Coldwater Farm Wildlife
Located on the Agua Fria River in central Arizona, Coldwater Farm is a tiny, 20 acre, refuge for wildlife. Despite being in the center of the Town of Dewey-Humboldt, however, the Farm is an ideal wildlife habitat. It has abundant surface water supplies and patches of dense vegetation. The Agua Fria River flows above ground through the farm, and there are three large ponds. Willow thickets and a nice grove of tall cottonwood trees fill the river’s flood plain.
Mule Deer Visits
The fawns just came again, and this time another pair of twins joined them. The photo shows one of them. I think the kid looks good for four months.
Barn Owl Box
Yesterday I finished setting up a nest box for the Barn Owls that live here. I’ve know the owls were here for about 10 years now. Last winter, wind blew down the best roosting tree, and the owls have lived in less protective trees. Barn Owls are unique in many ways. One of them is that they tolerate humans, and in return for permission to sleep in barns and other buildings, they control the local mouse population. Wise farmers use Barn Owls, not mousetraps. Read the two earlier posts about the Coldwater Farm Barn Owls here, and the windstorm disaster here.
The box is visible from my back door. If I pay attention in the evenings, I hope to see owls coming and going now and then.
Other Coldwater Farm Wildlife News
The annual return of wild ducks to the ponds is going well. Mallards, Ring Necks, and American Wigeon so far. I started throwing out a little corn when I take this old dog down for his daily swim.