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Saturday, June 20, 2026

Never again!

I liked to never got the pump out of the tank yesterday afternoon. After moving it into deeper water at 7 AM, I watered trees until noon or so. By afternoon, it was extremely hot (at least 100°) and I was exhausted.  The sides were slick, thick mud and the pump was 35 lbs. I couldn't drag it up because mud would've gotten into the pump impellers. I put a ladder for a type of railing to hang onto. Tried other things too, but nothing helped. Somehow, I managed to get it to drier mud. Had to go change into unmuddy shoes to stand on it without sliding back down into the tank. This photo is looking down so you can't see how steep it is. Anyway, I can't ever attempt that by myself again! I did end up nearly topping off the stucco tank. Lacked a mere 4".



Matt Walter visited for an hour in the morning. He would've helped with the pump, but I wanted to pump as long as I could. He couldn't hang around that long. He took this great photo of a juvenile male Lucifer. Now that the nestlings have fledged, a lot of courtship is going on in preparation for the next batch. Alway gratifying to see they've had a successful nesting.




Friday, June 19, 2026

All by myself

I tried unsuccessfully to get help at the oasis, so I determined to do the work myself. Started out early this morning weed-eating and servicing feeders, then set up a pump in the dirt tank. It still had a lot of water in it from the rain two weeks ago, plus I wanted the water out in case a deluge comes. The more that it holds, the less there is to spill over and wash out the road.


That entailed carrying heavy hoses and a 35 lb. pump into the water.  It'll pump all afternoon (didn't get it running until noon), then this evening before dark, I'll get back into the tank and lower it further and let it pump all night. A gas pump is already set up at the tank, but I'm not strong enough to start it. It would pump the water out in about three hours... unless the intake is bogged down in mud. That makes it really hard to get primed.


Looking east

Looking west

Stucco tank

I'm putting the water into the stucco tank. It's down about 21" through evaporation and leakage since the monsoon topped it off. 


The hardest part is making my way down the steep slippery bank into the muddy tank floor. I just take my time and go an inch at a time with a walking stick. I could have gone deeper and not have to do it again later today, but having so much trouble with UTIs lately, I didn't want to get too deep into the water.


I had been despondent thinking how I live in pain and can't do the things I want to do, so I feel better now, even though my back hurts worse and my left foot was numb for a while. It makes me nostalgic to look back on the good ole days of boundless energy and enthusiasm.


LATER: Been weed-eating and sitting indoors in the AC all afternoon. Now I'm too tired to get into the tank, so I'll turn the pump off at dark and reset it in the morning. Raised the level in the stucco tank by 8."  Should be able to add another 8" tomorrow, leaving the tank about 6" from being full. It loses about an inch a day, so not a real big deal. And surely we'll get more rain this summer, our official rainy season.


Went up to arroyo to check on the Dark Star Milkvine. Most of the pods are ripe and dispersing seeds.






Saturday, June 13, 2026

Along with rain

All the recent rains have not only caused the misery of mosquitoes, but also a sea of weeds. This morning I went down to service feeders. The electricity was off due to a storm in the area last night, not at the oasis. The water feature was becoming hidden by grass and weeds, so I cut what I could before the battery on my weedeater died. By the time the electricity was restored I was too tired to do more.


Before weedeater



After weedeater

I did it a couple of weeks ago, so it won't stay done for long, but, even though everywhere is an oasis right now, and birds aren't needing a drink or bath, it seems like it should be visible to birders, nonetheless.


The seedpods on the rare Dark Star Milkvines are beginning to ripen.


   


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Monsoons


Last year, you may recall, the oasis had three major monsoons that did lots of damage, including destroying my big non-leaking tank. This year we had a good rain in April that I was able to harvest water from, then in May a big monsoon filled everything, and now already in June we've had another huge monsoon.


I went down this morning, fearing the worst, like that the dike was washed out, which would eventually lead to the oasis practically washing away. The dike was bad, but still holding. It was built nearly 30 years ago and surely a foot higher than it is now after so many years of wind, rain, and compaction. It would be a major job to build it up, and not worth doing for the few years the oasis and I have left. Also it's so overgrown with vegetation that getting equipment in to work on it would be major uglification. This photo is of what I think is going to be where it gets breached first. Covered with brush so you can't really see the big pit in it on the right half of this photo.

                              


Here's another photo of the dike where it nearly washed out last year. I filled that hole with rocks, although I'm sure that won't prevent a flood from breaching it.



The settling pond at the upper dam used to look like this after a monsoon:


2023

Today it looked like this after yesterday's monsoon:


That's because we no longer clean it out of the silt and sand that builds up in it, which purpose was to keep it from going into the big, now broken tank. Eventually, that tank will fill up with this and look like this too. For now it only has about a foot of sediment and 8'  of water, because the above pond caught it before it could go into the tank. Obviously, it won't any longer. But of course, it no longer holds water for more than a few weeks now so doesn't much matter. On the above photos, the small soapberry tree has grown along the inside of the dam, but you probably couldn't detect the dam if you didn't know it was there.

While I was there inspecting everything, I saw this Olive-sided Flycatcher. It had a a bright yellow belly, which I thought was unusual.



A visitor last month, Roy Freese, took this cool photo of a pair of Black-tailed Gnatcatchers doing some serious nesting material gathering.




Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Horned lizards

Through the years, I've posted photos of horned lizards on this blog. Never thought more about it. But I read where someone is doing a horned lizard study in Texas and wanted sightings reported. About that time a visitor to the oasis captured one, not knowing what it was. I told him it was a Horned Lizard and to release it. Luckily, I thought to snap a cell phone shot of it first.


I posted it on iNaturalist as "Horned Lizard," not knowing there were different species of horned lizards. Soon it got ID'd as a Round-tailed Horned Lizard. That made we wonder what other species of them we had in the Big Bend. Seems there are three, but only two in Alpine or the Christmas Mountains that I'm likely to encounter. (The third, Greater Short-horned Lizard, is restricted to the higher elevations of the Davis and Guadalupe Mountains.)


Now I'm inspired to post my other horned lizard photos to iNat. I have photos of the Round-tailed and Texas Horned Lizard. I've posted both previously to this blog as simply "Horned Lizard." I've now edited those posts to be more specific.


Here's the one that started my journey into two horned lizard species. Always so much to learn, and so fun learning it, that I had to share it here.



The other species I've photograghed, Texas Horned Lizard, was from Alpine in July of 2020.



Now you probably know everything, or more than, I know about horned lizards in west Texas. I'm still on a learning adventure!