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plover lovers' picnic October 14, 2001 |
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Adopt these cats at Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society Today's
Bird Sightings: This
Year's Bird Sightings: Today's
Reading: This
Year's Reading: Photos: Anthony Ash Beauty Callie From the leaves, I'd say periwinkle but the flower is so shriveled up, your guess is as good as mine. Evening primrose Three ways of looking at lance-leaved goldenrod |
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Anthony and Ash were left in a box on the doorstep. Not good weather for being left on the doorstep. They are so cute together, all wrapped around each other like much younger kittens. They move around so much, rubbing against each other and me, grooming each other (but not me), batting at things real and imagined, and sniffing at the camera. It takes me several tries to get halfway decent pictures of them.
Someone, Dawna I suppose, has put a picture of Jaguar on the bulletin board next to the one of Miss Newburyport. I want to cry but I don't. There's still time left to get that coffee, even though I'm not cold anymore. Chasing Beauty around on the floor warmed me right up.
At the refuge headquarters, staff members cook outside in the drizzle at the grill. Volunteers wait inside the carpenter shop for the meat. I make some comment about this being plover warden weather. Everybody nods. Someone adds that it's not quite as cold as April on the beach. The mood is decidedly upbeat. We're celebrating a terrific year: 26 chicks fledged (from 13 pairs - truly fantastic). It's nice feeling like we actually make a difference.
There are awards, door prizes,
applause, laughter, and cake. There are plover warden
stories and bird talk - somebody tells a story of seeing
the So here I am on Plum Island. I'm fortified with garden burgers and loaded down with loot - the aforementioned sweatshirt, a Life's a Beach for the Piping Plover T-shirt, a USFWS T-shirt, a car window sunshade, a beautiful drinking glass with the USFWS goose on it, a portfolio of bird prints and whatever I'm forgetting. There's a whole rainy afternoon ahead of me. I've done the plover warden thing in weather like this. Why let a little rain stop me from birding? I don't get here enough anymore, so I'd better take advantage of being here.
Red-breasted nuthatches are all over the place. I've never seen a red-breasted nuthatch on the refuge before and today they seem to be having an event. One very wet, bedraggled, red-breasted nuthatch explores the nooks and crannies of the fence at parking lot 2 allowing me a good look at him. His colors seem more saturated too. Dark-eyed juncos, tree sparrows, song sparrows, and, I think, chipping sparrows form a huge mixed flock pecking around in the grass and weeds at the side of the road. They barely even move for cars. Plenty of fall wildflowers are still in bloom. I guess there hasn't been a frost here yet although we've had it further inland. I like the way the rain highlights everything, like it's polished, all shined up. The rain seems to get more penetrating the further south I go. How many extra T-shirts can I layer? Should've brought rain gear. I finally decide to turn around at Hellcat and head home to settle in with hot tea and a book. As I drive back along the PI turnpike, I watch two northern harriers attack something in the grass next to the airport. They both keep coming up empty-taloned. ![]() |
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Copyright © 2001, Janet I. Egan |