As April
slowly drifts off to meld within the mist of memory ....
.... not too long
ago, photographs of a mountain lion feasting on a dead buck in the middle of
the night were featured here. Today, we have a photograph of a bobcat on a mid-afternoon
stroll taken by the same inexpensive trail camera about ten feet from where the
mountain lion posed with the deer.
From Wikipedia:
Bobcats range from Canada to Mexico. They prefer rabbits and hares, but will
hunt insects, chickens, geese and other birds, small rodents and deer. Prey
selection depends on location and habitat, season and abundance. Like most
cats, the bobcat is territorial and largely solitary. An adult stands about 12
to 24 inches at the shoulders. Adult males range in weight from 14 to 40
pounds, with an average of 21 pounds. There are unverified reports of them
reaching 60 pounds. Females average around 15 pounds.
One dictionary
definition of a neighbor is a person, place or thing located near another. I guess
that makes Lonnie Lion and Bobby Bobcat (or should that be Lori Lion and Bonnie
Bobcat) sort of my neighbors. Both photographs were taken about forty yards
away from the house in which I formerly was a fulltime resident and one in
which my son now lives and I am a periodic accomplice.
For obvious
reasons, we shall hope that the paths of these two "kitty kats" never cross ....
Just for fun, we
have three videos here. The first is Piano Concerto No 1, B Flat Minor, Op 23,
by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. The second is "Alone at Last," a song
written by Johnny Lehmann and performed by Jackie Wilson. Notice any
similarity? I think it falls under the category of imitation being the
sincerest form of flattery -- or something like that. For those unfamiliar with the players in this game, Tchaikovsky's piece came nearly a century before "alone."
The third is the
Rolling Stones performing "Love in Vain," in 1972 somewhere in Texas. The guitar solo work is by Mick Taylor, whose face first
appears about 2:51 and who many would argue is among the best -- if not the
actual best -- guitar player ever to set foot on a stage. To each, his/her own ....