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Old 03-05-2005, 05:17 PM
Reel McKoi
 
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"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
...
Reel McKoi wrote:


"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
...
I didn't think I did either. At the head of our harbour, they've had

spring
peepers now for over a week, but we don't have them on the coast, yet.

But
last night when I took the dogs out for a walk I had to pick up a 6"

toad
off the road. He seemed a bit cold and sluggish, and the road wasn't a
good spot to spend the night (though I'd almost certainly be the only
person to use it before noon today), so I put him in the ditch.


I wonder what's going on with the frogs and toads this year!!?!?!?! We
heard spring peepers one night for a few hours. It sounded like only a
few, not the hundreds and hundreds we'd usually hear for several nights

in
a row
(in the neighbor's stock pond). Then the same thing in our own ponds -

we
hard a few frogs for maybe a week, then nothing. All the other years

the
noise level out there was incredible.
Where are the toads? I saw one and as you described, it was "sluggish."
Could there be some frog/toad disease out there, possibly spread from

some
imported amphibious pets?


Not in my case. We've rarely had temperatures in the 50s, here. It's
exactly 50F right now. So when I saw that toad at around midnight it was
getting close to freezing. That's going to make any toad sluggish :-)


$$ This is true. However it was a warm afternoon when I came across the
sluggish toad. It was in a flowerpot on my porch.

I heard three peepers last night. It's a bit depressing to even be able

to
cont them, but there'll be more when it's warmed up a bit. The ones at

the
head of the harbour are in plentiful voice.


$$ That's good to hear. I can't imagine what's happened to these critters
where I live. Even the plant pools behind the house, usually with a few
frogs each, are quiet. Perhaps when the nights get warmer here more will
show up.
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o