WC Is in Whitewater (Draw)


There’s no sign of whitewater, as an Idahoan understands the term, anywhere near Whitewater Draw Wildlife Management Area in southeast Arizona. But it is a very impressive birding area, particularly for Sandhill Cranes. Here’s a photo gallery from WC’s recent first visit to the birding hot spot. Remember you can click on an image for…

WC Is in Agua Caliente


Literally, not metaphorically. Agua Caliente State Park, in Tucson, Arizona, specifically. WC and Mrs. WC, and her brother, Terry, spent some time birding the park earlier this week. Great fun and nice photo ops. Finding a roosting Northern Sawhet Owl was pretty sweet, too. It’s the first one WC has photographed in about 15 years.…

Inge Lehmann and Earth’s Inner Core


It’s not an exaggeration to say that a lot of early geologists – even as recently as the early 20th Century – were sexist swine. The story of Inge Lehmann illustrates WC’s point and shows even geologists are capable of change. Lehmann was born May 13, 1888, near Copenhagen, Denmark, the eldest of two sisters…

East African Birds: Rollers


Rollers are birds in the family Coraciidae, a small Old World family of birds with just two genera and thirteen species. WC will cheat just a little bit and include a few Asian Roller species in this post. Rollers hunt from a high perch, silhouetted against the bright sky. It makes them tough to photograph.…

Katie John at her fish camp; photo by Erik Hill, Anchorage Daily News

A BUCIP Update: the Alaska Edition


Readers will recall that a BUCIP – pronounced “bew-kip” – is WC’s invention, an acronym for Big, Ugly, Complicated, Intractable Problem. Alaska has more than its share of BUCIPs and, in the past, WC has asked an unreasonable amount of readers’ time to explain what a mess they are. It’s time for an update on…

East African Birds: Old World Sparrows


Old World Sparrows are only distantly related to the more familiar (and unfamiliar) New World Sparrows. Old World Sparrows are the Passeridae, 8 genera and 43 species. New World sparrows are the Passerellidae, 30 genera and 138 species. Even more confusingly, the Old World also offers Sparrow-Larks, Bush-Sparrows and Sparrow-Weavers, as well as Sparrowhawks (which…

Poetry Mondays: “Five in Six Boys”


WC Is not so old that he cannot remember being a boy. Here’s a poem about boys. There are some British-isms in the poem that jar, but the essence is clear and accurate. McNish won the won the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry in 2017. Her work is a bit controversial, in…

The Fault That Isn’t


Most geologists would bet that the long, northerly running strait – a combination of Chatham Strait and Lynn Canal, smack in the middle of this map – followed the trace of an active fault. After all, the Pacific Plate, on the left side of the map, is sliding northwesterly in relation to the North America…

Field Notes: Abandon All Hope Ye Who Enter Here


WC’s classical literature professor and mentor, Dominic A. LaRusso, held that the three greatest men in Western Civilization were Marcus Tullius Cicero, Dante Alighieri and Leonardo Da Vinci. It was only natural, LaRusso (a second generation Sicilian) would say, that all three were Italian. When LaRusso learned that WC was an avowed atheist, LaRusso assigned…

Poetry Mondays: “All I have is a voice”


For the first poem of the New Year, W.C. reaches back to WC’s Prof. Marliss Strange’s favorite poet ever. W.H. Auden (1907-1973) wrote a moderately long poem, “All I have is a voice,” that touches on much of what WC thinks is wrong with American culture – some of which is unfortunately infecting much of…

Carrion, My Wayward Son


WC’s first dreadful pun of 2026. It can only get better from here, right? Apart from an earlier hat tip to Rudyard Kipling, WC has neglected the carrion-eating birds of East Africa. That’s not right. Equal time for scavengers! At least feathered scavengers. WC will start by noting that a lot of bird species you…

Book Review: “The Zorg,” by Siddharth Kara


President Felon has accused the Smithsonian Institution of focusing too much on “how bad slavery was”. The Smithsonian is OUT OF CONTROL, where everything discussed is how horrible our Country is, how bad Slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been — Nothing about Success, nothing about Brightness, nothing about the Future. This Country…

East African Birds: Cuckoos


North America has just four species of Cuckoo; there are 156 species worldwide of the cosmopolitan family Cuculidae. East Africa alone boasts more than a dozen. WC was able to photograph a few. Most but not all Cuckoos are brood parasites. Like the better known Brown-headed Cowbird, Cuckoos lay their eggs in another species’ nest…

Field Notes: Glaciers and Volcanoes


Alaskans know about isostatic rebound. That’s when land rises when the glacial ice piled on the land melts. Continental crust is lighter than the upper mantle and floats on it (for a given definition of “float”). Reduce the weight of ice and the crust rises, roughly like a boat does when you throw stuff overboard.…

Senator Ron Johnson, Snake Oil Salesman


The otherwise sensible folks in Wisconsin gave Ron Johnson (R, Conspiracy Theories) another term as one of their U.S. Senators, albeit by a narrow margin (50.4% to Johnson Barnes 49.6%). And Senator Johnson has rewarded his voters by indulging himself in ever more bizarre conspiracy theories and anti-science screeds. Johnson had previously promoted disproven treatments for…