Pearl Crescent butterfly
on a Sweet Everlasting
August 11: At Masquetuck, a lone red eyed vireo continues to sing. The marsh is changing color now and the sea lavender is blooming. A belted kingfisher hunts at the edge of Polpis Harbor.
Thursday, August 17, 2023
Mid-August Diary
Wednesday, August 2, 2023
Sweet Pepper and Supermoons
Sweet Pepper, clethra alnifolia |
I set off to hike Norwood Farm in search of smelling the sweet pepper, clethra alnifolua, in bloom. It is hard to describe how it’s scent demands focus. The sarsaparilla odor takes over my senses. If you want to be removed from the cares and craziness of the rest of the world, walking scented paths reigns supreme. Between the scent, listening for birdsong, watching for favorite wildflowers and following flitting butterflies, how could I possibly think of anything else? Smells subdue Trump’s indictment, US debt downgrade, continuing war in Ukraine, controversies over college admissions....
Monday, July 31, 2023
After the "Storm"
I am looking forward to the Sturgeon Moon, which will rise from the ocean on August 2. This is the moonrise on July 29.Moonrise, July 29
Before the kids arrived, I believe I saw the first Whimbrel to stop in Nantucket on this year's southward migration. I had hiked from Wauwinet to Coskata Pond via the Head of the Harbor and was rewarded on July 10 with this sighting.
Whimbrel at Coskata, July 10 |
July 18 |
Tuesday, July 11, 2023
Lost in the wilderness
Blueberries |
Swamp Azalea, Rhododendron Viscosa |
Colicroot at Windswept Bog, Aletra Farinosa |
The arrowhead viburnum has run its course. What was a field of irises at Windswept Bog is now a field of Rosa Carolina, and the colicroot field is blooming. The false indigo was getting ready to burst near the Pout Ponds on July 1 and Josh and I saw the first sickle grass on our hike from Reyes Pond on July 8. It’s the parade of summer. There were 6 types of mushrooms in Squam Swamp during my hike on July 7, and I nibbled on a number of ripe high bush blueberries.
Chicks
My new kayak has been launched! It was so upsetting to have my trusty Walden stolen from Polpis Harbor in late October. I had to replace it. So now the Eddyline Skylark 12 has been exploring Polpis.
Wednesday, June 28, 2023
Sunday, June 25
Yellow-crowned night heron |
There have been a series of articles in the New York Times about Americans “de-churching”, disengaging from church. If they are, they are missing out on an important opportunity for community. Some say they commune with nature instead. If that is the case, our Sunday morning social birding is the ideal for both. Our leader, Ken Blackshaw even calls it “bird church.” However, next Sunday I’ll head back to Mass at Sconset Chapel, which I love.
Sunday, June 11, 2023
June
Coming and going to an island makes the seasons of the spring seem more defined than they might be if I were in one place. Returning to Nantucket after a three week absence, we have moved beyond the lime green/reddish hues of early spring to the time of white and yellow: white multiflora Wild roses blooming profusely and lazily draped on anything green they can find, wild cherry bloom-candles lit, ox-eye daisies sprightly waving, Scotch broom shining out. The white waxy coating of the cedar berries dapple the dark cedars.
This is the time of year when the common yellowthroats "wichety wichity" songs fill the air as they defend their territories. The oystercatchers at the northwest point of Polpis Harbor have chicks; the osprey are fishing and the kingfisher is rattling. I head out at 9:30pm to hear the chuck-will's-widows singing in the Sesachacha Heathlands and am rewarded by their calls and the starry skies and no wind. Iris Prismatica, Blue Flag
Iris and Blue-eyed Grass |
Cedars fruiting at UMASS Field Station |
Wild Cherry |
Stump Pond |
Scotch Broom on the Polpis Road |