haze with sanderlings

July 30, 2004


It's hazy, hot, and humid at the beach just like everywhere else around these parts. The greenheads aren't too bad though. High tide is at 9:55 or something like that this morning so it's almost all the way in when I get to the beach at lot 6. There are no shorebirds except for one sanderling. A lone sanderling? Alert the press. That's like man bites dog. All the shorebirds, tons and tons of peeps, are at the salt pannes. At least that's how it looked when I passed by there. The haze creates this interesting effect of two horizons: one close in where the water abrubptly and uniformly changes to haze and one farther out where the horizon would normally be but much higher up. That's the only way I can describe it. There are two levels, one where boats sail on water and the other where they sail through the white sky. It's really weird. It's supposed to clear up by noon.

There's one guy fishing as close to the boundary as he can get. He's talkative and interested in the piping plovers and surprisingly asks me about the tern restoration project on the Isles of Shoals. Actually what he asks is what bird it is they're trying to restore on the Isles of Shoals -- which he seems to think is all one island. I tell him what little I know about the restoration of roseate and common terns. I have a t-shirt I bought at Shoals Marine Lab that says Tern Restoration Project on it, but I'm not wearing it. I'm wearing my Life's a Beach for the Piping Plover PRNWR t-shirt. Anyway, most of the fishermen I meet are genuinely interested in the birds and very respectful of the beach closure. The guy tells me some fish stories, including one in which he caught a 38 inch bluefish last summer. That's a mighty big bluefish. He says Jack helped him haul it in and asks if I know Jack. Of course, everybody on this beach knows Jack. He interrupts fishing only to sleep or go to church. Seriously. And his luck in catching them isn't just knowing the tides and the spots, it's knowing how the fish think.

Visitors start streaming in but surprisingly they can all read and they realize the signs apply to them. They stop, read the sign, smile at me, and head south with their beach gear. This is amazing. It's unprecedented.

A few common terns and least terns start fishing just to the north and I point them out to the fisherman who was interested in terns. The aforementioned Jack arrives with his fishing gear and he gets to telling fish stories and teasing the other guy about his very interesting shoes. I think they are actually some kind of waterproof bootie that's supposed to be worn inside something else, but I don't really know. And they're a weird color.

Birdwise it's very quiet today. There are some gulls sitting on the beach down in the mystery zone but it's too hazy to sort them out. Ditto for any terns that aren't close to shore -- white terns in white haze are tricky IDs at best. Once the tide starts to go out a little, a flock of sanderlings stops by to join the loner -- he must feel ever so much better now --- and a flock of semipalmated plovers flies by at top plover speed clearly on a mission that does not involve landing near here. There are no swallows despite a reasonable supply of flies. Even my reliable kingbird who perchs on the 5.d mile marker is AWOL today. A pair of mourning doves puts in an appearance and fly so far out over the water I wonder if they suddenly think they are seabirds. Maybe they heard us talking about the Isles of Shoals and they want to go there :-) Then there's a seagoing cabbage white. No kidding: a little white butterfly headed straight out to sea. I lose it in the haze and don't know if it changes its mind or not. A clouded sulfur floats by but it heads into the dunes, altogether a better place for a butterfly to be.

It's wicked humid. With the humidity, the sunscreen, and the bug repellent I feel like a sticky mess. The haze does start to burn off around 11:00 AM and I start to get really hot. Good, so now I'm a hot sticky mess. And I don't have a shower waiting for me at home (see here and here If you're really interested in the state of my bathroom).

Jack and the other fisherman are talking about the Democratic National Convention, something about the freedom to fish, and how the protestors really can't expect to be heard if they dress like clowns. It's funny but just when their conversation floated over to me I was thinking about how none of the speechifying at the DNC mentioned piping plovers. Really I was. Nobody mentioned any federally threatened species. I guess now that we've got the bald eagle back and the Republicans have co-opted the eagle there isn't much else bird-wise for the politicians to be interested in. I foolishly wrote to someone (who matters in these matters) that what I want to accomplish is to make the piping plover as popular and charismatic as the bald eagle, then I scaled back and said well, maybe the osprey. Now, if only I could figure out how saving the piping plover relates to homeland security I'd be all set. :-)

Maybe I'll dress up like a piping plover and go to the Republican National Convention in New York. It's gotta be better than dressing as a clown.

Today's Bird Sightings
Plum Island
sanderling 20
common tern 8
herring gull 2
double crested cormorant 3
ringbilled gull 2
semipalmated plover 12
least tern 3
mourning dove 2

Visitors: 3

Refuge biological staff: 0

Coast Guard assets: 0

Today's Reading
Seabirds: their biology and ecology by Bryan Nelson, Birds in the Bush by Bradford Torrey

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Bronson Arroyo


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan