Monday, August 25, 2025

August

 

Full Sturgeon Moonrise

August is a busy month of grandchildren visiting; they are bursting with energy as the natural world of Nantucket starts its journey to fall. By August 1, the sickle-leaved silk grass is along the paths at tge Mikestone Bog.  The steeplebush is brown from the drought and the boneset is straggly.  With the cessation of cranberry farming's water, will the water willow continue to survive in the coming years? Dryness continues.  Only .48 inches of rain by mid- month.  The ponds are baked dry. Will there be any beach plums this year?

At Eel Point on August 6,  the colors  are red and golden brown:  the poison ivy is turning red, the marsh grasses are goldening and beach grasses browning.  Red rosehips are plumping out and silver bayberries shining. Sanderlings and ruddy turnstones forage along the shore.


Crane-fly Orchids

A highlight of my month is a visit to the Crane-fly orchids ( Tipularia discolor)  with NCF botanist Kelly Omand on August 7.  Listed by Massachusetts as endangered, they are found in Nantucket, Dukes, Barnstable and Bristol Counties. How many times I have walked near them on our Beechwood/ Norwood Farm hiking route, without knowing they were there?  The stand of Pearly everlasting is shining and the  first Little Ladies Tresses orchids (spiranthese tuberosa) are blooming.  Another Nantucket rarity, St. Andrew's cross (hypericum stragulum)  is on full display. Soon the downy goldenrod will come.

On August 8, I walked Squam Swamp.  It is so dry, so no mushrooms...end of Clethra Alnifolia, sweet pepper, and its wonderful scent, is near.  I checked out a tip from Kelly Omand that a dwarf clubspur orchid was near the Netted chain ferns (Woodwardia areolata)  between post 20 and 21, but couldn't find it. On August 12, Kelly took a group of us down the deer hunters trail before post 2, to see 5 of Nantucket's 29 fern species:
  • New York Fern: pinnae narrow to base
  • Netted Chain Fern: solid leaves
  • Cinnamon Fern (Cinnamon fuzz where pinnae meets stalk,  and at base)
  • Dioptera Wood Fern: black stalk, no cinnamon fuzz, wetter habitat ( vernal pool)
  • Bracken Fern Toridium dry upland, Tripartite 
There are 10500 fern species in the world; that close to the number of bird species!

Lesser Yellowlegs, American Oystercatcher, Whimbrel

August also marks shorebird birding time, as the birds which breed in the northern regions start their journey south. Josh and I hiked to Coskata from Wauwinet on August 11. We waded across the inlet and saw hundred of terns, with some laughing gulls mixed in. Whimbrels,  a dozen Semipalmated plovers and Barn swallows were great to see. At The Creeks on August 12, there was a congregation  of great and snowy egrets. More than fifty of them foraged in the pool near the bike path, not bothered by me or dogs walking nearby. 




On August 21, Hurricane Erin brought big seas and Wilson's storm petrels to Sconset beach. I have seen them on pelagic trips, but never before from the land. I saw 20 of them dancing on the water. Young laughing gulls seem to be everywhere on the East end. Are they breeding here now,or coming from Monomoy? Erin brought a bit of a respite to our drought with .72 inches of rain.

August 22 First false foxglove (Agalanis Purpurea) at Windswept Bog.
Semipalmated Sandpipers

Short-billed Dowitcher 

Lesser Yellowlegs

Black-bellied Plover

Sanderlings

Semipalmated Plover

Whimbrel

Ruddy Turnstone

Ruddy Turnstone





Saturday, August 2, 2025

Midsummer

 


It has been a summer of northern harriers!  We see at least one  daily hunting along the bluff.  It seems that whenever I am out for a hike,  there is one as well.  Are there more northern harriers than usual?


Sabatia 


















Nantucket  has changed into its midsummer wardrobe.  The Sweet Pepper,  Clethra Alnifolia,  is blooming and casts such a sweet scent in the wet places.  (On July 27,  there was some Rhododendron Viscosa,  Swamp Azalea,  still in bloom in the north-facing low places.) Hypericum Stragulum,  St. Andrew's cross, is out.  It is on the Massachusetts endangered list and is currently found only on Nantucket in Massachusetts. The Virginia Meadow-beauty is now out around the ponds.  I spied Sabatia Campanulata again at Almanac Pond.  Or is it Sabatia Stellata?  I am waiting for botanist Kelly Omand to tell me.

At Squam Farm and at Norwood Farm,  I can see the goldenrods, but not blooming yet.  Well, maybe a few downy goldenrods are peeking.  The sumac is turning red, the grasses are browning, the tupelo is reddening and the huckleberry, too.

Virginia Meadow Beauty

Huckleberry 



Common tern

Sesachacha is regularly home to a pair of short-billed dowitchers,  semipalmated sandpipers,  least sandpipers,  killdeer, lesser and greater yellowlegs and of course the egrets, mallards,  cormorants and canada geese. Osprey love to fish there.

July was dry, with only .74 inches of rain.  There was only one day with rain over .1 inch. June had only .43 inches of rain. May had 3.49 inches and April 3.93.  Last  year,  July had 3.19 inches of rain,  June had 2.95,  May .92 and April  1.40.  So the four month total  is 8.59 inches in 2025 and  8.46 in 2024, but distributed more to the spring this year.  It has not been enough to revive the ponds .  Precipitation was 33.79 inches in total 2022, 21.59 inches in  2023, 17.24 in 2024 (but missing January and February readings)  and 14.52 so far this year.  Many ponds are just wet mud.


Norwood Pond

Almanac Pond

















The  Boston Globe rain an article from the Associated Press about how there are more lightning bugs this year,  perhaps because of a wet spring.  I certainly had my peak lightning bug experience in late June.

Semipalmated Sandpiper 

Lesser Yellowlegs