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Gumboot Lake (above &
right) is a beautiful montane lake at ~6050' elevation in the extreme
southeast corner of Siskiyou County. It is reached by a narrow but
paved road west (Road 26) from Mt. Shasta City. The divide that
separates Siskiyou County from Trinity County is just beyond the lake.
There is a small campground with pit toilets that is popular with
fisherman and campers on summer weekends.
From the perspective of odites, this lovely gem is a
fine spot to search of Emeralds, and can also be good for spreadwings
and Black Petaltail. Rita and I spent a couple pleasant hours
(8:30-10:30) one Sunday morning (22 July 2007). Despite fine sunshine
early, odes did not start flying until about 9:30 a.m. We missed
petaltail here but did find perched examples of both Ringed
Emerald (below left) and American Emerald
(below right).
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A gorgeous spot nearby is along Gumboot Creek,
the outflow of Gumboot Lake, as it crosses Road 26 (above & right).
There is a sylvan glade set among the conifers; there is a
crystal-clear gurgling creek; and there are numerous seeps and rivulets
that support a huge assemblage of the endemic pitcher-plant Darlingtonia
californica. Colorful butterflies flit about; the woods have birds
and chipmunks; the creek has native frogs; and there are dragonflies.
It is a naturalist's haven.
Darlingtonia californica, also called the
California Pitcher plant, Cobra Lily, or Cobra Plant (below, left &
right), is a carnivorous plant, the sole member of the genus in the
family Sarraceniaceae. It is endemic to Northern California and Oregon,
growing in bogs and seeps with running water. IUCN has designated this
plant as uncommon due to its rarity in the field. It is just soooo
impressive to see in growing in profusion.
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Most dramatic during our visit was an observation of an
ovipositing female Pacific Spiketail (right). Please click
here for a separate page with more photos and the story of
this encounter.
Other memorable moments included finding perched Variable
Darner: both a male (below left) and a female (below right).
Both spent time foraging over the glades and then perching often.
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Close examination of the appendages
on the female (above) showed that one of them was broken off, a common
occurrence, as I understand it, in some species of mosaic darner.
This particular female decided that
turn-about was fair play. After flying away from her tree-bark perch
and securing an in-flight meal, she returned to perch — not on the tree
— but on my pants, and directly on the 'naughty bits' (left, photo by
Rita Carratello) as if to give a close examination. What she concluded
has not been revealed.
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Our next stop was nearby Picayune
Lake, just over the divide in Trinity County.
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