A black bear and cub take a swim

After a few months away from this location, I recently returned and reset a trail camera pointing at the small seep-filled pool. Since it has been so dry, despite some monsoon rains, I was hoping this spot would attract wildlife like it had in previous years. This morning I checked the camera and as it turns out, just yesterday there was a fun visit by a sow and her cub. Notice in the first clip of them, the mother bear pulls her cub into the water, encouraging her to swim.

A bear wallow in one of Arizona’s Sky Islands.

Bobcat Catches Fawn

Sensitive content! I did not expect to see this when I checked a couple cameras this morning. While I’ve found several old mountain lion kills based on the surrounding evidence, I’ve never seen anything that I suspected was a bobcat kill. This trail cam capture surprised me because I was not expecting anything like this would be captured by the trail cams, even after years of watching thousands of trail cam videos of deer and other wildlife doing their thing. I’ve reluctantly watched it a few times because while nature is beautiful, she is also brutal. The fawn and her mother are going about their daily business, eating, drinking water… Then in seconds, for the fawn, death appears in the form of a bobcat. Seemingly out of nowhere. Despite our big brain and intelligence, we humans are no different than the fawn. Death is the great equalizer, it can strike us anywhere, anytime.

A bear cub, deer fawns, and ring-tailed cats

This morning I checked a series of trail cams I’ve set up at water sources in a drainage in the mountainous desert near Tucson. These spots have, usually, held water throughout the hot dry season before monsoon rains are due. This year the monsoon rains have been few and far between in this area so these water sources have been a very important resource for local wildlife.

A cinnamon sow and her cub
A ring-tailed cat family
Twin fawns visit Little Bear Pool

More Mountain Lion Action

This location, it turns out, is not just a random mountain lion scrape, but a latrine where several mountain lions (at least two, maybe three), regularly check scents and mark their presence. The latest was this big male mountain lion.

Mountain lion marking action

Bears being bears

It’s the time of year in Arizona when the temps are hot and the black bears are always happy to find a watering hole, either to drink or wallow. The following three videos are from the last few weeks during one of the hottest and driest periods this summer.

The classic wild west style wallow -in the cattle trough
Any water is good water when you’re thirsty
The bear found the bucket used to clean the spring – photo time-lapse

Last Night’s Backyard Wildlife

It was a busy 12 hours from before sundown to right after sunrise last night. An owl, deer, coyotes, raccoons and a bobcat. The first video shows the Great horned owl having a drink in the evening. The second video shows the mangy coyote the next morning. The third video shows all the action from evening to the next morning.

Great horned owl
Mangy coyote
All of last night’s wildlife

A black bear marks trees and inspects a camera

The bear scat trail cam site (see previous post about the mama bear and her scat) has continued to be active, most recently with male black bears coming through and marking two different trees and smelling the old scat. I have two trail cams there now, both on trees that are not bear marking trees. Recently, a curious bear decided to check out one of the cameras. This isn’t the first time a bear decided to mess with one of my cameras, but no damage was done and it shows how curious and aware bears are of their surroundings.

©GregJoder

Backyard Wildlife Action

Here in Tucson the summer heat is upon us. We’re in the somewhat miserable time between the cooler temperatures of spring and the onset of summer monsoons. The highs have been from around 100 to 110 degrees and with most natural water sources having dried up the neighborhood wildlife have been visiting the backyard water sources more frequently. Below are some of the recent visitors:

Mule deer family with twin bucks in velvet
A peccary party with new babies
Thirsty coyotes
Thirsty bobcat

Bear sign and wallow

This morning I checked a few cameras in an area where bears have been active over the last few years. Bears have likely been visiting this spot for ages before I placed cameras there. The first clue of recent activity were new tracks and marks at an old bear marking tree. The second was murky water in the spring pool and wet vegetation nearby.

©GregJoder

This bear seems to have a new injury to his left ear. It must be brutal out there. The stories he could tell… This will also help in IDing this guy if/when he shows up again.

Black bear action

The bear marking tree had some new visitors this week. While I was hoping to see the two yearling cubs again, the camera captured a different fun surprise, a sow with three new cubs (first video). The videos from the previous visit appeared to indicate via sounds that the two older cubs from the other bear family may have tried to climb a tree next to the camera, so last week I placed a second camera looking at that tree. The next surprise was a male bear using that tree as a marking tree (second video).

©GregJoder
©GregJoder