You
can’t see me.
Right?
A
buffer behind the dunes, built up at great effort with tractors and loaders;
dunes which are then elaborately sculpted by the erosion of wind and rain.
It
said:
“Men
are twice as likely as women to have a hearing problem,
but
only half as likely to admit it.”
What?
First,
we found a place with plenty of them. The grain silos around Progresso
are a good place to start.
A
lot of them were red-winged blackbirds.
There
were brown-headed cowbirds.
Bronzed
cowbirds.
And
our target for the day, the yellow-headed blackbird, in the center of this
frame, to the right of the pole.
He
was being reclusive.
It’s
a lake with no outflow and an underground, 4-million-ton, salt dome right
beneath it. The salt is from the Jurassic period. This area was
part of the Gulf of Mexico back then; that’s where the original salt came
from. This is not the only salt dome around here, it’s just the one that
geological conditions exposed. Salinity in the lake is 10 times that of
the ocean. Seasonal rainfall determines how wet or dry the lake is.
It’s pretty white right now. We haven’t had a rain lately.