This is the first of two baby fence lizards that got into the house in
the last few weeks. I guess I can't really blame them: it's getting
cold outside, even for an endotherm.
It's funny how we always start seeing lots of baby lizards when the weather
seems like it's getting too cold for reptiles to be out and about.
Maybe the little ones just haven't learned yet that they should find a nice
burrow to wait out the winter.
We usually capture spiders and crickets in the house with a cup and
card, and escort them outside.
But lizards are a lot harder to capture than spiders.
Even with cooperative hunting — Dave holds the cup and sneaks up
on the lizard while I try to herd the lizard toward him —
lizards are fast, and there are so many possible hiding places.
This lizard didn't duck under the cabinets, the hole you can see in
the photo. Instead it went the other direction and dove into the
heater vent. We pulled the vent cover and left a little ramp so the
lizard could get back up easily; later in the day, we found it, caught
it and escorted it outside. As we did the second lizard (assuming it
was a different one), a few days later.
I hope they've found a nice place to hibernate.
Tags: lizard, reptiles, nature
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11:47 Nov 18, 2022
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A short hike today to Lake Ranch above Los Gatos gave us nice views
of three killdeer, a duck family with six ducklings, a hunting egret
and a host of other birds. But on the way back, we met an unusual
little fellow on the trail.
It was a young alligator lizard, one of the smallest I've seen -- which
is still fairly sizeable for a lizard, maybe eight or ten inches long
including the long slim tail.
In typical alligator lizard fashion,
it was lying motionless on the trail. So in typical Dave and Akkana
fashion, we whipped out our cameras and switched into macro mode.
Alligator lizards are normally very placid. It's hard to get them to
move under any circumstances, as long as you don't touch them.
You can shoot photos from all angles,
get the camera right up where you have to shoot a panorama to get the
whole tail in, move around to the other side and get a different angle,
and the lizard won't move.
Imagine our surprise, then, when the little one opened its mouth and
started threatening us!
Dave pulled back his camera (it's his a new toy, so I was letting him
shoot the up-close macros while I stayed what I thought was a
comfortable foot away) and the beast turned on me and started
advancing, mouth still open. I snapped a few shots while pulling back
slowly. Then he made a rush for me.
I pulled my camera, and fingers, up out of his reach -- supposedly
alligator lizards can bite, though it's hard to see any evidence of
teeth in the photos -- and he rushed my shoes. I lifted the foot he
was headed for, and he darted under my shoe, turned on a dime and
skittered toward Dave's hiking shoe. But I guess when he got there he
didn't find it quite as vulnerable as he'd hoped, so he turned again
and ran off toward the side of the trail, leaving us stunned -- and
doubled over with laughter.
I actually tried to shoot a video of his advance, but once he rushed
me I was too busy getting out of his way and missed most of the action.
Evidently I'm not quite ready to shoot those National Geo documentaries.
That's a bit of dry leaf on his forehead, in case you're wondering.
Here's what Dave was doing that got the little lizard annoyed.
The adult alligator lizards we see don't mind that a bit ... honest!
Tags: nature, reptiles, lizard
[
22:01 Jun 29, 2012
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