I did! I did taw a puddy tat!

My sister and I did hike the Farmington Canal Heritage Trail again this morning, and the weather was pretty nice, if a bit cloudy, but we didn’t see anything remarkable, and I barely took a picture. Instead, the big excitement came yesterday evening when she spotted this gorgeous creature slinking along the edge of my folks’ yard. For those of you unfamiliar with those black-and-white ears and that short tail, this is my very first image of a bobcat (Lynx rufus), aka wildcat, bay lynx, or red lynx. It was barely bigger, though certainly heftier, than my folks’ large house cat.

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I did immediately try to take a picture with my phone, but it was at least 50 yards away, and thankfully my camera was just inside the house, so I bolted in to grab it. By the time I came back out, the cat had moved on a bit, but my sister pointed to where it had gone, and I found it just as it pounced into some weeds to catch some small rodent. Here’s a picture with the rodent mostly concealed by the grass to spare your tender eyes.

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The rodent was gone in less than a minute, and then the cat continued its prowl. My sister, the vet, confirms from my pictures that this is a female, and she never did let me capture an image of more than just the side of her face. I checked on iNaturalist, and I found that they have been spotted in Wisconsin, but the closest sighting to Milwaukee was in Muskego, so I don’t have much hope of seeing one in Estabrook Park any time soon. Thank goodness for occasional visits to Cheshire, eh? Just look at that paw she has!

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Anyway, so as not to leave you with just those three bobcat pictures, as amazing as they are, here’s another look at the belted kingfisher over the Quinnipiac River yesterday morning.

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Here’s another look at some of the dozens of mute swans on the Broad Brook Reservoir on Saturday. They appear to be mobbing a great blue heron, but everyone just minded their own business, and perhaps the heron has learned that swans can’t be pushed around as it seems that cormorants can.

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Here’s one of the cedar waxwings I mentioned, and I don’t know if this is a youngster who hasn’t yet grown in its fancy tail feathers with a yellow stripe across the tips, an adult who is in the middle of a molt, or if something else is going on, but it’s still a pretty bird, nevertheless.

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Finally, here’s one of the more than a dozen gray catbirds that enjoy the habitat along the edge of the trail.

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Published by Andrew Dressel

Theoretical and Applied Bicycle Mechanic, and now, apparently, Amateur Naturalist. In any case, my day job is researching bicycles at UWM.

3 thoughts on “I did! I did taw a puddy tat!

  1. If you do a search on “ bobcat in Fox point Wisconsin“ you will find some pictures on patch.com that was causing quite a stir back in 2018

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