I returned home from the farmers' market to hear a Brown Creeper calling in our front yard. Luckily my camera wasn't too far away, and the creeper spent some time feeding in a few different trees.
Here it is searching crevices in the bark:
I returned home from the farmers' market to hear a Brown Creeper calling in our front yard. Luckily my camera wasn't too far away, and the creeper spent some time feeding in a few different trees.
Here it is searching crevices in the bark:
These nudibranchs are white
with some orange, too
They're sending a Valentine's wish
directly to you!
Mating pair of Cockerell's Dorid nudibranchs (Limacia cockerelli), photographed on 29 January 2025.
♥ Happy Valentine's Day! ♥
Beautiful gold-flecked hermit crab in a Three-colored Top Snail (Calliostoma tricolor) shell. Photographed on 28 January 2025.
A couple of neighborhood birds in Cotati today (8 February 2025).
Cedar Waxwing (Bombycilla cedrorum), above, and Hermit Thrush (Catharus guttatus), below.
Those sculpin eyes, they get me every time. (And that green and white patterning is magical!)
Photographed in the rocky intertidal zone along the Sonoma Coast in early January 2025.
For all of the marine invertebrate enthusiasts out there — I wanted to mention that Eric will be presenting a webinar for Bay Nature magazine this week on Wednesday, Feb. 5, from 12-1 p.m. PST. He'll be discussing the local diversity of marine invertebrates and some new discoveries, accompanied by lots of great photos and videos!
If you're interested in checking it out, you can register to join the talk online here.
P.S. This is a Dwarf Brittle Star (Amphipholis squamata) photographed on Bodega Head last week.
Eric noticed this amazing sculpin recently -- the colors behind the eyes are a perfect match for orange sponge and pink coralline algae found in low rocky intertidal zone areas.
This might be a Smoothhead Sculpin (Artedius lateralis), but we'd love input about the identification.