[This lovely creature is a juvenile Common Tern, near the mixed tern/skimmer colony at Malibu Beach, near Longport. The beautiful browns of juv terns are soon lost to wear. This bird has barely 10 miles on it, I'd guess, as of Thursday night when I photographed it following its parents begging for a meal. Wintering as far south as Argentina, it'll log enough miles to need an oil change soon ;>).]
Terns by the hundreds are piling into Cape May, or so I hear - Tony Leukering tells me over 700, with birds going in and out so who knows how many are really there. Check the beach and Bunker Pond. Multiple Sandwich Terns were among them today. Most of the tern colonies are finishing up, so watch for juveniles following adults begging for food. Forster's Terns mostly nest on wrack in salt marsh, Commons also nest on the marsh but prefer undisturbed sandy beach if they can find it, no mean feat in NJ.
[This Common Loon has summered near Longport. Described as unable to walk. . .which is normal, because loons can't walk, their legs set so far back that they must scoot and slide onto their nests, and seldom come onto land otherwise. For swimming, such leg position is ideal. But coming onto land when not nesting is unusual. Whether this bird is sick, oiled, or just a juvenile acting its age, we know not. Note the Semipalmated Plovers in the background.]
[A couple Tri-colored Herons (leftmost, on the marsh, and left-center, perched in the phragmites) with a bunch of egrets near the rookery at Cowpens Island on Thursday. I'm quietly worried about herons - this photo was taken on a boat trip that in years past yielded as many as 40 Yellow-crowned Night-herons, but this time we saw only about 5. The traditional heron rookery west of Sunset Lake in Wildwood held essentially no birds this year. Herons are high on the food chain, and should be watched - if their numbers fall, something bigger could be at play. We did record at leat 200 Great Egrets and 50 Snowies on Thursday, as well as 15 Tri-colored Herons, for a spectacular trip in the rich Great Egg Harbor Bay.]
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Sounds of Summer, Part Two
A sound of summer (the audible kind) I forgot to mention, how I know not, is the piping whistle of Osprey. Taylor Sound, between the parkway and Wildwood, should be renamed "The Place of Ospreys," since it is ringed with Osprey nests: nests on duck blinds, on derelict cabins, and on more conventional Osprey towers. And the birds pipe constantly, or whenever one of their number flies over with a fish, which is nearly the same thing as the young near flying stage and insistently beg for food from busily hunting adults.
We saw many shorebirds while kayaking today: Whimbrels feasting on fiddler crabs; peep probing worms from the muckiest mud you can imagine; Spotted Sandpipers teetering on sod banks; Greater Yellowlegs chasing fish. All the shorebirds were adults; the first juvenile shorebirds (not counting the local Willets) will probably be Least Sandpipers appearing around August 1.
[Semipalmated Sandpiper above, Least below. Compared to Semi, Least is browner above, small-headed and hunched (I swear they even look hunched when flying), finer and more drooped bill, and yes, there are those yellow legs. These two birds were making their way across the same flat, feeding within feet of each other, and here then is another clue: which one kept its toes dry?]
[Makes you glad they're only a couple inches across. . . and wish you were a Whimbrel. The decurve of a Whimbrel's bill matches the curve of Fiddler Crab burrows. Night-herons love these things, too, as do gulls.]
Saturday, July 23, 2011
The Sounds of Summer
[Herring Gull chick, west of Avalon today.]
I don't mean sounds you hear, though there are plenty of them: the laughing of gulls, keee-aaahrr's of Common Terns, drone of flies, music of the ice cream truck driving the streets of North Cape May, crash of waves and laughter of children at the beach. The sounds I mean have water in them, at least at high tide: sound, noun: an inlet, bay, or recessed portion of the ocean.
Of both sounds, Cape May has many. Of the aquatic kind, Great, Grassy, Jarvis, Jenkins, Richarson, Townsend (who were these people?) fill and empty with the twice daily tides. Today I paddled Stite's Sound and down to Townsend's Inlet; tomorrow it will be Taylor Sound, on a falling tide, passing the marsh shack hosting an Osprey nest on the roof, the one, I fancy, that Witmer Stone stayed in 100 years ago or so. He wrote of visiting such a place, and the location matches, roughly, though without maintenance a shack in the marsh falls down several times over in the span of a century. According to the plan, I'll pass "Stone's" shack again on the way back in as the tide rises and gives me a lift to the landing. That's the theory. We'll see what the wind says, but one thing I can tell you is you don't want to wind up in a kayak fighting both an outgoing tide and the wind at the same time. At least not in the narrow channels, where the tidal flow can outstrip a small outboard or weak kayaker. In bigger channels, the water spreads a bit and you can go against the flow, but it's not much fun.
The sounds are shallow, so shallow that at low tide they won't float a kayak in places - which means they won't float a boat, or, hallelujah, a jet ski. But on the mud left behind at low tide there are shorebirds, foraging gulls, terns, egrets, and night-herons, and the myriad creatures that are the supermarket for these birds.
More on the shorebirds later. Today I checked in on another gull colony I know, a large gull colony, by which, as Tony Leukering made me clarify, I mean a colony of large gulls: mostly Herring, a few Great Black-backeds.
[ Herring Gulls on an isolated sandy spit, higher than the surrounding marsh and safe from flooding, with high-tide bush for the chicks to hide under, and shelter from the swelter of late.]
