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Test your ranching knowledge

Mountain Cowgirl

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2021
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1,212
Based on this photo taken today, on a road I walk, crossing an alfalfa field, who can tell me:
What creatures were involved?
What they were doing?
And why they were doing it?
IMG_6183.JPG
 
It appears to me that several egg manufacturers were pushing a wheelbarrow???? Since the tracks all run the same way they above mentioned creatures were NOT crossing a road. Unless you are tricking us with your photo? As to why, well you best ask the party involved
 
It appears to me that several egg manufacturers were pushing a wheelbarrow???? Since the tracks all run the same way they above mentioned creatures were NOT crossing a road. Unless you are tricking us with your photo? As to why, well you best ask the party involved
No trick and all relevant questions. I was puzzled also when I saw it a couple of days ago. Yesterday I witnessed the happening and then it all made sense. The tire track is irrelevant.
 
I am surprised none of you can solve this mystery.

Due to heavy watering trying to get all the growth possible on the 5th cutting of alfalfa, the field became heavily saturated and earthworms fled the field, frolicking in the dry road where about 100 crows picked them off with little effort.

It is commonly thought that earthworms flee because they sense drowning, but since they breathe through their skin, this has been discredited. I have heard several explanations but none explain why they only do it around here in the spring and fall. I think perhaps because our ground with the cooler weather doesn't dry as fast with the same amount of water used during the summer in the spring and fall, they surface and seek a drier but still moist soil.

Many of these worms crossed the road but found the soil much too dry due to no rain for weeks and only one light rain since late June. It was on their return trip moving much slower that many were eaten by the crows.

I am still undecided why they leave the irrigated fields and yards in the spring and fall if the overly saturated soil doesn't affect their breathing.
 
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