FOMO

Fear of missing observations.

Back in September, I was told I needed to start walking after every meal as a way to help manage my blood sugar. This actually worked out alright as it provided a framework for my renewed interest in iNaturalist. I would upgrade my camera equipment and do a thorough exploration of Esquimalt. It interested me to get a sense of the flora and fauna of the neighborhood. I started mapping out the area in various loops of up to 5 km. I would study my observation map as it filled up and plan new routes accordingly.

It's now December 11, and I am closing in on a thousand observations and three hundred species, and I will likely manage to hit five hundred identifications by the end of the year.

I have covered many of the routes multiple times by now, and I am seeing a lot of the same things at this point. Still, there is always change. Always the possibility of being surprised by something new. September and October were incredibly dry; in November, the rains returned, and with the rains came mushrooms and new crops of licorice ferns. Bufflehead ducks have arrived.

One day at low tide I found a Tidepool sculpin in beneath a rock. Another morning I came across a dead Varied Thrush on a walkway overlooking the Matson Conservation Area.

But today I decided not to take my camera with me on any of my walks. First time in months I let a full day go by without taking a shot. I'm conscious of the possibility of getting weird and obsessive about it and want to avoid that.

But what if I see something on a walk, and I don't have my camera with me?

Answer: I will still have seen and appreciated it. I just won't have photographed it and uploaded it to the site. And that's okay.

https://inaturalist.ca/observations/141027444
https://inaturalist.ca/observations/141470073

Publicado el 12 de diciembre de 2022 por warrenlayberry warrenlayberry

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Vida Silvestre es una entidad asociada a la Organización Mundial de Conservación