[Herring Gull egg. 2 to go; the norm is 3 per clutch. ]
[Mobile Herring Gull fledgling.]
[Still older juvenile Herring Gull, with parent.]
Mike Crewe told us over crab cakes and beer tonight that in the U.K., gull chicks are banded by teams of people,because the chicks so effectively disappear when approached. And it's true: there had to be dozens of chicks in the gull colony I visited this morning, yet a quick but careful walk-through yielded none apparent to the eye. Mike said the teams use radios, with observers guiding the banders: "Okay, put your hand down next to that shrub, the chick is right there." I stepped away from the colony to watch, and sure enough, chicks started reappearing from their hiding places, including the one pictured above.
[This group of Black-crowned Night-herons accreted around a salt marsh pool as the tide fell, concentrating prey.]
[Clappers, Clappers everywhere. I could have reached out and picked this Clapper Rail up.]
[Rigged for battle. The black bag is a waterproof bicycle pannier adapted for kayaking, and holds the camera. I would prefer a camo kayak, but anyone who's been out in south Jersey coastal waters knows you want to be visible, lest a jet ski or inattentive boater run you down. . .]
It was 94 degrees next to the water near Avalon when I came off about 10:00 a.m. The outside thermometer reading, according to my truck, peaked at 99 in the center of the Cape May Peninsula a little later, dropping again as I got close to the bay. Who knows what the high was; mowing the lawn at midday left me soaking, and the birds visited the water drip constantly, lawnmower running nearby or not. I got on the water before sunup this morning and swam several times to cool off, watching schools of silversides flee in front of me.
These sounds teem with life. When people ask me why Cape May is so good for birds, that's part of the answer.
I don't mean sounds you hear, though there are plenty of them: the laughing of gulls, keee-aaahrr's of Common Terns, drone of flies, music of the ice cream truck driving the streets of North Cape May, crash of waves and laughter of children at the beach. The sounds I mean have water in them, at least at high tide: sound, noun: an inlet, bay, or recessed portion of the ocean.
Of both sounds, Cape May has many. Of the aquatic kind, Great, Grassy, Jarvis, Jenkins, Richarson, Townsend (who were these people?) fill and empty with the twice daily tides. Today I paddled Stite's Sound and down to Townsend's Inlet; tomorrow it will be Taylor Sound, on a falling tide, passing the marsh shack hosting an Osprey nest on the roof, the one, I fancy, that Witmer Stone stayed in 100 years ago or so. He wrote of visiting such a place, and the location matches, roughly, though without maintenance a shack in the marsh falls down several times over in the span of a century. According to the plan, I'll pass "Stone's" shack again on the way back in as the tide rises and gives me a lift to the landing. That's the theory. We'll see what the wind says, but one thing I can tell you is you don't want to wind up in a kayak fighting both an outgoing tide and the wind at the same time. At least not in the narrow channels, where the tidal flow can outstrip a small outboard or weak kayaker. In bigger channels, the water spreads a bit and you can go against the flow, but it's not much fun.
The sounds are shallow, so shallow that at low tide they won't float a kayak in places - which means they won't float a boat, or, hallelujah, a jet ski. But on the mud left behind at low tide there are shorebirds, foraging gulls, terns, egrets, and night-herons, and the myriad creatures that are the supermarket for these birds.
More on the shorebirds later. Today I checked in on another gull colony I know, a large gull colony, by which, as Tony Leukering made me clarify, I mean a colony of large gulls: mostly Herring, a few Great Black-backeds.
[ Herring Gulls on an isolated sandy spit, higher than the surrounding marsh and safe from flooding, with high-tide bush for the chicks to hide under, and shelter from the swelter of late.]
[Herring Gull egg. 2 to go; the norm is 3 per clutch. ]
[Mobile Herring Gull fledgling.]
[Still older juvenile Herring Gull, with parent.]
Mike Crewe told us over crab cakes and beer tonight that in the U.K., gull chicks are banded by teams of people,because the chicks so effectively disappear when approached. And it's true: there had to be dozens of chicks in the gull colony I visited this morning, yet a quick but careful walk-through yielded none apparent to the eye. Mike said the teams use radios, with observers guiding the banders: "Okay, put your hand down next to that shrub, the chick is right there." I stepped away from the colony to watch, and sure enough, chicks started reappearing from their hiding places, including the one pictured above.
[This group of Black-crowned Night-herons accreted around a salt marsh pool as the tide fell, concentrating prey.]
[Clappers, Clappers everywhere. I could have reached out and picked this Clapper Rail up.]
[Rigged for battle. The black bag is a waterproof bicycle pannier adapted for kayaking, and holds the camera. I would prefer a camo kayak, but anyone who's been out in south Jersey coastal waters knows you want to be visible, lest a jet ski or inattentive boater run you down. . .]
It was 94 degrees next to the water near Avalon when I came off about 10:00 a.m. The outside thermometer reading, according to my truck, peaked at 99 in the center of the Cape May Peninsula a little later, dropping again as I got close to the bay. Who knows what the high was; mowing the lawn at midday left me soaking, and the birds visited the water drip constantly, lawnmower running nearby or not. I got on the water before sunup this morning and swam several times to cool off, watching schools of silversides flee in front of me.
These sounds teem with life. When people ask me why Cape May is so good for birds, that's part of the answer.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
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