NFR Got any mammal pictures

Non-fishing related
They like the paths...calories in calories out for this guy...there's not many rabbits anymore, so they'll be gone soon...I think.

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Billie Frank Jr. - Nisqually NWR, early-mid April. Mammals I: American mink. When I’m birding, I am listening to every sound, even the lightest rustle of dry leaves. I’m looking for any motion in my peripheral vision. Any little ripple in a canal draws my attention. I feel like an overweight hyperactive pointer or spaniel - total focus (just like when I’m flyfishing in a stream).
That intense focus has paid off on several recent visits to Nisqually NWR. My wife and I had reached just beyond the picnic area by the Twin Barns when I caught a ripple in the canal adjacent to the boardwalk. A quick look with my binocs showed that the ripple’s source was an American mink!!!
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It climbed from the canal’s edge onto the moss-covered trunk of a downed big-leaf maple.
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It moved along the trunk quickly as I tried to keep it in focus while clicking the shutter of my camera as fast as I could. It was really focused as it moved.
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Fortunately, it paused on the trunk for a few seconds to do some quick grooming.
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Look at the length of those front claws!!! Its fur is such a rich chocolate color. Then, the mink disappeared into a clump of dried big-leaf maple leaves that were caught in some branches. After a minute. it bounded out and disappeared down the bank of the canal. A first for me in at least 50 trips to Nisqually.
Steve
 
Billie Frank Jr. - Nisqually NWR, early-mid April. Mammals II: muskrat. I saw my first muskrats at Nisqually one day last summer; they were slurping down duckweed. This spring, I have been fortunate to see them (at least three separate individuals) on three trips.
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The active individuals were gnawing on green cattail stems, just as you might expect.
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Steve
 
Billie Frank Jr. - Nisqually NWR, early-mid April. Mammals I: American mink. When I’m birding, I am listening to every sound, even the lightest rustle of dry leaves. I’m looking for any motion in my peripheral vision. Any little ripple in a canal draws my attention. I feel like an overweight hyperactive pointer or spaniel - total focus (just like when I’m flyfishing in a stream).
That intense focus has paid off on several recent visits to Nisqually NWR. My wife and I had reached just beyond the picnic area by the Twin Barns when I caught a ripple in the canal adjacent to the boardwalk. A quick look with my binocs showed that the ripple’s source was an American mink!!!
View attachment 183525
It climbed from the canal’s edge onto the moss-covered trunk of a downed big-leaf maple.
View attachment 183526
It moved along the trunk quickly as I tried to keep it in focus while clicking the shutter of my camera as fast as I could. It was really focused as it moved.
View attachment 183527
Fortunately, it paused on the trunk for a few seconds to do some quick grooming.
View attachment 183528
Look at the length of those front claws!!! Its fur is such a rich chocolate color. Then, the mink disappeared into a clump of dried big-leaf maple leaves that were caught in some branches. After a minute. it bounded out and disappeared down the bank of the canal. A first for me in at least 50 trips to Nisqually.
Steve
Great photos! Back in Vermont I often shared two of my fishing spots with mink. They would swim and dive along eddy seams and come up with a meal and crunch it up. I'm pretty sure they were eating crayfish, but they might have caught fish, too.
 
Must be Hobo Marmots . . . (focus isn't real sharp - took these at 1600mm and 140 yards or so. Sometimes . . . "You gotta pick the fruit where you find the tree." Sony Clear Image Zoom is a useful tool!).
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