Up here, rabbit/hare populations work in a seven year cycle
Where exactly is that again ?Bunnies are seen in groups...
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Cat butt.
Very cool, that’s one of my addictions as well. This is from a quest for Coues, not predators however.That's how it was in Aridzona, too.
In peak years blacktail jacks were as thick as bugs. The county and state highways were practically paved with squishees, and people would find them stuck in their car's grill when they stopped for gas.
Then, without warning, they disappeared over a couple weeks. The population dropped to 5% or so, and the cycle began again.
The fun part was the peak-year summers brought hungry critters down from the mountains and out of their dens like nothing else. Mountain lions, coyotes, hawks, and so forth.
Made for spectacular varmint hunting, too. Long range from the hillsides morning and evening when they were moving, and walking them up quail-style when it was hot and they were resting in shadows.
(Couldn't eat the things, though. Besides stringy and essentially meatless, they carried all manner of disease-y crap you didn't want to be exposed to by physical contact.)
Here's my buddy Dave eyeballing a spot we called The Gallery. (He was a Pan Am Games pistol champion and Olympic Team alternate)
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The view from where he is sitting:
(The denser line of vegetation is an arroyo 400 yards out. Made for convenient range estimation in pre-laser days)
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On the mechanized prowl for a fresh walk-up area:
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Very cool, that’s one of my addictions as well. This is from a quest for Coues, not predators however.
Still fun in AZ, did you live here for a spell?
Thought that cat had human feet. Flat at that. Lynx? Bobcat?
I got one to top that. Saw a baby bunny and little squirrel "fighting" like that and at one point the squirrel jumped at the bunny who tried to dodge and they both smacked into each others heads making a tiny little coconut sounds. The squirrel got spun ass over head a few times. And yeah they both kind of went back to their own corner to lick their wounds.Talking common garden bunnies here, not some exotic/rare species.
I was sitting on my porch enjoying the low humidity, 77 degree, faint-occasional-breeze weather with a cigar a few minutes ago, and watched two CGBs doing something I've never seen before.
Think bullfight inside a five foot circle. One in the center, always turning to face the "charger", then jumping straight up about a foot at the last split second so the charging rabbit went underneath him. Then they'd both spin to face each other and after 3-4 seconds they'd do it again. Rinse, repeat probably 20 times.
One target bunny, one charger. They never switched roles.
I figure it was either ritualized combat between to males, some sort of mating dance between two soon-to-be Lover Bunnies, or youngsters simply playing a game they made up.
Anyone know?
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In case anyone's interested, this turned out to be a real National Geographic moment. This little falcon pounced on an unsuspecting bunny that was lounging in the grass. I had the binoculars on hand and caught the whole thing ... the little paws trying to fight back against the talons. It was quite a show .Surplus bunnies -1
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