Introducing … Aqua (MAN!!)

Mr. Aqua

Meet Aqua (MAN!!) Morris. This blue male Veiltail Betta is the newest creature to join my household. My mom bought the little guy for me and I couldn’t be happier. I think Izzie likes him too, although not the attention I have given the fish!

Blue Veiltail Bettas are native to southeast Asia — Cambodia, Thailand — and are also known as Siamese Fighting Fish, Combattant (in Canada), Trey Kroem phloek (in Cambodia) and Ca lia thia (in Vietnam), according to Petco, which is where I bought my little guy from.

The fish can get to be 3″ in their adult size and are easy to care for. One neat fact: Veiltail Bettas can breath through their gills like other fish as well as from the surface through modified gills (labyrinth organ).

I’m not a big fish person — I love the interaction that fish usually doesn’t provide. However, Aqua is definitely settling in (with me screaming Aqua Man!! each time I enter the door.) Plus, I’ve bought the bulbs that are supposed to grow into plants — hopefully — and I keep checking for signs of life from it.

Oh well, welcome to the house Aqua (MAN!!). 😀

A happy grandmother

My grandmother has cancer so whenever I visit I try to make the most of the time I spend with her. Recently, I happened to catch her on a “good” day and we spent a while outside so she could show my mother and I the flowers and peach tree in her front yard. We love flowers, especially irises, so I think we all agreed the above flower was our favorite blooming at the time. What else made our trip outside great?

Do you see what I see (II) …

Pied-billed Grebe

After the bayou float, I had to walk about Arkansas Post to find the red-bellied woodpecker. I found the awesome bird and more.

Do you see the American Alligator?
Canada Goose
Red-Bellied Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Yellow Rumped Warbler
Hairy or Downy Woodpecker
Northern Cardinal
Brown Thrasher
White-throated Sparrow

Spring Bayou Float

I finally got a chance to explore Arkansas Post by boat at it's annual Spring Bayou Float. We started at Moore's Bayou and eventually ended up on the Arkansas Water Trail. It was a pretty awesome trip — I loved it.

I didn’t fall in.

More importantly, I didn’t totally ruin my months-old camera like I feared I would when I first unsteadily got into my canoe for the annual Arkansas Post National Memorial spring bayou float.

Park rangers talked the float up beforehand saying “see Arkansas the way explorers like Marquette and Joliet did, from the bow of a canoe.” I’ll admit, I couldn’t resist.

First, they must have had some muscle because pushing through the debris, both natural and man-made, was tough at times. Our seven-person group began at Moore’s Bayou (which you have to pass to get to Arkansas Post) and worked our way north.

We were fine for a while – I got to take pictures, watch for wildlife and silently plead for the ducks and American Coots up a head of us to just slow down so I could get a good picture. However, we were finally halted by four or five logs that blocked our path completely. We might have still made it by if the water was just a little higher, however, the water level was just too low to get past the logs.

So, we headed back south past the Moore’s Bayou boat ramp and into Arkansas Post territory.  Our list of animal sightings grew as we went — we passed a beaver’s dam (hut?), nutria and a mated pair of Bald Eagles that use a local nest annually. The two children of the group — sisters age 7 and 9 — were enchanted. They were more excited, though, to see an American Alligator. Unfortunately, we only got to see the gator’s backside.

Still, it was a pretty great adventure overall for a free two-hour event. I’m now counting down until the next float — a late fall bayou float that will be given in the afternoon since it’s during duck season. Woo hoo!