Saturday, April 23, 2022

Seeking the new

Brown Thrasher  at Windswept Bog

 I love a new experience. It may be why I love birding.  There is elation at hearing or seeing a bird that I’ve never seen before, or that I rarely see.  It makes the day somehow special and memorable.


I know that soras and rails are at Milestone Bog, but I have never seen one there, despite the hundred times I’ve hiked there.  Until I did..,yesterday!  “You never step in the same river twice,” but hearing  the sora  made it  really true.

Birding also is comforting when birds are where we’ve seen them before…like the killdeer near the sand exchange pool at the bog…or the pine warbler in every pine stand this weekend.

But there is special love for the new…like the brown thrasher in the path at Windswept Bog this morning…the light wasn’t good enough to get a great picture,  but I didn’t even get a picture of the sora!  ( will I be “trimbled” for that, given that it’s a rara avis?)

Birders even go in for “FOY”, first of year  birds , in their hug of their favorite birds and landscapes.  I guess it’s all firsts here  today…




Seeking Spring on Daffodil Weekend


In the mud
In the greening moss
In the fern fiddles pushing up from water
In the unleaved  gnarls of the beech’s arms
And the newly red-budded maples

In the grasping greenbrier
And the blue skies beyond the chickadee ”I-I-I love you” song 
In the warmed places on the trail and in the shaded
In the quiet and the “birdy” spaces

To open the future
And grow up from the past
Prick up your ears  to the sounds of rebirth
Sharpen your vision to the signs of the earth
And the persons trying  to move us all forward
Like the wood anemones and fern fronds
With pent up energy released by the sun
And the stored up desire that justice be won

Like the daffodils prolific against the dead stalks
The shoots undaunted by last night’s frost
Celebrate Easter and Passover and all the spring feasts
Leave behind the old grudges and worries at least
Enjoin this reopening, this greening , this birth
Of the new season and peace for all earth

Wood Anemone

Ferns emerging


 

Maple's red buds



Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Late March, Early Spring

 






Sunrise, March 26













Spring  arrives with thunder and lightning and rain
In Nantucket
Bolting over the lighthouse' regular beams
The winter friends still here- the buffleheads and even a late snowy owl,
While we wait for the migration of spring songbirds.
Oystercatchers and an egret have been seen
The grackles and red-winged blackbirds
and now the osprey and piping plovers


So close to the sea and the elements
the purist form of life
The daffodils push up to claim the new season,
And every human clings to the warmth of 40 degrees
The hope of renewal

Silver sea sea at first light with clouds
Honeyed light reflected up
The sun now moving north from its winter perch
The beginning of a dawn chorus of song sparrows, wrens, robins
While our winter ducks and gulls show to winter's hold


Winter Birds:  Iceland Gulls



Squam Farm, March25

Winter Birds:  Scaup


Monday, January 17, 2022

January

 Extreme weather means adventure.  All boats to Nantucket were cancelled on Friday,  and when we  took the slow boat  on Saturday,  it was 16 degrees with winds from the northwest at 20 mph. But what a show the birds put on!  The King Eider was about 75% of the way from Hyannis to Nantucket.  Who else was outside looking at birds in that weather?   


How fun to see brant right at Brant Point!  And I hope I didn't bother the snowy owl out at Smith Point.   


King Eider 

Brant

Brant,  off Brant Point


Iceland Gull


Sanderling at Great Point

White-winged scoters off Great Point

Great Point Light

Male long-tail duck off Great Point


Snowy Owl at Smith Point


December

 

December in Nantucket gets wrapped up in red and green for the holidays.  This year was especially busy since President Biden's family visited over Thanksgiving and attended the annual Christmas tree lighting.

For me, however,  December's colors are golden brown grasses and gray goldenrod ghosts and the  red bittersweet, holly and winterberry.  The major bird migration is done,  but the crows and turkey vultures own the skies.  And the sparrows own the grounds.

Walking is ruled by the hunting season.  The Trustees of Reservation warden warned me off my hike to Coskata Woods.  Trucks of hunters in bright orange are talking about their kill.   Sunrises are later and a thrill to watch.

Ram Pasture

Polpis

Holly Farm, Polpis

New park at the Creeks



PS  In late November, my camera fell out of my backpack  while I was walking around Fresh Pond in Cambridge and I had to sent it to be repaired.  Every day I missed  it, a Canon Eos 90D with a 100-400 mm lens and 1.4  extender. I might have driven to the  North Shore to find harlequin ducks off Halibut State Park or Andrews Point if I had my camera.  The freezing thirty degree weather didn't hold me back…it was realizing that I would feel productive if I were taking photographs of birds, and would be “just going for a walk” if not.   There was a hint in the thousands of shots in my iTunes and Google Photos libraries.  A hint in my nature blog  and instagram feed.  Feeling productive is important to me.  And there is always more to learn about the light, the craft and the birds and their lives.

I got a new backpack.

And I  took pictures with my iphone for this time in Nantucket.

Monday, November 22, 2021

November

 


November 20, 2021.  The season’s change is as dramatic going from fall to winter as from winter to spring.  Today was 42 degrees with winds from the north and northwest at 10 mph.  Nantucket’s trees are leafless, except for the browned leaves hugging the scrub oak.  The groundsel  is still a shrubby green, but the blooms have blown.  Holly berries’ reds are the brightest colors, along with the cedars and hollies. The bright blue skies and sun light up the landscape.


The waters are the star now. The ocean is full of ducks and gulls.  On the ferry over, I saw at least two thousand surf scoters, especially in the open water.  Long tail ducks and back and white winged scoters  popped about, flying out of the ferry’s path. The eiders and cormorant hugged Coatue.






At home in Sconset,  there was a feeding frenzy off the bluff. Hundreds of dainty Bonaparte gulls mixed with kittiwakes, herring, ring-billed, greater black backed gulls.  And the ducks were there too.  A parasitic jaeger came to scare up the Bonies.  Several gannets and 11 razorbills joined the feeding frenzy.  What a day. Birders have been seeing a major “gull show” for the past week.

Josh and I hiked Norwood Farm, and there the birds were quiet. Crows, red tail and Cooper’s hawks were most visible, a few jays called and one last towhee flew past.  American black ducks flew out of the ponds.  

On the mainland,  yesterday I was taking pictures of bright yellow leafed ginkgo biloba, orange-leaved bald cypress and red leaved Japanese red maples.  Here we are moving into the austereness of late fall and winter.