South TX Specialist Certification 2/2/2020
Dave Scott with the Earth Native Wilderness School hosted a Track and Sign Specialist Certification in deep South Texas on February 1-2, 2020. Specialist Certifications are arduous. Participants have to answer 57 very difficult questions over 2 days. Two evaluators (1 local and 1 external) are present at Specialist Certifications to ensure reliability and consistency. Casey McFarland served as external evaluator.
We were staying at the Cactus Creek Ranch neighboring the Laguna Atascosa Wildlife Refuge. This is an amazing location filled with amazing birds and a diverse array of wildlife. Probably the favorite finds of the weekend were tracks of a bobcat carrying prey, sandhill crane tracks, a Texas tortoise burros, alligator tracks and scat, and nilgai antelope tracks. See the photos below.
Huge congratulations to Nick Czaplewski for earning his Track & Sign Specialist Certificate. This is a huge accomplishment and takes years of preparation. Thanks to Cactus Creek Ranch for allowing us to camp and explore the property, Laguna Atascosa for allowing access, Thadea Corkill for opening up her house to all of us, Gene and Sara Cannon for assisting and Dave and Mikki Scott for organizing.
Coyote Scat
2 walking deer
It-begins
Deer front track in gallop
Woodrat nest in prickly pear
Deer feeding sign
Dog takeoff
Nilgai
Casey-being-an-animal
Explaining-tracks-1
Feral Hog
Nilgai Feeding
Crab Burrow
Tree sap drippings
Alligator Uric Acid
Heron/egret cough pellet
Heron Scat
Alligator Track
Alligator Track
Alligator Burrow
Bobcat carrying prey
Raccoon Left Front Track
Texas tortoise burrow
Nutria Tracks
Opossum tracks
Explaining-tracks-2
Wolf spider hole
Coyote tracks
Something-confusing
Nutria Tracks
Explaining-tracks-3
Sandhill crane tracks
Armadillo shell
Fiddler crab feeding
Under-the-Texas-Sky
Deer paused/looked right
Hog tracks
Explaining-tracks-4
Bobcat Tracks
Getting-a-closer-look
Striped Skunk Tracks
Woodrat Tracks
Deer humerus bone
Feral hog scat
Great-tailed grackle tracks
Hog rub
Explaining-tracks-5
Praying mantis ootheca (egg case)
Nilgai Scat
Roadrunner tail feather
Juvenile pig skull
Group-Photo
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Nick
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Hi Jonah, On that deer pausing and looking left, could it have been looking right? The right front track seems to point toward the side, away from the main direction of travel. If it looked right, wouldn’t that be the case? If it looked left, wouldn’t the left front track be the one that pointed outward, away from the main direction of travel? Just curious. Thanks!
Thanks Kim! Fixed it. Don’t worry, we asked it right. Just got mixed up when labeling a bunch of photos.