Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
J. Rodgers
115
Frank Clarke Ranch, P.O. Box 54, Laytonville,
Mendocino Co., Calif
April 1, 1938
creek we saw several newspapers hung
from trees. We could also see the weathered
remains of others of at least two other
ages. Mrs. Winchester said that those
cpapers waving in the breeze would
keep the coyotes out. After trying to
small clear on the other horse, we
started up the hill. March 31, was a
warm day with only scatter clouds
drifting across the sky. This morning
started out cloudy and while we
were walking to the location of the
large bear skin there was a slight
sprinkling of rain, but by now the
sun was out more time than it was
behind clouds. We made many
stops to rest and to let the horses
rest. Carl picked up a Triturus
similaris near the bank of Ten
Mile River, I picked ten or fifteen
Triturus rivularis out of a small
branch of Ten Mile River. During our
stops, I made a list of birds seen or
heard, and included in it any species
that I remembered seeing or hearing.