Wild animals in your yard and around your home.

edited April 2012 in General Chat
I have this thread on my other 'home' forum, and figure it could work well here too.

Living on the edge of a large section of native forest reserve means I get some pretty cool bugs & birds visiting the yard. So I'd like to present a "Look what I found in my yard today" thread where hopefully you might learn a little about New Zealand fauna as you check out what I have photographed.

Everyone else is encouraged to contribute with photos of wild animals from their own yards, of course, but I do ask that you provide actual photos you have taken (don't have to be good quality), not just links to other's photos of the same animal found on the internet. But you can provide links to wikipedia or whatever so people can find out more about the animals you're presenting (and see better photos!).

Try and size your photos down to 'forum-width friendly' too, if you can.

Without further ado, here's my first creature;

Cave Weta

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Wetas are a primitive cricket. There are several distinct species (yes, that's what Peter Jackson named his FX company after - an in-joke can be seen in the King Kong trailer when a swarm of giant Weta attack Jack Black's character). The Cave Weta has huge spindly legs and long antenna and can jump a couple of metres at a time. This one would be about 20-25cm long if its legs were fully stretched out including antennae). They are harmless, though because of their size and ability to jump so high, they do frighten people.

One of the cats brought this guy in, but I rescued it before any damage was done. And even though they're more common in caves, they live in all sorts of dark secluded areas.

And as this is the opening post, here's a couple more...

Here is a lovely Tree Weta in our courtyard which, while similar looking to the Cave Weta above is actually from a different order altogether. The kids found it in their playhouse last week. They're a primitive cricket, and in the shot on the planter box he's trying to scare us away by raising his hind legs and splaying his jaws & waving his antenna around wildly. Mighty impressive. The head-to-body length which you can see better in the picture in he tree is about 7cm. A pretty good specimen all round.

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This hedgehog had fallen down a drain in our path. So I put on a glove & pulled him out. He was a decent size too. Goodness knows how long he was stuck down there, but considering the rain we'd had, I'd say probably less than 2 days.

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Hedgehogs were introduced to NZ by european settlers. They're a bit of a pest, raiding the nests of our numerous ground-dwelling birds etc, but you don't see them too often. And they are kinda cute.


OK, now show me yours!
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Comments

  • edited May 2010
    I'm relieved you did post pictures of spiders, considering I'm arachnophobic. If anyone wants to post some, please warn before you do :)

    I haven't checked for small animals at all (by the way, your second cricket-thingie, in the first picture, looks like it's pulling its tongue or something lol. What is it, actually?).

    There was a stray cats who followed us home and adopted us, his name is Lumpy because he was, well, Lumpy (he had two hernias). He might have gone to us for help or something. He was definitely a stray and not a lost or abandoned pet. That was in October.
    Here are recent pictures:
    Lumpy posing (seriously, he only looks all proud like that for the camera):

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    Lumpy being normal:

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    We live by a river. In late October, or maybe early November, we saw on the other side of the river what seemed to be a dark brown cat. Then we saw a second one a bit further, but I noticed it was carrying a branch in its mouth. Something didn't compute, and that's when we realised they were beavers.
    Although the river was partially frozen, they were building a dam on it. We looked at them for a bit then left. I don't have any pictures though.
  • edited May 2010
    I have some fantastic spider pics to post, but I will hide them in spoiler tags.

    I can understand some people being scared of spiders, but can't really get my head around being afraid of pictures of spiders. Oh well.

    I'm not too sure about the finer points of Weta mouth parts, but yes, that flap does look like a tongue in the first Tree Weta picture.
  • edited May 2010
    jp-30 wrote: »
    I have some fantastic spider pics to post, but I will hide them in spoiler tags.

    I can understand some people being scared of spiders, but can't really get my head around being afraid of pictures of spiders. Oh well.

    Well, I used to have a panic attack when I read/heard the word in any language (as long as I knew what it meant) so I'm doing much better already!
    I don't think you can post pictures in spoilers though. They appear anyways, I think. Maybe linking to them would work?

