Advertisement

What's On Your Phone?

A few from this season.
 

Attachments

  • 6D717745-FBCB-4C6F-89D8-91C50D9AF372.png
    6D717745-FBCB-4C6F-89D8-91C50D9AF372.png
    3.9 MB · Views: 28
  • 9E97AF98-3B01-427A-AFF1-4A01D7E01988.png
    9E97AF98-3B01-427A-AFF1-4A01D7E01988.png
    4.1 MB · Views: 29
  • 426145EE-0A86-42DE-B646-676B30E77EC1.jpeg
    426145EE-0A86-42DE-B646-676B30E77EC1.jpeg
    223.5 KB · Views: 28
  • 3BDA42B9-411E-4535-8500-3CA6FE32FD84.jpeg
    3BDA42B9-411E-4535-8500-3CA6FE32FD84.jpeg
    108.4 KB · Views: 26
  • 53657B2D-2473-4328-B5C5-251202E4DDE8.jpeg
    53657B2D-2473-4328-B5C5-251202E4DDE8.jpeg
    363.1 KB · Views: 27
I'm going to say chipmunk track.
I looked it up. Maybe a snowshoe hare? Looks like they land heavy on their large rear feet and stagger the front ones in front of each other.

Wish that spot was a little closer to home as I’d be in there with a shotgun. Those tracks were all over the place that day.
 
I looked it up. Maybe a snowshoe hare? Looks like they land heavy on their large rear feet and stagger the front ones in front of each other.

Wish that spot was a little closer to home as I’d be in there with a shotgun. Those tracks were all over the place that day.
Definitely not a snowshoe hare. Long skinny tail in back, little feet in front, and body plus hind legs in middle.
 
Definitely not a snowshoe hare. Long skinny tail in back, little feet in front, and body plus hind legs in middle.
Methinks that skinny part is the front legs, not a tail. What you were seeing as the little feet in front were just it's rear-facing knees making mark in deep snow.

From some nature blog online:
1671153679301.png
 
56E5EA0F-2594-4316-8F70-AD81B790AC9A.jpeg
I like to take pictures of interesting rock formations. This one is in the Missouri River Breaks. The formation is about the size of a refrigerator. It looks like a giant dinosaur dump.

Edit: I don’t think that is what it is, just looks like it. I assume it is a bacteria colony or maybe early coral formed at the bottom of a shallow sea that covered all of E Montana a few millions years ago. The formations are pretty common in places. They still take my imagination to new places.
 
Last edited:

Attachments

  • E507D830-C3A1-4A50-AEE4-BF7E7DCDB88B.jpeg
    E507D830-C3A1-4A50-AEE4-BF7E7DCDB88B.jpeg
    2.7 MB · Views: 11
  • B63D8375-9EDA-4370-869C-664BBA4A0AB7.jpeg
    B63D8375-9EDA-4370-869C-664BBA4A0AB7.jpeg
    4.1 MB · Views: 11
View attachment 255787
I like to take pictures of interesting rock formations. This one is in the Missouri River Breaks. The formation is about the size of a refrigerator. It looks like a giant dinosaur dump.

Edit: I don’t think that is what it is, just looks like it. I assume it is a bacteria colony or maybe early coral formed at the bottom of a shallow sea that covered all of E Montana a few millions years ago. The formations are pretty common in places. They still take my imagination to new places.
Don't sell yourself short. We're on the internet here and you can do whatever you want. Call it dino dump. It makes for a better storyline. Facts be damned.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
114,023
Messages
2,041,492
Members
36,431
Latest member
Nick3252
Back
Top