I’m talking looking out your window, what mammals, birds, reptiles, cool bugs, or other critters do you occasionally see?

  • Nolvamia@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I live on the outskirts of an Australian city, a couple of hundred metres away from farmland and national park. Opposite me we overlook a large public open space/park.

    We have a resident family of magpies. There’s a few cockatoos in the large gum tree next door. There are some kookaburras living in the park who sometimes visit the trees out the front of our place. The odd eagle circling high above. Too many mynas these days. Lots of rosellas and grass parrots. A smattering of finches.

    There are tons of kangaroos around. They come into the park to feed at night. During the day they retreat into the national park and we see them when out walking the dog. I’ve run across echidnas and red belly black snakes in the national park, but not technically seen from my window, although we were maybe 15 minutes walk from my front door.

    We get the occasional blue tongue lizard visiting our backyard. I found a eastern brown snake skin in the yard once too, but didn’t see its owner. One of my neighbours reported one in his backyard last spring, and my kids have spotted one in the park on the way home from school once, so we know they’re around. There are rabbits around here somewhere and we regularly see them on the nature strip out front at night.

    We have the usual assortment of crawlies around. Ants. Spiders. Geckos. Midges. Flies.

    There are a couple of horse ajistment places nearby and a pony club. It’s not uncommon to see horses being exercised through the park. Two of our neighbours own horses and ride them home occasionally.

    • Okokimup@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      It’s so weird to me that you just see kangaroos walking around. Like, that’s a zoo animal. But then I feel the same way about deer and I see them several times a week.

      • Nolvamia@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I guess it is just what you’re used to. In my mind a deer is somewhat exotic, or cute. A ‘nice’ animal. Whereas to me a kangaroo is somewhat annoying, like a large rat. If I’m walking the dog at night I occasionally have to scare a mob off to clear our path. You can’t pat them or approach too closely as they can attack if they feel threatened or scared. Rare, but I’m not going to take that chance. And so many end up as roadkill as fences tend not to stop them. So, not so nice overall.

        Interesting to see all the different experiences from around the world.

  • Crostro@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Birds- junco, cardinals, orioles, finches, grosbeaks, robins, Wilson’s snipes, grackles, turkey vultures, starlings, hummingbirds, blue jays, Canada geese, blue heron, woodpeckers, red wing blackbirds, nuthatch, chickadees, killdeers Mammals - raccoons, possums, black bear, deer, fishers, stoats, squirrels, chipmunks, farm animals, rats, porcupines, skunks Reptiles - garter snakes, milk snakes, occasionally blue tailed skinks Amphibians - spring peepers, wood frogs, painted turtles, snapping turtles, toads, bull frogs. There’s more I’m sure, but those are what springs to mind without putting effort into it

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Lots of different birds - mockingbirds, ibis, woodpeckers, blue jays, crows, hawks, vultures. Night heron.

    Sometimes bats, always squirrels, sometimes a possum or raccoon.

    Little lizards everywhere, sometimes a snake.

    Wasps, bees, butterflies, dragonflies.

    At work - beautiful great blue herons, great white herons, tricolor herons, cormorants, ducks, and the occasional alligator all come to the mitigation pond at the office park. ETA also at some time in the year there are these big storks that look prehistoric.

    • Okokimup@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I love large waterfowl like sand hill cranes. You can absolutely tell they’re just modern dinosaurs.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Used to see chipmunks. The little fuckers knew the window screens trapped my kitties from getting them and would taunt them. Turkey once at the old spot. Skunks a few times at the old spot. Dogs and cats.

    Now just birds and dogs being walked by their persons. How about you?

  • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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    3 months ago

    Birds: rufous horneros, rufous thrushes, kiskadees. Including a kiskadee fight, it was fucking hilarious - picture two males encircling each other, as if they were in a ring, surrounded by females. (Picture a 40yo surrounded by two cats, watching them fight through the window. It was like this.) Once in a blue moon I see a hummingbird, they used to visit me more often before the hail killed my fuchsia.

    Cool arthropods: a silver argiope once, I “adopted” her but she had children and passed away, RIP Kumoko. My basil is always gathering some native bees. I guess for most people gaucho spiders count?

    Mammals: only the usual. Cat, dog, cat, human, cat… …my neighbourhood has a lot of cats, including uninvited guests.

    I can’t recall the last time I saw a toad. When I was a kid I had fun splashing them with water - it’s harmless to the critter, but if you startle them they jump.

    For reference, this is in urban South America, Cfb climate.

    • Okokimup@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I had to Google kiskadee. Nice to see some animals in a different part of the world from me.

      • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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        3 months ago

        To be honest I had to websearch most English names for those animals, including this one. Might as well share pics and local names:

        Rufous hornero


        Locally known as joão-de-barro (“Mud John” - they build their nests out of mud). They’re like winged capybaras, extremely chill… even for their own good, I had Kika (one of my cats) once catching one. (I managed to free the little guy, he was hurt but alive.)

