You know those mornings where all of your alarms go off
and you still decide to lie in bed for “just 5 more minutes” but accidentally
sleep for another 45? Today was going to be one of those mornings. Both of my
alarms had gone off, and I had just rolled over and gotten comfy when I heard
something flutter and land reasonably close to my head region. I lay there for
another 30 seconds before deciding to finally get up, partly because of the
mysterious critter, and partly because I didn’t want to have to run around in a
panic a half hour later. I got up, turned the light on, briefly glanced around
but didn’t see any flies or moths on my bed, and was heading to the bathroom
when I glanced back one more time… and saw a freaking COCKROACH on the wall
above my pillow. Before I could even move, it tried taking flight but fell ONTO
MY PILLOW, where my FACE was a minute earlier. I used a cup and knocked it onto
the floor between my nightstand and the wall, and then I put the cup over it,
thinking I could just leave it there for the next 2 months until it was time to
move out. (I wasn’t using that bit of floor, and the cup would be the last
thing I packed.) While eating breakfast I finally woke up enough to be
reasonable and just get rid of the thing. I wasn’t gone more than seven
minutes, but in that time the roach managed to FREE HIMSELF from the confines
of my carefully placed cup. What’s worse than a roach in your bedroom? A roach
in your bedroom that could be hiding ANYWHERE. I started moving furniture,
tipping out shoes, pulling the sheets off my bed, and crawling around on the
floor until I spotted him walking along the wall away from the foot of my bed.
I did the cup thing again, but this time immediately removed him with the help
of some paper under the cup. He had been totally docile this entire time until
I shoved the paper underneath, at which point he started SCREAMING and jamming
his antennae between the paper and the cup in an attempt to free himself while
I ran to get him outside. Who needs an alarm when you can have ROACHES?!
I do find it pretty interesting that I’ve lived in two
different regions of Peru where cockroaches were common “household” critters,
and I didn’t have a problem with them. In the rainforest I just knocked them
off of my clothes line and made sure not to step on them when I got out of bed,
and in the cloud forest I tried to keep them out of whatever I was cooking and
off of my dinner plate. But in a legitimate residence, with walls and carpeting
and air conditioning, roaches are like 20 times worse. They’re not something
you would expect to see indoors, so they are awful. In Peru, we didn’t really
have doors, so there was no “in”. To be fair, my bed was always the safe zone –
I had a mosquito net in the rainforest and a tent in the cloud forest. Both
were made of the thinnest material that could be torn by a paperclip, but they
felt like fortresses against jungle critters.

As for work, our nest searching is winding down. We’re
still always looking for nesting behavior, but apparently the latest that
scrub-jays have ever laid the first egg of their clutch is June 6
th,
so once that date rolls around we’ll pretty much be done with nest searching
(other than keeping our eyes out for nests that we may have missed). This week
we’re actually in our second surge of bandings because of all of the re-nesting
attempts or double broods. We have something like 10 nests to band this week,
so I have to get my fill of scrub-jay chicks now before we run out of nests to
band! I got to do two more bandings on my own (with supervision), which is
always exciting. Once the bandings are over we’ll still be checking on the
fledglings through July, which is also pretty fun. The younger ones are cute
(when you can find them) because they just hunker down and don’t move or make
noise. The older ones are cute because they’re a bit more brave and pop up when
their parents start squawking to see what’s going on, and then they join in! There
is one area where there are 3-4 territories with fledglings all right next to each
other, and if I drive slowly down that road I can see all the fledglings pop up
and squawk as I pass by. Fledgling Alley!
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| I thought I was checking a nest halfway through the incubation period, but I found these guys instead! Mom laid her eggs way earlier than we thought. |
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| Cute, fluffy little 11-day-old nestling |
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| Banding nestlings while two adults watch from behind me |
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| Papa in the top left looking out for his two little fledglings in the bottom right |

I’ve learned that this is a great time of year because
all the wild blueberries are getting ripe! I’ll occasionally pass by a little
blueberry plant here or there and grab the ripe ones as a delicious treat (I
have never liked store-bought blueberries, but these wild ones are delicious).
Last week Michelle and I were nest searching in a territory with birds that
were not being very cooperative (they were just foraging and preening instead
of doing anything nesty). She started moseying around trying to get the birds
to give us some indication of where they were nesting when she stumbled across
this massive patch of blueberries. We both immediately quit on those birds and
started picking blueberries for a good half hour or more. Hey, if the birds get
to forage, so do we! We followed little patches of blueberry bushes all the way
back to the truck. As long as it took to pick all of those berries, they were
gone in about 5 minutes. We started collecting more throughout the week so
Michelle could bake this super delicious blueberry cobbler thing. *Drool*
Speaking of baking things, on my day off I baked some of
my mom’s No Bake Cookies to surprise Sheena on her birthday last week. They
were also delicious, if I do say so myself! That night we went to Emily’s house
for a Girl’s Night – we watched Amelie, ate Chinese food and cookies, played
Scattergories, and just hung out. We had a great time!
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| Northern Bobwhite |
Last weekend our whole office had a little potluck at
Greg’s house. He lives next to a lake, so we ate lunch and then went swimming!
The swimming was pretty brief, actually. There was this huge float thing tied
down next to a dock, so we swam over to that and then just lay on that for
ages, tried knocking each other off of it, and were just silly. It was so much
fun, and WAY better than lying on the beach – it gets too hot too quickly on
the beach, so you always have to jump back in the water, but on the float
you’re basically lying in a little pool of water. It’s perfect! After that,
some of us spontaneously decided to go to the new X-Men movie, so we hustled
over to the movie theaters (still dripping wet) to catch the last cheap-o
showing of the day. We were worried we wouldn’t be able to sit together, it
being Saturday of opening weekend, but the guy selling tickets laughed and said
the theater wasn’t even half full. This is Avon Park for you (actually, it was
Sebring – Avon Park doesn’t even have a movie theater). But yes – the movie was
great, in a WTF kind of way. Definitely recommend it.
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Clockwise from top left: Greg S., Greg T., Jacob, Michelle, Emily, Me, Sheena, Britta (Dustin was taking the picture) |
Last week I also watched Captain Phillips for the first
time and that movie was amazing! You should definitely watch it if you haven’t
(or re-watch it if you have). And as for books, I read The Fault in Our Stars
(movie coming out in June) and it was so cute and heartbreakingly good.
(Teenage cancer chick falls in love with teenage cancer dude. Nothing bad could
happen there...) I also read Divergent and it was fantastic. Very reminiscent
of The Hunger Games, if you liked those books. Waiting to borrow Insurgent
(second in the trilogy) from the library, and reading The Dive from Clausen’s
Pier in the meantime.
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| Gator wandering through the scrub! |
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