Becca at work |
Heavily populated with native plants |
From a distance this looked like a bird of prey, possibly an owl |
My zoom lens proved otherwise |
Becca on an overgrown trail |
Pointing south toward El Paso's Franklin Mountains |
Weed-infested trail to the arroyo |
The view to Becca's left |
Entering a broad arroyo |
The arroyo bifurcates here |
One way out of the arroyo |
Looking down at the arroyo, which runs through the center of this image |
I've noticed that Barrel Cactus fruit grows toward the setting sun |
Somebody's primitive trail marker |
4 comments:
I like it when you and Becca explore different territory. Beautiful photos.
I thought that the figure in the third image was a Burrowing Owl. Do you have such owls there?
Do you have a problem with cheatgrass? Is that cheatgrass in the image of the weedy arroyo?
So many questions...
The following comes from this article: THE UNWELCOME ARRIVAL OF BROMUS TECTORUM TO HIGH ELEVATIONS
Cynthia S. Brown, Ph.D.
Helen Rowe
Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management
1177 Campus Delivery
Colorado State University
Fort Collins, CO 80523-1177
ABSTRACT
"Cheatgrass has spread to high elevations in the western U.S. over the last 10
to 15 years, raising concerns about the negative effects it will have on the newly invaded habitats."
And, yes, we have Burrowing Owls here in the Chihuahuan Desert.
Thanks for the reference, Packrat. Colorado State's in our Colorado "back yard," and I know that the area where we'll be living has a problem with cheatgrass, too.
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