Monday, April 13, 2020

Easter

 Easter is a time of  rebirth and renewal.  A time of pain and joy.   This is so evident in the natural world around us,  and the spring peepers in the wetlands nearby are very loud about it!  Easter was bright and sunny,  with low winds:  perfect for a Polpis loop bike ride.  The pine warblers were singing in the multiple pine stands I passed.  I saw the buffleheads back in Sesachacha-  I thought they had gone. The  white-tailed deer are bold, running across the road and bike path.

 The gannets, long-tail ducks, loons eiders and scoters visited regularly in the afternoon this week, along with our resident herring,  great back-backed and lesser black-backed gulls.  A merlin visited the yard.  But as I hiked the beach to Hoick's Hollow in the late afternoon,  the pain was also visible-  a struggling red throated loon was beached and unable to move.

No Easter baskets for the grandkids this year,  with our novel coronavirus social distancing meaning Arthur and Noa's  Easter Egg hunt was seen via Facetime. We are lucky to be healthy. A Zoom Rudden Easter gathering and Posner-Semonoff Passover seder brought us together.

On Saturday we had hiked Stump Pond and it didn't look much greener than it did a few weeks ago. Near the bog a flicker and a merlin/cooper's hawk were seen.

Red throated Loon

Common Loon

Black Scoter

Eider

Field station Pond

Arthur's 4th Birthday

Great Egret on Folger's Marsh


S
Pink SuperMoon on April 7,  Arthur's 4th Birthday

Daffodils on the Bluff Walk

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Eel Point, Monday April 6


Along with the spring and some sunny days come the people.  We are seeing more people walking up Baxter road to the lighthouse in the morning and the evening.  I am seeing more people out biking and walking on the Polpis Loop bike path, too.  This morning there were 7 bikers and 6 walkers out while I cycled from 8:30 am to 9:30 am.  And when the weather is sunny, like it was yesterday, the parking lot at Sanford Farm is full, with cars parking out on the Madaket Road. 

Attempting to reach Eel Point via the Eel Point Road along Dionis was a miss.  There were so many deep puddles that we had to turn the Prius around and head over to an approach via Tristram's Landing.  What a reward for getting there,  starting with a peregrine falcon and including 2 oystercatchers, 2 great egrets,  a great blue heron and 2 more piping plovers.

The road is out to the end of the point is blocked as the tides are flooding it regularly.  So it was perfect for us as solitary hikers. Although masks are now recommended when out in public,  there was no public at Eel Point.

Tidal flooded road

Oystercatchers at the point on a sand bar

One of two piping plovers

One of two Great Egrets



High water time

Great Blue Heron flies from the marsh

Solitary Sunday Birding on April 5

Since the Sunday Birding Group has been suspended by Coronavirus quarantining,  I headed out to Quidnet on my own on Sunday at 6:30 am.  So many deer are visible at that time;  I saw 8 during my outing.  I am used to seeing vernal pools in Squam Swamp and the moors,  but there were pools also at Sesachacha, between the path to the pond and the dune.  Two black ducks flew off when I approached.  Osprey, Eiders, Scoters, and 4 piping plovers were the highlights.

Osprey

Hunting over Sesachacha Pond


Three of the Four Piping Plovers near the Cut

Eiders protected from the wind

The view from Sesachacha

Friday, April 3, 2020

Late Winter




Milestone Cranberry Bogs are getting prepared for the 2020 year.  Josh and I took a walk toward Barnard Valley Road,  yielding some new views of Sankaty Light, and "the other side"  of Gibbs Pond.



Winter is harsh on or near the water.  Today,  April 3,  it is 40 degrees with 40mph winds from the northeast and high winds at 60 mph.  Yet I still see eiders flying north (20 during a timed minute), gannets, long-tailed ducks,  scoters on the water.  

I  often see dead birds on the beach. This past week  I saw both a dead eider and a dead red-throated loon.    Josh and I saw 2 dead seals on our hike last Friday to Smith Point.  Perhaps the abundance of winter kill is why I see so many turkey vultures,  crows, red-tailed hawks out.  They seem to be the most visible birds on land at this point  (aside from the gulls and my local song sparrows and house finches).



Eider









Red throated Loon















Monday, March 30, 2020

March 30

Magical Squam Swamp

Human-built Squam Sculpture
Polpis Harbor from near Chaos Corner
Bushwacking to Medouie Creek



Osprey on a  nest in Medouie Creeks

Fake News?

On Friday March 27,  Josh and I set out to hike around Smith Point from Madaket.  What a day!  It was warm and sunny and lots of people were outside...we could tell from the number of cars parked at Sanford Farm;  they were parked out on Madaket Road!  The hike was beautiful.  
We saw 5 seals,  3 alive and 2 dead

Winter kill

Sign of spring:  2 piping plovers
 When we came back into Madaket Village, I saw this bird on a wire...and knew it was a flycatcher.  I called it an Eastern Kingbird, and put it up on eBird with this picture.  The Boston Globe on Sunday mentioned in the Bird sighting that an Eastern Kingbird had been seen in Madaket.  Oops.  My first sighting mentioned in the Globe....and it wasn't an Eastern Kingbird,  but more likely a Phoebe!  Ken Blackshaw and the ebird moderator both wrote to me that it was likely a Phoebe because the kingbirds are still in South America. I am sorry that I created FAKE NEWS.

A phoebe,  not an Eastern Kingfisher










Friday, March 27, 2020

Coronavirus Diary March 27 2020

I am blessed to be able to see spring arrive to Nantucket.  It has been blustery,  raining each of the last three days,  with high winds.  It's settling down now,  with the temp at 51 degrees and the wind from the north at 7 mph.  

It hasn't stopped us from exploring.  On Wednesday,  the northeast winds brought the gannerts in.  Harvey Young pointed out how great to get a view from above. The angle of the bluff  (and my 400 mm telephoto lens) helped me out.








dozens of long-tail ducks fly north in the late afternoon,  along with all three kinds of scoters, eiders, gulls and red-throated loons.





Stump Pond

Yesterday we hiked Stump Pond in the clockwise direction.  Usually we hike it counter-clockwise.  The moss is greening up and we saw early growth of what look like pyrola rotundifolia.  Pretty quiet on the bird front:  turkey vultures, crows,  the dozen bufflehead on the pond,  4 canada geese, a red tail hawk.

Pyrola Rotundifolia? Didn't look like Trailing Arbutus, Mayflower

























Sphagnum Moss...but what kind?



Moss envy