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.