        Rufous thrush


        Locally known as sabiá laranjeira (“orange tree thrush” - probably a reference to the orange belly?). I’ve seen some calling them “fiscalzinhos” (inspectors), because if you mow your grass they’ll “inspect” it for bugs.

        Kiskadee


        Locally known as bem-te-vi (roughly “I see you well” - their singing sounds like they’re saying it). They’re afraid of larger animals like us, but surprisingly aggressive and territorial against other birds.

        silver Argiope spider


        That’s the one who used to live in my garden. Locally “aranha-de-prata” (silver spider). They’re extremely chill, note how I could get really close to the spider and she (yup, female) gave no fucks.

        Gaucho spiders


        Locally known as aranha-marrom (“brown spider”). Like, 90% of the houses in my city have at least a few of those. And they have a rather strong venom, so you need to watch out for that. Thankfully they’re more afraid of humans than humans are of them, and they like to hide themselves in hard-to-access corners.

        The name is probably because they were first described as a species in Rio Grande do Sul (demonym “gaúcho”).

        native bees

        By far the one I see the most are these:

        I’m not aware of any English name, they’re locally known as “tubuna”. I think the name is a reference to the tubes they build to their nests, that look like papier mâché. Completely harmless but people keep confusing them with wasps and trying to get rid of the nests. After the town hall implemented a project spreading a few human-made nests with native bees through the city, they became a more common sight.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Right this second, I can’t see anything other than a chicken. It’s dark and she’s next to me.

    The front yard is kinda mid. Occasional squirrels, some cardinals, wrens, and finches. Basic songbirds usually, but not in numbers or constant.

    But the back yard? That shit is lit.

    Years ago, I started planting all native stuff to let it go meadow style. While it was not entirely successful in staying native, and it’s gotten outgrown since I have trouble maintaining it all, we have all kinds of stuff.

    More butterflies than I can identify, rabbits, squirrels, woodpeckers, chickadees, thrushes, swallows, bluebirds, cardinals, crows, the occasional hawk, all kinds of flying critters.

    We got bumblebees all over, isopods, millipedes, ants, spiders (more species than I can recall, a damn book’s worth), and that’s just the stuff you can see from the window. Hell, some of the spiders are right on the windows lol.

    It isn’t all stuff you want to see, and there’s critters you don’t usually see out the window, but sometimes do like mice and rats. The chickens usually keep those away from the house, but they sometimes find their way in. They’re beautiful, but not welcome inside. That’s the price of things being wildlife friendly, you don’t get to pick what moves in. You just have to control access.

    We have a blacksnake that lives near one of the oaks that sometimes shows up and suns itself where you can see it from the one window. Other than that, the other reptiles stay out of sight. We have lizards, but they stay far away from the chickens, and they’re so small you can’t see them.

    My dad actually moves his chair in his room so he can watch outside instead of the TV.

    We have gotten possums coming through. One tried to set up housekeeping in the far section, but got tired of our shit after the fifth or sixth time it would creep into the coop at night and piss off the rooster. You’d see it sometimes though, when the moon was uncovered and full, piddling around in the brush.

    We’ve seen foxes, coyotes, and raccoons as well, though none stay. I’ve finally fixed the fence, so the big critters like that can’t get im casually any more. But we used to see them creep up towards the house, kinda sniffing after chickens. Before we had chickens, they’d just be passing through at the far end of the yard, so you’d have to be watching to catch them.

    While it’s beyond what you asked about, if you go outside, it’s even crazier. Because all those birds know they’re safe, so they do not give a fuck if you watch them. I can sit down in my chair, and they’ll just be flying around, singing and fighting and being birds. The squirrels will sit on the fence waiting for me to drop something when I’m giving treats to the chickens. The birds don’t even wait. We’ve got a family of cardinals that hops right up outside of reach and sings/chirps at us for handouts.

    There’s all that song, and the rustling of things in the remaining grass and brush. The bees and butterflies and regular flies and gnats and mosquitoes are all dancing in the air (until the birds get them lol). And there’s always something blooming. It’s worth the damn mosquitoes to sit there.

    The longer you sit, the more things stop caring you’re there. The one rabbit will come out and do his thing, just pausing now and then. The non cardinal songbirds will visit in little waves, doing whatever it is they’re doing. There’s a robin that will park on a branch maybe four feet from where I park my butt. It’ll just sit there for five or ten minutes at a go, then flit away for a while, then come back.

    There’s some wrens that hop their tiny butts into the pecan tree and tussle around while whistling and fussing until I laugh, then they kinda squeal squawk and act all offended.

    Alas, there was a cat that used to come for visits. The bluejays ran it off with the help of some crows. Poor thing didn’t know what to do, and eventually stopped coming back.

    Earlier today, just as the sun was going down, I could hear the shift change as some of the night birds came out. There was about fifteen minutes where all of the birds were singing so loud, the neighbor’s radio got drowned out by it.

    You wanna talk about a zen experience, there’s nothing like just sinking into all that life for a while.