Wednesday, December 13, 2023

December



 We intentionally came to Nantucket after Stroll weekend because it would be quieter.  Upon arriving, I set off to hike  north up the beach to Sankaty Head and Hoick’s Hollow.  I followed a pair of human footprints to the beach erosion project, but it was me alone and the birds after that. The human activity may be quieter, but ducks and seabirds are more active in winter.  I was lucky to be walking at low tide, and the rocks were well exposed.  My harlequin duck quarry played nearby.  A horned grebe and a razorbill followed me north, while Long-tailed ducks fed offshore and the gulls soared.  Red-throated loon stretched out to fly .  The scoters and buffleheads bobbed. A seal peered at me.  Breath quiets, the world of wars and lack of moral clarity (reaction to Hamas) recedes.







The walk back along the road, away from the sea, to Sankaty Head Lighthouse was quiet.  Low tide at 2:03 and it will be dark by 4:30.

On Saturday I headed out to Madaket to check out the Brant and saw my first common goldeneyes of the year. Dunlin mixed with sanderlings in fizzy flocks. Red-breasted mergansers regally swam by. I flushed a late egret at Jackson Point. A great blue heron languidly flew into the marsh. 






What passion sends me with binoculars and scope out into #wildnantucket?  The landscape is singular, the wild things precious. There is a feeling of being one with the world even as I am alone. The winter brings the deer to the front door, their droppings all over the lawn as they take possession of what is theirs as the humans depart.  The grasses and seed pods are like ghosts of summer. The ducks return and reclaim the sea from humans.  The sun rises far to the south, and will begin its journey north with the solstice.  Will we see a Snowy Owl on Nantucket this winter?

While winter brings more human quiet in Nantucket,  the world of seabirds heats up. We sailed past thousands of scoters, loons and long-tailed ducks on the ferry back to the mainland.  And the black scoters were singing.







Sunday, November 12, 2023

Nantucket November

 




Two weeks since my last post, more beautiful browns:  blooming grasses, gone-to-seed goldenrods, scrub oaks. 
A few leathery mahogany viburnum leaves and maroon hypericum stragulatum, St. Andrew’s Cross. A shock of color from huckleberry and bayberry, and a sliver of sheep laurel. Some green will be with us all winter,  like the hollies and the cedars.

Oaks are usually the last deciduous trees in Nantucket to lose their leaves.  Even half of the scrub oak leaves are down.  There is the fingerprint of the wind on the oaks;  those exposed to the wind in high places or facing the northwest have lost their leaves.  Those close to the ground or in protected spots still cling to theirs.
Norwood Oak


Our winter birds are back:  we saw all three scoters with the birding group today,  and buffleheads, wigeons, ruddy ducks.  Ginger and Louis saw Harlequin ducks off the erosion control viewpoint yesterday! Brant are at Madaket. 

Jupiter rules in the clear night skies.The sun now rises far to the south, and will continue heading that way til the Solstice.  We are entering meteorological winter, the three months of shortest daylight.

October was very dry, with a mean temperature of 58 degrees, and average wind speeds of 9.9 mph and 2.03 inches of rain.  During my last visit,  Almanac Pond was completely dried up.  Last year October's mean temperature was 58.2, wind at 10.9 mph and 7.66 inches of rain.  In 2021 the mean temperature was 59.9, average wind speed  11.3 mph  and  there was 5.1 inches of rain.
First Light November 12 5:55 am

Sunrise 6:25 am




November 11







Stump Pond

Monday, October 30, 2023

Hunter's Moon

Moonrise, October 28



Late October in Nantucket:  Marshes brown, Tupelos leafless, brown scrub oak covering the moors.  The Goldenrod is gone,   leaving ghostly seed stands.  The groundsel/saltbush blossoms are almost gone;  there are few hypericum, aster and sweet everlasting . The firey huckleberry, yellow summer sweet and maples light up the landscape. Green cedar, sheep laurel, bayberry, heather, scotch broom provide the green counterpoint.  Jays cry, crows call, woodpeckers chip. Have the towhees fled?  There is only the sound of 2 airplanes during my 3 mile hike at Norwood Farm.  A doe and fawn dart across the path. There is no hunting on Sunday.  










Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Hurricane Season

 

Masquetuck
These past two weekends,  Tropical Storms Lee and Ophelia have ruled.  Lee brought high winds but no rain,  and Ophelia brought both.  Equinox winds have averaged in the high twenties,  with gusts in the forties.  The sustained winds have whipped the leaves off the ocean-facing hydrangea and leveled the cosmos and verbena.  White caps and waves crash out front  with fast moving steel-gray clouds.

Head of the Plains looking to Clark's Cove

But the combination of the goldenrod and the groundsel  beckons me to go walking.  Milestone Bog is now brown with grasses and sedges  and yellow with goldenrod.   The  still green Polpis Road flashes silver as the winds whip the Russian Olive leaves and white with the salt bush (groundsel).   Tupelo leaves are almost down, leaving leaves of brown and gold and red in Squam Swamp.   The rain lights up the Usnea moss on the trees. On the bluffwalk, the autumn clematis blankets are without blooms.




I caught some fall warblers in Madaket:  a palm warbler at Jackson Point with the Sunday birders ,  and a pine warbler at Head of the Plains with Josh.  The shorebirds are active:  a flock of pectoral sandpipers in Madaket with the birders and a  white-rumped sandpiper at Sesachacha, along with semipalmated plovers,  greater and lesser yellowlegs, three kinds of gulls, Gadwalls and wigeon.  At the Head ofthe Plains,  I followed this solitary sandpiper walking down the road!

Pine Warbler at Head of the Plains

Pine Warbler

Palm Warbler at Jackson Point
Solitary Sandpiper


Palm Warbler










Foggy Days

 

Foggy September 10 sunrise
In early September,  the Bluff Walk abounds with  Queen Anne’s Lace, goldenrod, autumn clematis, and rose hips. The showy clematis blankets the shrubs, the grape leaves flutter and the groundsel is budding. At Squam Farm, the cobwebs hang in the fog, while goldenrods, grasses and grapes contrast with the reflowering pasture thistles. Mockernuts have fallen from the hickories. Gerardia and Liatris are a treat, as wells a brown thrasher and a least flycatcher. The Milestone Bog is filled with burnweed and still some sickle-leaved silk grass. Sweet Everlasting is in bloom.



Autumn Clematis on the bluff

Goldenrod at Milestone Bog

Liatris, 
New England Blazing Star 

Gerardia






Whimbrel at Pocomo Meadow

Ruddy Turnstone


Black-bellied Plover 

Norwood Oak on September 8