    It's not like the fear is rational (actually, I think it can only be called a phobia if it's irrational), I'm not scared of them biting me or anything, just of their appearance I guess, so it really doesn't change much if they're in front of me or in a picture. The only difference is how to deal with it (hide the picture vs call my husband xD)
  • edited May 2010
    You're right, pictures don't get hidden by spoiler tags.

    Hmm, not sure what I'll do yet, it'll ruin the flow of the thread to only give links. And if we have to avoid posting spiders for arachnophobes, then we'll have to avoid posting snakes, birds, rodents, frogs... and anything else people might be afraid of.

    I'll give good warning & spoiler space though when I do post spider photos, I promise.
  • edited May 2010
    Yeah, and there are people who have a phobia of cats and I already posted pictures, and so on. You can't really post pictures of anything if you have to be careful about everyone else. So don't worry about it, as long as you keep saying before a picture what it's a picture of I'll just make sure not to scroll down if it's a spider.

    I used to love phasms. Someone I knew had lots of them as pets, they're awesome. I didn't really stop loving them as much as I stopped seeing any. I still think they're pretty awesome.
  • ShauntronShauntron Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    My backyard has like four oak trees, which makes it a squirrel park! I took a video of those critters, maybe I will post it...
  • edited May 2010
    You should! We don't have any native land mammals in New Zealand*, so animals like raccoons and squirrels really fascinate me.


    * We do have a lot of introduced animals that have become pests like possums, hedgehogs, rats, mice, rabbits, weasels, ferrets, stoats, deer, goats, pigs etc.
  • edited May 2010
    Oh man, I saw an awesome animated gif recently. It had a GIANT SPIDER and it was being swarmed by enough smaller spiders to have their tiny little bodies completely cover every bit of the large spider's body. I don't know if they were baby spiders swarming and eating their mother(as I think at least some spiders are wont to do), but it looked amazing.

    ...

    Oh, and yeah, we only get the common squirrel around here, and those things are about as camera shy as they are boring.
    Avistew wrote: »
    Something didn't computer, and that's when we realised they were beavers.
    I'm not sure if that's just a typo or if you got the phrase wrong, and I'm not sure if I'm being a jerk by pointing this out, but that should be "didn't compute". A "computer" is a thing that "computes"(reckons/calculates/deduces by means of calculation/etc), rather than the act of deducing/adding something up/realizing something by means of deduction/etc.
  • edited May 2010
    Squirrels are boring to you, but not to people who live in countries without squirrels.

    Also, Dashing, do typos really need all that explanation?


    This native owl (also found in Australia and the South Pacific islands) called a Morepork in NZ due to its distinctive 2-note call was sitting on the power lines outside our house last week.

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  • puzzleboxpuzzlebox Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    Nice thread, jp-30.
    Shauntron wrote: »
    My backyard has like four oak trees, which makes it a squirrel park! I took a video of those critters, maybe I will post it...
    we only get the common squirrel around here, and those things are about as camera shy as they are boring.

    I love squirrels! The way they move is so fluid and graceful, they're lovely to watch. I don't find them boring at all, maybe because I'd never seen one until a few years ago. I'll take some pics of the grey squirrels in the park/graveyard behind my building to post later.

    For now, here are some fat little robins. They're so bright and round, I always enjoy seeing them. Both of these photos were taken in winter last year.

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    Males and females have the same colouring. These are European robins, which are different to American robins.
  • EmilyEmily Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    Two years in a row, we've had mallard ducklings hatch in the backyard. There were twelve this year.

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    Luckily they were able to follow their mom away from the nest and out of the yard without falling in the pool. (Last year, that wasn't the case...)

    There are also tons of wild turkeys in our neighborhood.

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    This is just a few of them. There are dozens of these guys living in the open space behind my house.

    We also have tons of brown lizards in the yard, and deer, and the occasional heron. Oh, and the elusive Italian Greyhuahua.
  • edited May 2010
    Shauntron wrote: »
    My backyard has like four oak trees, which makes it a squirrel park! I took a video of those critters, maybe I will post it...

    Please do.

