
I may release this as a t-shirt. Let me know what you think.
Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
Cedar Waxwing (Bombycilla cedrorum)






Warm and humid this morning. Just perfect for a bike ride.
I went down to Oquossoc,turned off a side road and parked.There is something about a Maine summer morning. Bird calls, the green leafy canopy, the whine of mosquitoes, ahh!
I took off up the road, crossed Rt 16, and continued on up the Kennebago River Valley. About a quarter mile up the road, the alders rustled and then a young bull moose comes running out of the bush. I skidded to a stop, breathless and shaking.
I continued up the road and finally I came to my turn around point, the Kennebago River Bridge. I always stop and look around, catch my breath (it's downhill to the bridge and one has to ride through wet grass to get there, so wet brakes make for a breathtaking ride.)
I was stand on the abutment looking down and scared a young garter snake who them dropped down to the concrete below. Scrambling down,to one, check on the snake and two, I saw a dead rodent. Curiosity always gets me, so I had to check it out. It turns out to have been a Woodland Jumping Mouse, Napaeozapus insignis.
I see one on occasion ,but not long enough to really get a good look. The knife is 6 cm.
Riding back and stopping to look at things, I kicked my bike.


Scattered patches of krummholz are about on the top, like this clump of balsam fir(Abies balsamea) and labrador tea(Ledum groenlandicum).



Mountain Sandwort (Arenaria groenlandica) was very abundant. It thrives in disturbed areas, especially in places disturb by frost. The trail was fringed with it.