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NaturePhotographers > Ethan Winning  > Day Trips and National Parks > Walnut Creek Open Space & The 3 Seasons of Mt. Diablo
I've laid out this gallery in order to show all the aspects of the Walnut Creek Open Space and Diablo, and my last five years of hiking the trails. All three seasons are represented, but not in order. I hope you get the idea as to the diversity of wildlife and just the "atmosphere" of the area which often changes daily. There are more than 150 species of wildflowers, 110 of birds - residents and migrants and just occasional visitors, and 30 species of butterflies. I have no idea how many types of insects and spiders are here, but enough to get my heart pumping when I see or get bitten by one! It's magical if you just stop to enjoy it. So, for some of you, STOP jogging and get off your bikes. You don't know what you're missing.

Mt. Diablo is MY mountain. The Walnut Creek Open Space is MY open space, and here's why we have to keep it OPEN:

Mt. Diablo is a unique 4,000 foot mountain towering over the East Bay of San Francisco. It can be seen from roughly 400 square miles (see Wikipedia). It has three distinct climate changes: green and flowered spring, hot, brown summer, and a sometimes snowy winter. But as you will see in the first photo, winter can bring snow to the peaks, green grasslands to the mid-range, and colorful trees at the base. For a list of the wildlife on Diablo, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mt._Diablo. The wildlife that is pictured in this gallery represents maybe 70 percent of them in the Walnut Creek Open Space, the latter comprised of Lime Ridge, Shell Ridge, Acalanes Ridge, and Sugarloaf Open Space(s). Every week is something new, sometimes every day but I have to keep my eyes open. You never know when you might spy a fork-tailed brush katydid nymph on a California Poppy or a four-foot Western Rattlesnake just crossing your path.
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Ethan Winning > Acorn Woodpecker and Mourning Dove at Trough
Ethan Winning > "Hey, Ma! Why are my toes on backwards?"

Three feet from its nest, and was being coaxed by its mother to go hunting on his own. He is flying, but if like other Cooper's, not too good at hunting.
Ethan Winning > "Red-shafted" Northern Flicker - Adult Male

The first Northern Flicker I saw was three weeks ago. I didn't think I'd ever get more shots of it, but now I know which two trees are their favorites, and I must have seen six or eight this morning. It's got to be mating season, and not just for them. Of course, they just might be confused by 66 degree temps at the end of November. Or maybe they're just horny. Lord knows the geese are - all of them, all the time.
Ethan Winning > Golden-crowned Sparrow
Ethan Winning > "It's a Big World Out There"

Lesser Goldfinch
Ethan Winning > Wildflowers photo
Ethan Winning > Monarch Butterfly - Next Morning
Ethan Winning > Fog Rolls In Over Berkeley Hills to Walnut Creek Open Space
Ethan Winning > Variegated Meadowhawk
Ethan Winning > Warbling Vireo With Caterpillar in Buckeye Tree

Since I don't have a gallery for Vireos, I'll just use the "warble" part.
Ethan Winning > White-crowned Sparrow - Spring 2012

Sometimes you just can't control the background
Ethan Winning > Bullock's Oriole
Ethan Winning > Tarantula Hawk -  Pepsis thisbe

Black antennae are the only difference from the Pepsis formosa wasp
Ethan Winning > Lark Sparrow - Spring 2012
Ethan Winning > Lesser Goldfinch
Fog Rolls In Over Berkeley Hills to Walnut Creek Open Space
Ethan Winning > Fog Rolls In Over Berkeley Hills to Walnut Creek Open Space
Fog Rolls In Over Berkeley Hills to Walnut Creek Open Space
Camera: Canon (Canon Powershot Sx40 Hs) |
more details: exif |
original size: 3995px x 2008px |
Current: 600px x 302px |
Other sizes: S • Medium • L |
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Keywords: fog rolls 3462
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