Today's Bird Sightings:
Plum Island
sanderling (45)
semipalmated plover (7)
semipalmated sandpiper (6)
great black back gull (8)
ruddy turnstone (8)
herring gull (51)
ring billed gull (9)
double crested cormorant (17)
common tern (1)
piping plover (2)
tree swallow (3)
least tern (1)
laughing gull (1)
redwinged blackbird (1)
Mammals
white tailed deer (1)
refuge staff (3)
south beach 11:30 - 3:30
Today's Reading: Wanderlust
by Rebecca Solnit
Today's Starting Pitcher: off
day
2000
Book List
Plum
Island Bird List

Copyright © 2000, Janet I.
Egan
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Today
is a lighter gray than usual, a pale pearl gray. It's so
humid I feel like I'm swimming in the air. The temperature
is supposed to go up into the 90's today with possible
thunderstorms late in the afternoon. But, you know what?
It's a great day to be at the beach. There's a steady breeze
to keep the greenheads away and cool me off. There are not
too many visitors, but just enough to keep it from being
boring. The sanderlings are putting on a show, feeding like
crazy, chasing semipalmated sandpipers and semipalmated
plovers away, chasing each other, and racing at top speed
along the water line so fast their legs blur.
The
incoming tide obliterates the telltale sanderling feeding
trails - lines of holes with little mounds of sand where
they've poked their bills into the sand and then sort of
plowed it repeatedly. The semipalmated plovers parade back
and forth in the wrack behind me, having given up contesting
the water line with the sanderlings and semipalmated
sandpipers. The no trespassing sign withstands the incoming
tide for three hours and finally falls over. I debate
whether to take off shoes and socks and roll up pant legs to
retrieve the sign. What if greenheads suddenly appear and
bite my tender feet? I'm so responsible, I decide to go for
it. The dead skate that's been washing in and out all day
washes up right at my feet as I'm retrieving the sign.
For
most of the shift, no gull comes close to the dead skate.
Now a ring billed gull gets interested and starts pecking at
it, seemingly without actually eating any of it. A first
year herring gull lands and drives the ringbill away. The
herring gull pecks at it more vigorously. An adult great
black back drives the herring gull away, takes one peck at
it, decides it's not worth eating and flies away. No gulls
touch it for the rest of the shift.
Most of the visitors ask questions about piping plovers
(what do they look like, what do they eat, etc.) or about
when the beach will be open. But it wouldn't be a summer of
plover wardening if somebody didn't ask me if I have a gun.
Late in the afternoon, a guy walks up to me and asks:
Guy: "Are you the guard
today?"
Me: "Yes."
Guy: "Do you have a gun?"
Me: "No they don't issue us guns, just a
radio."
Guy: "What happens if somebody trespasses?
Do you shoot them?"
Me: "No, they don't' give us guns, just
radios."
Guy pointing to the dead skate: "What's
that?"
Me: "A dead skate. Like a, umm,
stingray."
Guy: "What are they for?"
Me: "Umm, I think they're edible, but it
looks like it's been dead for awhile and even the
gulls won't touch it. I wouldn't recommend eating
it."
Guy: "So, it tried to get on the closed
beach and you shot it?"
I bit my tongue and did not say "With my radio?" but I
thought it. After the guy left I laughed until I started
coughing. I laugh again in the car on my way back to the
gatehouse.
I
was going to do more weed pictures but sort of ran out of
energy. This fungus is growing on the fence next to lot 7. I
don't have a fungus book, and it doesn't look like either of
the two types shown in my everything book (the National
Audubon Society guide to the nature of New England, which
has some of everything: birds, flowers, trees, mushrooms
(except the ones I've seen so far this year), butterflies,
dragonflies, marine mammals, fish, herptiles ...). I'm too
tired to try an Internet search and the library isn't open
late at night, so I'll have to figure out the fence fungus's
name another time.
So,
the weed of the day is Bouncing Bet. Looks kind of like the
phlox my mother used to plant in her garden on Warwick Road.
Who names these things? Who is Bet and was she flattered or
insulted to have weed named after her? Did she really
bounce?
I brake for a deer in the road, for catbirds in the road,
and pedestrians, but for once the suicidal mourning doves do
not hurl themselves at my car. In fact they aren't in the
road at either of their usual spots. I don't really bird on
the way back because the game I made up for today was to see
how many birds I could list just from sitting on the beach.
I'd say it's a pretty good list, especially since this is
the first laughing gull I've had this year.
Also, in the weed department, I stop to verify that
neither Evening Lychnis nor Evening Primrose, which I
photographed yesterday, is in bloom. Evidently the night
blooming flowers agree that today's gray is much lighter,
practically daylight. A few patches of blue sky even sneaked
in but they've vanished already and thunderstorms are
predicted for tonight.
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