, please?





Lookout

5 07 2025

As a bachelor lieutenant stallion, one of Skywalker’s duties is to protect the band as a whole from unwanted incursions by *other* bachelor stallions. When he’s not harassing the main stallion, Skywalker takes that pretty seriously.





One wildling on the Fourth

4 07 2025

Happy actual Fourth of July (blame WordPress for the recent posting weirdness) from wild, wide-open, freedom-embracing Spring Creek Basin. 🙂





Grey under grey

3 07 2025

Buckeye searches for the grasses that just received a slurp of rain under those mammatus clouds. He’s already taken advantage of the damp ground to try to deter the bugs, which also were taking advantage of the humidity to come out in force!

*****

Happy Fourth of July! Not a splash-of-color image, but I hope it’s one that invokes some of the independence and freedom this country was founded upon.





Just … rain

3 07 2025

We interrupt your regularly scheduled mustangs for an important news update:

WE GOT RAIN!!!!!!!

When you don’t get rain for weeks and weeks, even a little rain is newsworthy. When Mother Nature unleashes a direct hit over Spring Creek Basin, well, that’s major news, that is!

This crazy sky (please tell me the name of those clouds if you know? mammatus or something similar? I read an article about them recently, but I can’t remember the name) was AFTER the rain. Upon entering Spring Creek Basin, I had seen some silver slivers in the distance that had me very excited … but first I saw this sky, and then I saw mustangs, so I had to stop (I ran out of time and patience to choose and process any mustang pix, but they’ll be coming; nothing super exciting as they weren’t super cooperative with that sky above them, chasing the rain-fresh grass!).

Then … THIS:

SPRING CREEK!!!!!

Can you tell that straight across (left side of the pic) is the road? At far right is the curve just after the water passes through the old breached dam (I did a post about it a little while ago). The water is flowing from right to left – and it was loud and muddy and glorious. 🙂 You can see how high it was when it first ran; already it was feet lower by the time I got out there.

Many (most? all?) of the rocks in the foreground are from previous floods. That, my friends, is the power of water in the desert.

Then I rolled around back downstream to just upstream of Spring Creek canyon, through which Spring Creek runs on its way out of Spring Creek Basin. All of the basin’s arroyos feed into the big arroyo that is Spring Creek. This is looking eastish toward that iconic horizon. The canyon is right behind me:

The water flows from right to left, around the curve on downstream, through the short stretch of zigzagging canyon and on across Disappointment Valley to join Disappointment Creek, which ALSO was flowing with rainwater (the flow of the creek ended around solstice weekend), and eventually to the Dolores River way out there where the sky is particularly (and still) dark with rain.

Giddy. 🙂 Thank heavens for the rain. 🙂

*****

I was right about the type of clouds:

Mammatus cloud


Wikipediahttps://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mammatus_cloud

Mammatus (also called mamma [1] or mammatocumulus, meaning “mammary cloud”) is a cellular pattern of pouches hanging underneath the base of a cloud.

People also ask

What does it mean when you see mammatus clouds?

AI Overview

Incredible mammatus clouds make for a bumpy ride | WHNT.com

Mammatus clouds, with their distinctive pouch-like or udder-like appearance, often signal the presence of severe weather, particularly thunderstorms, though they can also appear after the storm has passed. While they don’t directly cause storms, they are a visual indicator of unstable atmospheric conditions and can be associated with heavy rain, hail, lightning, or even snow in winter. 

Here’s a more detailed explanation:

  • Formation: Mammatus clouds form when sinking air creates pouch-like structures hanging from the base of other clouds, most commonly the anvil of a cumulonimbus cloud (thunderstorm cloud). 

Significance:

They are often seen before, during, or after a thunderstorm, indicating the turbulent and unstable air within the storm system. 

Severity:

While not a direct sign of severe weather, their presence suggests the possibility of other dangerous weather conditions like lightning, hail, or strong winds. 

Pilot Caution:

Pilots are often advised to avoid cumulonimbus clouds with mammatus formations due to the potential for turbulence. 

Not Always Dangerous:

It’s important to note that mammatus clouds don’t always guarantee severe weather. They can also appear after a storm has weakened or dissipated. 

Visual Cue:

Despite their potential association with storms, mammatus clouds are known for their striking appearance and are often photographed by weather enthusiasts and meteorologists. –> including this photographer! 🙂