No dry creek beds in that hike. Looked muddy, but like you said that is to be expected after lots of rain. Nice to hear the sound of the rushing water.
yeah, no dry creeks has us all excited here in SoCal! And wait till you see the video from next week, even better! Thanks for always watching and commenting, Sarah :)
That’s too funny! Can you imagine me hiking here with my rod!? 🤣 Okay! Next time I’m in Baja we’ll make a tutorial video on how to clean trigger fish, they’re a bit harder because their “skin” is so tough, kinda like an elephant
At 4:30 seconds you asked what the bird was. The answer is it isn't a bird its a ground squirrel. The "chirp" is a warning to the other squirrels that there was a potential threat in their "neighborhood", the threat was more then likely you if you were alone in the hiking area, you don't even have to be super close to them for them to do that. Squirrels get really loud if there is a dog in the area and they will actually chirp at snakes or hawks or any other kind of predator that they view as a threat, they are a very interesting animal with a lot of social structure if that makes sense. I also live in Southern California and before the area I live in grew up there used to be ground squirrels a few blocks away when I was a kid I used to walk my dog through there and the squirrels would go insane chirping and there was different chirps if it was just me or if it was me and a friend or if it was me and the dog.
Wow! First of all thanks so much for taking the time to write such a detailed explanation, I appreciate it! I would’ve never imagined it could be from ground squirrels, but now it makes sense. It was so loud! Thanks again 😄
@@milesandhikes after watching your video i looked up "ground squirrel documentary" I didn't really find anything real good for California (other then some younger kids doing a project on squirrels in San Luis Obispo) but I did see a short that I didn't click on that looked like it may of had a chirping squirrel. I will see if I can find it and I will post the link.
@@milesandhikes not the one I saw earlier but it sort of shows the different calls (It's less then a minute long) ua-cam.com/video/HWSMqabZaAM/v-deo.htmlsi=l6DdKCWR-UKG5oPR
@@milesandhikes I think it deleted my link but I'm not sure if it did type in "California ground squirrel warning call" you will come across a woman named lisa ? (I don't remember what her last name was already) She had a video under a minute long showing one chirping. I read years ago that they have 20 or 30 different chirps for different threats. Anyways have a good evening.
Looking great with all that rain!
No dry creek beds in that hike. Looked muddy, but like you said that is to be expected after lots of rain. Nice to hear the sound of the rushing water.
yeah, no dry creeks has us all excited here in SoCal! And wait till you see the video from next week, even better!
Thanks for always watching and commenting, Sarah :)
Nice video!!
Gracias Ignacio :)
Thanks for sharing. No trigger fish in this creek? ...Oatmeal and I would like to see a "how to clean a trigger fish" movie.
That’s too funny! Can you imagine me hiking here with my rod!? 🤣
Okay! Next time I’m in Baja we’ll make a tutorial video on how to clean trigger fish, they’re a bit harder because their “skin” is so tough, kinda like an elephant
At 4:30 seconds you asked what the bird was.
The answer is it isn't a bird its a ground squirrel. The "chirp" is a warning to the other squirrels that there was a potential threat in their "neighborhood", the threat was more then likely you if you were alone in the hiking area, you don't even have to be super close to them for them to do that. Squirrels get really loud if there is a dog in the area and they will actually chirp at snakes or hawks or any other kind of predator that they view as a threat, they are a very interesting animal with a lot of social structure if that makes sense.
I also live in Southern California and before the area I live in grew up there used to be ground squirrels a few blocks away when I was a kid I used to walk my dog through there and the squirrels would go insane chirping and there was different chirps if it was just me or if it was me and a friend or if it was me and the dog.
Wow! First of all thanks so much for taking the time to write such a detailed explanation, I appreciate it!
I would’ve never imagined it could be from ground squirrels, but now it makes sense. It was so loud!
Thanks again 😄
@@milesandhikes after watching your video i looked up "ground squirrel documentary" I didn't really find anything real good for California (other then some younger kids doing a project on squirrels in San Luis Obispo) but I did see a short that I didn't click on that looked like it may of had a chirping squirrel. I will see if I can find it and I will post the link.
@@milesandhikes not the one I saw earlier but it sort of shows the different calls
(It's less then a minute long)
ua-cam.com/video/HWSMqabZaAM/v-deo.htmlsi=l6DdKCWR-UKG5oPR
@@milesandhikes I think it deleted my link but I'm not sure if it did type in "California ground squirrel warning call" you will come across a woman named lisa ? (I don't remember what her last name was already) She had a video under a minute long showing one chirping.
I read years ago that they have 20 or 30 different chirps for different threats.
Anyways have a good evening.
@@AtomicReverend yes! Saw Lisa’s video, thanks!
That was exactly what I heard. Poor thing must have been freaked out I was there