    I personally find squirrels hilarious, especially the ones on campus, which are so fat that they can barely walk anymore. I will now be taking my camera everywhere to see if I can get some of these fat squirrels in action. Or inaction.
  • edited May 2010
    I'm not sure if that's just a typo or if you got the phrase wrong

    It was a typo. I do that thing sometimes when my fingers remember typing a word often and just type it instead of the word I wanted to type. I can usually catch it when it's different enough, but didn't notice there. Thanks for pointing it out, and thanks for explaining in case it wasn't a typo :)
  • edited May 2010
    Great Robin photos, puzzlebox. We have a "robin" here, but it was so named as it reminded settlers of the European Robin. It's no relation. They don't make it as far as my house, but they are able to be seen on a forest walk about 10 minutes drive from home. It's kind of cheating, but I may post some photos of those if I start running out of animals around the house.


    When our flaxes start flowering, we get lots of visits from the native Tui (pr. too-eee) eating the nectar from the flowers.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tui_(bird)

    Beautiful birds - the iridescent sheen isn't so noticeable in the photos, unfortunately. They're about 30-35cm long and have a distinctive whirring wing sound in flight.

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    They have a strange and lovely song too, though some of it is above human hearing range. You can see them singing away with their distinctive white throat feather bobbing around, but half the time can't hear a note.
  • edited May 2010
    Somewhere around my house, I have a picture of a squirrel that somehow managed to get into our house (probably down the chimney or something) and was sitting on the curtain rod above our back door when we got home. The thing freaked out and ran off. We didn't find it again until that night, in mine and my sister's closet. We ended up having to move the furniture around to force it out toward the back door.
  • edited May 2010
    Those weta creatures are really interesting; I'd never heard of those before!

    I live in the countryside, so sometimes we have a few animal visitors. Mostly birds; probably the most colourful one we see here is the chaffinch. We've been getting a lot of magpies here lately too. And there's a gigantic pigeon, who seems to have decided that our garden is it's home.

    Last year I managed to record some footage of a squirrel that ran around our garden. It was quite tame for a wild animal.

    Over the past few weeks we've seen rats too; they've been stealing food from our guinea-pigs when they've been let out the hutch!

    And a couple of months ago a fox kept coming into our garden. It looked very healthy, and wasn't scrawny like most of the foxes we see in our neighbourhood. But, as a guinea-pig owner, every time it came into the garden I had to chase it back out immediately!

    Two years ago, I found a newt in our shed. That was pretty random. I do have a photo of this somewhere.
  • edited May 2010
    I hope you last two manage to find those photos at some point! Also, Hi Emily!

    A year and a half or so back, my Mum turns up at my placeafter a long flight (up in my city for her latest grandchild birth (via my brother and his wife) and for a funeral of an uncle).

    I hear the car pull up, so open the front door... and this rather large and beautiful frog leaps in from the front porch and hops around the lounge. Thought for a second a witch must have put a hex on Mum, but no, Mum was still getting out of the car.

    Anyway we caught it and put it in an aquarium so the kids could see it the next day. We let it go in a nearby pond, but here's my daughter holding the lovely creature.

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    I used to go catching frogs when I was a kid, had pet frogs for years, but never did I have one leap through my front door on its own accord.
  • edited May 2010
    We live in a developing area that was previously farmland, so there's quite a few larger animals hopping around still... And I do mean hopping. The other day I saw a kangaroo and her joey bounding along the footpath on the other side of the road. My dad once almost ran over a young koala crossing the road, too.
    In the winter, we get mice living in a hole under the barbeque, and wolf spiders regularly sneak into the house. In the summer, there is an infestation of cane toads, which everybody takes great pleasure in crushing with their cars or spraying to death with Dettol. :D
    Thanks to the dog, the birds tend to avoid our house. Before we got him back from customs, two peewees would hang around, and my sister named them Yoda and Leia.

    I need to replace the batteries in my camera. Then I can get some pictures to show off. :D
  • puzzleboxpuzzlebox Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    As promised, squirrel pics! And a city pigeon as a bonus (there were wood pigeons too, but they can wait for another time). I really lucked out this afternoon because there was a guy feeding unshelled peanuts to the urban wildlife.

