That does seem like quite a lot of webs. I’m wondering if in addition to the mist making them visible, there weren’t also more than the usual number of webs. Seems like if there were usually that many, we’d walk through a lot more of them. It might just be seasonal, and you hit on or near an apex of their activity. I still remember hiking with you and Kevin once and seeing a lot of rattle snakes. Never saw so many on a hike before or since. And of course, you gotta’ remember the thousands of thousands of lady bugs we saw that one time.
Great for Halloween (now get out there and snap some more lizards!!).
Eventually I’ll do a post on lizards just for you. One possibility is that the trails tend to be significantly wider and therefore more difficult to span for a web. The webs were either in trees or on the ground.
That does seem like quite a lot of webs. I’m wondering if in addition to the mist making them visible, there weren’t also more than the usual number of webs. Seems like if there were usually that many, we’d walk through a lot more of them. It might just be seasonal, and you hit on or near an apex of their activity. I still remember hiking with you and Kevin once and seeing a lot of rattle snakes. Never saw so many on a hike before or since. And of course, you gotta’ remember the thousands of thousands of lady bugs we saw that one time.
Great for Halloween (now get out there and snap some more lizards!!).
LikeLike
Eventually I’ll do a post on lizards just for you. One possibility is that the trails tend to be significantly wider and therefore more difficult to span for a web. The webs were either in trees or on the ground.
LikeLike