Monday, November 30, 2020

Bluebird
Great Meadows NWR- Concord
   It is November 30 and the season of hope, watchfulness and expectation has begun.  We celebrated this pandemic Thanksgiving as usual in Cambridge,  but with just son Charlie and daughter-in-law Kelsey rather that the extended clan.  The highlight was seeing close to a dozen bluebirds at the Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge  in Concord, MA yesterday.  Bluebirds are definitely visitors to ACK,  especially in late October and November,  but I am hoping to see more here!  


Bluebird 11.29.20, Concord MA

I am watchful and expecting that this surge of the virus will stay away from our family and friends. Nantucket was moved from a "red" zone according to the MA Department of Public Health,  to a "yellow" zone this week.

Today,  Josh  and I are back in Sconset. It's a mild but blustery day,  at 55 degrees with winds from the southeast at 25 mph.  During my 1 mile walk from home to Sconset,  I saw 3 dead birds  (2 eiders and a herring gull) on the beach;  only one had been touched by raptors.  It is a rugged environment in the late fall and winter.  



I explored a number of birding spots in the Boston area over the past couple of weeks.  At Belle Isle Marsh,  I got a great picture of a Tufted Titmouse,  a species that is relatively common on the mainland,  but does not live on Nantucket.  

Tufted Titmouse, Belle Isle Marsh, 11.11.20






Monday, November 16, 2020

Late Fall

 The groundsel has blown away,  the huckleberries are reddish sticks.  The trees are bare,  except for the oaks.  But the winterberries radiate,  and the harlequin ducks have arrived.    

The gannets, all three scoters,  the loons and the long-tailed ducks are regular visitors off the bluff.  The lesser black-backed gulls are regularly on the beach with the greater black-backed  and herring gulls. 

The raptors are again more visible.  When we returned home on Friday morning,  the crows had left us a rabbit,  with fur and entrails spread about.   The Sunday birding group watched a peregrine falcon each an eider from the Erosion Project viewing point,  and then saw greater black-backed gulls eating one at the UMass Field Station beach.

The drought seems to be ending;  we have had 3.22 inches of rain in October,  and already 2.38 inches in November.  The ponds are still very low.  

Huckleberry sticks on the Middle Moors

Last pond lily near Norwood Farm

Low Almanac Pond...
looking back  


AlmanacPond - height of the rock

Snow buntings at Gibbs Pond

Harlequin duck off Erosion Control Project




Winterberries