A brisk walk at Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge with the dogs last November. We encountered a small alligator, but the dogs didn’t notice…
Tag Archives: Pets
Cooled and ready
Excited to move on
Rollin’ in the mud
The dermestid mystery: solved
About a year ago, I noticed Amos frequently and obsessively scratching himself, and, after some searching, I discovered a single flea. I promptly treated him, but often felt something crawling on my legs and arms in my bed when I went to sleep. I would usually panic a bit – oh no! fleas in my bed! – but invariably, I would find that the insect responsible for disturbing a few leg hairs were Dermestid beetles. Beetles in this family are frequently used to strip flesh from carcasses and clean bone and are not known to be harmful or even bite.
I couldn’t figure out where they came from, but I was glad they weren’t fleas. The problem disappeared shortly after I started noticing them, but recently returned. I was still without an answer to the beetles’ origins, until yesterday. I moved an ottoman away from my bed, and discovered this milk bone, covered in holes and the little dermestid beetles running out of them. Amos is a peculiar dog: he will often hide his treats, rather than promptly eating them, and apparently, he forgot about this one.
Without a microscope but with Google Image Search, I managed to tentatively identify the beetles as Lasioderma serricorne, cigarette beetles, which are Anobiids, not Dermestids (the ‘furriness’ suggested to me that they were dermestids at first). In any case, I’ll be sure Amos isn’t allowed to hide his treats any longer.
Priorities
Hiking through the park – the number one priority is keeping cool.
Eva doesn’t need a bridge
Eva decided not to use the bridge to cross a channel. She made two attempts to jump back up onto the trail, as was very excited to have achieved her second attempt.
Swimming in the Intercoastal
Amos and Eva cool off in the intercoastal waterway at Skidaway Island State Park.
Rollin’ to keep cool
One More Dog Photo
I’ve now arrived in Las Cruces, which is another field station operated by the Organization for Tropical Studies (Las Selva and Palo Verde are the other two in Costa Rica).
The past couple of days, I spent visiting Boa in Pandora (Valle de La Estrella) on the south end of the Caribbean slope. Of course, I have more pictures of my dogs that I could post, but hopefully I’ll get into posting some more interesting and diverse subject… for now, here’s a photo of one of Boa’s four dogs. She’s 6 months old and extremely playful.