    These are grey squirrels, which are not native to Britain - they were introduced from North America and compete with the native red squirrel for food and habitat. They are also carriers of a disease that affects red squirrels (but not greys), and can digest unripe nuts etc whereas red squirrels can't. Basically, they are bad news for the red squirrel, which is now quite rare (I've never seen one).

    These guys are super-fast, it's hard to catch them in motion.

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    This greedy feral pigeon was chugging down whole peanuts right from the hand. You can see his tongue in this pic. NOM NOM NOM.

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    A lot of people seem to hate pigeons ("rats with wings" etc), and I guess they are an invasive species, but they can be beautiful birds in their own way... look at the iridescent sheen on this guy.

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  • edited May 2010
    We had a pretty bad outbreak of zombies in our yard recently... we got a shot of them:

    Plantsvszombies.jpg

    Our garden held them off, thankfully.
  • edited May 2010
    I'm afraid I don't have any pictures, I'll need to get round to taking some, but until then you'll just have to take my word for the following text :P

    We have the usual around here, neighbour cats and dogs like to come in and out of our garden. We also have birds. Crows, Pigeons, Swallows.

    Sometimes we do have the odd exotic animal, at least exotic around here. The biggest is a fox that occasionally wanders around. One time it was in our garden for a while. They actually look surprisingly cute for wild animals.

    The most bizarre thing wasn't found in our garden, but in my gran's. It was some kind of insect, it looked like a wasp or a hornet, but it wasn't either. The most distinguishing feature was that looked like a massive stinger at least as long as the insect itself, which was already pretty big. I can't remember what it was called now, but it looked pretty cool.

    It was a Wood Wasp.
  • puzzleboxpuzzlebox Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    Zonino wrote: »
    Sometimes we do have the odd exotic animal, at least exotic around here. The biggest is a fox that occasionally wanders around. One time it was in our garden for a while. They actually look surprisingly cute for wild animals.

    They do, don't they? They're a feral pest in Australia, but here in the UK I feel my adoration is legitimate. :p

    One of the windows in my old apartment had a view over next door's garden (I use the term "garden" loosely, as you can see it's not exactly in immaculate condition). One day I happened to be looking out the window and saw this fox padding around... eventually he found a place to curl up and took a nap in the leaves. He's pretty well camouflaged!

    It was exciting for me because you rarely see animals this size in the city.


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  • edited May 2010
    Love that fox!

    My wife & kids went for a walk along a short trail that's been put through the reserve behind our property. At the end they found a beautiful forest gecko sitting on a gatepost at the entrance to a right-of-way where the trail ends.

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    I told my brother who was living with us at the time and who's an ecologist. We decided because a bunch of the street's young bogan boys hang around there, that the lizard would be safer if moved off the conspicuous post.

    We brought it back to out place and let it go on a huge Kanuka tree (their favoured dwelling) that borders our yard and the reserve, but not before my kids had a good close look!

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  • edited May 2010
    I don't have any pictures (unfortunately) but last year, as I was leaving my dorm room in the early morning I stumbled across two deer just standing right outside the dorm, eating all of the vegetation in sight... right next to the path. It was pretty awesome.

    What made it weird is that my college is in the middle of a city.
  • puzzleboxpuzzlebox Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    jp-30 wrote: »
    they found a beautiful forest gecko sitting on a gatepost at the entrance to a right-of-way where the trail ends.

    Wow, it's amazing how its eyes have the same colour/pattern as its skin. Looks like it's covered in lichen or something (I guess that's the point!).
    I don't have any pictures (unfortunately) but last year, as I was leaving my dorm room in the early morning I stumbled across two deer just standing right outside the dorm, eating all of the vegetation in sight... right next to the path. It was pretty awesome.

    Haha, that must have been a bit of a "what the ...?" moment. :)

    Sometimes it's good not to have a camera at times like that, because you get to experience the moment completely, rather than worrying about taking a picture.
  • edited May 2010
    puzzlebox wrote: »
    Haha, that must have been a bit of a "what the ...?" moment. :)

    Sometimes it's good not to have a camera at times like that, because you get to experience the moment completely, rather than worrying about taking a picture.

