July 1, 2009

Backyard Nature


So we got some cheap goldfish for our pond. It was a pretty exciting event, and well worth the 4 bucks in goldfish. A few of the goldfish met their doom in the pond's pump, however...their bodies were discovered when Ben tried to fix the malfunctioning pump. Oh well. 4 bucks. Cycle of life and so forth. Other goldfish were not as foolhardy and wisely remained hidden in the lilypads until we coaxed them out with the skimmer. A few more like to hide out under the waterfall. Unfortunately, with the pump not working, I'm not sure how long the remaining survivors will hold out. It's getting a little stagnant in there without the waterfall. We may be making another trip to Petco in the near future. Still, it's the longest I've ever kept goldfish alive.

Goldfish carcasses aside, Hayden has really enjoyed watching them. They are amazingly fast little swimmers, but skittish. Like I said, they prefer to hide. He named all of them "Ace" for awhile. Then he kept changing their names.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, the other frequent inhabitants of our yard are turtles. I saved one from the lawnmower a couple of weeks ago. Mostly we've found babies, but recently Hayden spotted a big one from our sun porch so we all went out to see it. Hayden figured it was the momma. I have no idea how you tell the difference between girl turtles and boy turtles...so momma it is. We found another one (or the same one?) in the front yard too, so we appear to have a thriving turtle population that may or may not dine on the dwindling goldfish population.

I finally found the section in the library on animals, so we'll have to learn about our wild neighbors and report back. It will be a while, because today at the library Hayden was more interested in books about space and dinosaurs, so information about turtles (and toads and fish) will have to be shelved until another day.

1 comment:

  1. Poor things... I think maybe a double filter (large-hole screen and small-hole screen) may help keep the little critters out of the pump, whenever it gets back in service again. They are fun to watch!

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