Great Point Lagoon |
Razorbills and gulls |
More razorbills |
Hundreds of gadwall flocking from the lagoon |
Sunrise at 77 |
Great Point Lagoon |
Razorbills and gulls |
More razorbills |
Hundreds of gadwall flocking from the lagoon |
Sunrise at 77 |
Bluebird Great Meadows NWR- Concord |
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.
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 |
I rode off on my mountain bike on the 23rd to make another "Tour de Ponds," visiting seven ponds on the Middle Moors, including Gibbs Pond. I flushed 40 or more Black Ducks and saw a solitary sandpiper bobbing in one of the Wigwam Ponds. At the end of August a black-crowned night heron was hiding there. No pictures here of Gibbs or Almanac Ponds.
First Wigwam...dried up from the drought |
Second Wigwam |
Third Wigwam |
From above |
Corner of Pout Pond Road and Norwood Farm |
Norwood Farm lily pond from Pout Pond Road |
The weather was glorious this week, and Josh and I took a late afternoon trip on Oct. 22 to the Madequecham Valley. Well, actually, we drove past Tom Nevers, Forked Pond Valley (better known as Bunny's), Wigwam Valley to Madequecham. It was not particularly birdy. But the rollers were beautiful, as were the colors of the valley.
And then the fog rolled in...like an approaching army.