    It most definitely was. Then I realized that the stag had really huge antlers and decided that I would much rather be somewhere else, preferably out of range.
  • edited May 2010
    SPIDER SPIDER SPIDER

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    I went out looking for one of these spiders as the live under planks and bits of wood on the ground, and obviously found one. I don't know what it is exactly, but I think it may be a type of Huntsman Spider. One variation, the Avondale Spider, was used in the movie Arachnophobia a few years back. The one I have in my hand isn't as big as those ones, but still pretty impressive.

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    A web appeared on a shrub by our front door last month. The eggs inside hatched, and Mum was out guarding her brood.

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    It's a Nursery Web Spider.

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    A stunning looking spider!

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    OK SAFE TO LOOK AGAIN NOW!
  • edited May 2010
    I have seen wild duck, deer, bear, fox, and rabbit walk in my yard since I bought the place 10 years ago.
  • edited May 2010
    My garden leads straight onto the woods and I've never seen anything as interesting as what you lot have. I'm jealous. The closest I've got is a couple of phesants, and I think we might have some foxes nearby, but I haven't seen them.

    Having said this, when I was somehing like 6, I looked out my window and saw a deer and her fawn looking through the back gate. Unfortunatly, I don't think they exist in the woods near me any more. Probably got driven out. It's a miracle no one's tried to cut the woods itself down yet to make way for new property really.

    By the way, you lot are fine photographers... for one thing the pictures are in focus!
  • edited May 2010
    I'm saving my blurry ones until my in-focus ones are exhausted! :p
  • edited May 2010
    Just as I was lamenting the fact that I didn't have the pictures of the deer that came by my dorm last year, another deer came right by my window. I got a (rather fuzzy) picture.

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    ...Yeah, I'm not a very good photographer. I'm just happy I got the deer in the shot without cropping off any of its body parts.
  • edited May 2010
    Fantastic. Looks like a Virginia deer or a Mule Deer, maybe?

    This little skink was found running through the dining room, probably brought inside at some stage by a cat. Looks like it's not the first time it's had a tangle with a predator given the tail stump.

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  • edited May 2010
    jp-30 wrote: »
    Fantastic. Looks like a Virginia deer or a Mule Deer, maybe?

    I'm not entirely sure, but I don't think its a Virginia deer, because apparently they aren't very abundant west of the Rocky mountains and I live in California, so most likely a Mule Deer.
  • edited May 2010
    You've effectively convinced me to stay away from New Zealand.
  • edited May 2010
    Because?

    We have no dangerous animals at all, except a rarely seen mildly poisonous spider. No bears, no snakes, no scorpions. Not even allowed to have snakes in our zoos.
  • edited May 2010
    jp-30 wrote: »
    Because?

    We have no dangerous animals at all, except a rarely seen mildly poisonous spider. No bears, no snakes, no scorpions. Not even allowed to have snakes in our zoos.

    Because giant spiders roam the streets, crushing houses beneath their huge disgusting feet.
  • edited May 2010
    Spiders are good for the environment, as they eat a number of other annoying insects that would otherwise create an infestation.

    Mind you, if I see a spider in my house I'm most likely going to kill it.
  • edited May 2010
    You guys are nuts.
  • edited May 2010
    Chyron8472 wrote: »
    Spiders are good for the environment, as they eat a number of other annoying insects that would otherwise create an infestation.

    Mind you, if I see a spider in my house I'm most likely going to kill it.

    Once a Spider started to make a web over my parents bed. My dad decided, in a way, to keep the spider (there) because those spiders are the ones who eat the really dangerous and poison ones. (I think those are a bit bigger than the others, I'm not really sure about it).

    Next day, the Cleaning Lady come in, watched the spider, and kill it. Then my dad was complaining for about a week.
  • puzzleboxpuzzlebox Telltale Alumni
    edited May 2010
    GinnyN wrote: »
    Once a Spider started to make a web over my parents bed. My dad decided, in a way, to keep the spider (there)

    Please make your father watch Day Off (fifth time I've seen it, still burst out laughing at the end).

    I'm looking forward to my next trip back to Oz in July - I'll almost certainly be able to get some huntsman spider pics to freak people out share. I've really enjoyed everyone's contributions so far!
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