20 June 2007

June 20th

Map of the Wild Animal Park. Click on it to enlarge
Waiting for the Journey into Africa truck-train

San Diego Wild Animal Park


We set out today for the Wild Animal Park located in the San Pasqual valley inland from Escondido about 35 miles north from San Diego. It is surrounded by hill slopes in dry country and the major theme for the Park is animals of Africa. Despite this focus there are several notable conservation programs carried out within the Park, mostly involving captive breeding, with the specially significant program involving the recovery of the critically endangered California Condor. today was very hot, in the high 30s (C), and we did not venture out to see some of these displays. however we took the 'train' journey circling the Park to offer James the best overall view of big African mammals and then slowly cruised round the region described as Heart of Africa. A mid morning break at the Okavango Outpost for drinks and a snack and lunch at the Mombasa Island Cooker. By mid afternoon we were exhausted from the heat and decided that we had seen enough for the day returning to our motel in La Jolla. As always there are lots of interesting animals and birds to discover at this place with plenty of photo opportunities, however, labelling is as frustrating as usual when not all species are clearly identified. Some surprises were encountered including the magnificent Cock-of-the-rock and a Madagascan Crested Ibis. Other faithfuls, such as Shoebill and Southern Bald Ibis, were good to seen again.
The following is a selection of my impressions captured digitally, but many more pictures are available at the web sit: To be added shortly!


Cheetah Acinonyx jubatus - aloof as ever!
Female Waterbuck Kobus ellipsiprymnus (W African form?)
White (Grass) Rhino Ceratotherium simum (southern population)
Flank of a Giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis
(One of the southern forms?)
Bongo Tragelaphus euryceros
(lowland form?)
Drake Cape Shelduck Tadorna cana
Nesting Green Heron Butorides virescens
Lesser Flamingo Phoeniconaias minor
Greater Flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus
Chilean Flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis
Gerenuk Litocranius walleri
Sunbittern Eurypyga helias
Andean Cock-of-the-rock Rupicola peruvianus
Drake Ruddy Duck Oxyura jamaicensis performing 'bubbling display'
Shoebill Balaeniceps rex
Black-crowned Night-heron Nycticorax nycticorax
Great Egret Egretta alba
Having trouble from a Great-tailed Grackle Quiscalus mexicanus
Great Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo (lucidus form)
Coscoroba Swan Coscoroba coscorobaSwan Goose Anser cygnoidesAmerican Coot Fulica americana in confrontationSouthern Bald Ibis Geronticus calvus
Madagascar Crested Ibis Lophotibis cristata
James with Grandad at the Wild Animal Park

19 June 2007

June 19th


Seaworld San Diego


Close up to Common Bottlenose Dolphins, Tursiops truncatus

A day at Seaworld! The following is a selection of images from today. More can be viewed by going to the web log at: To be added shortly!

Lesser Flamingo Phoeniconaias minor
Greater Flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus
Killer Whale Orcinus orca -NE Pacific form
The immortal 'Shamu' performing as ever!
This seems to be a Glossy Ibis Plegadis falcinellus rather than
the expected White-faced Ibis P. chihi
Drake Rosybill Netta peposaca
Brant Branta bernicla [nigricans type]
Typical? Lesser Canada Goose Branta hutchinsonii
White-cheeked (Bahama) Pintail Anas bahamensis
Scruffy Little Blue Heron Egretta caerulea
Scalet Ibis Eudocimus ruber
Caribbean Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber
Snowy Egret Egretta thula
Californian Sea Lion Zalophus californianus Tufted Puffin Fraturcula cirrhata
Seen in the Alaskan sea cliff exhibit within the Penguin Encounter

Beluga Delphinapterus leucas
Polar Bear Ursus maritimus
Seen, along with the Beluga, in the very impressive Wild Arctic exhibit

Commerson's Dolphin Cephalorhynchus commersonii
One of several held at Seaworld at this time
James enjoying the day with Mum; specially the aqarium fish!
James with Grandad
The big splash!



June 19th - Torrey Pines

Old cone of Torrey Pine
We have a two bedroom suite at the Residence Inn By Marriott, a motel conveniently located off Gilman Drive, La Jolla and not too far from the Los Angeles to San Diego freeway. We spend today at Seaworld but before we head down to Mission Bay we go to see the famous Torrey Pines.

On the coast between La Jolla and Del Mar to the north there is high ground overlooking an estuary and on this headland there is a grove of one of the rarest pines in the world, the Torrey Pine Pinus torreyana.

The headland was a prominent feature known to the earliest Spanish explorers as Punto de los Arboles or "Point of Trees" a landmark for sailors navigating off this coast. Trees on this coast are rare and have been so since before the time of arrival of the Spanish. In 1850 the botanist Charles Parry recognized this pine as unique and named it after his friend John Torrey, also a botanist. Parry was concerned about protecting these trees and urged that they be saved from extinction. The authorities were in agreement and by 1885 there was a bounty on anyone caught vandalizing a Torrey Pine. By 1899 the San Diego City Council passed an ordinance that set aside 369 acres to be used as a Public Park.
The newspaperwoman and philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps donated more land and was instrumental in raising public concern about protecting the trees. She contributed significantly to the establishment of the reserve as seen today. The Torrey Pines State Reserve now covers about 2000 acres including the coastal marshes and some additional groves of pine present on high ground to the north of the estuary, although this smaller area is now completely surrounded by habitation. The splendid Adobe lodge (now the Visitors Centre) was originally built with support from Ellen Scipps to accommodate a restaurant and it was a popular feature in the Park during the 1930s. An unexpected bird seen scurrying away from us as we walked to the Visitors Center was a Roadrunner!
Useful booklet
A very helpful booklet 'Torrey Pines State Reserve' is published by the Torrey Pines Association, La Jolla, California, 108pp [ISBN 0-9629917-0-8]. I bought the 3rd and latest edition which was first published in 1991. However, the following notes are taken from the Park website and expand on some of the background fact mentioned above.

Visitor Center

In 1922 the building which is now the Ranger Station and Visitor Center was built. It was commissioned by Ellen Browning Scripps and probably designed by H.L.Jackson. Architects Richard S. Requa and Herbert Lewis Jackson developed modern methods of using an ancient building material, adobe blocks. Requa and Jackson did the original work for the Santa Fe Land Company, as subsidiary of a well-known railroad. They designed the Rancho Santa Fe Inn, the first school, and the original post office in Rancho Sant Fe. They worked out methods of protecting earth walls from rain, capillary moisture, and (I hope) earthquakes. They were leading exponents of the mission revival style which was so popular before World War II.

The building was called Torrey Pines Lodge. It was a restaurant with stumpy tables, chintz curtains, lampshades made of Torrey Pine needles, and a jukebox. It may have been a real lodge. I have seen a picture which seemed to show three small, primitive motel buildings near where the flagpole is today. The lodge was in a handy spot. The road up the hill where joggers and bikers torture themselves was pretty rough going for a Model T. By the time you got to the top, your car needed water and you needed a beer. Guy Fleming's daughter, Mrs. Margaret Allen, liked to tell how she and her brothers would play near the road. A Model T would snuff out on the steepest part of the hill. They would yell at the driver to turn around and back up the hill. Southern California drivers were not used to such steep hills. The Model T didn't have a fuel pump. The tank was placed so that if it was half empty, the gravity system didn't get the gas to the carburetor.

Visitors center (Lodge) Torrey Pines State Reserve
View northwards from the loookout near the Visitors Center.
Los Penasquitos Marsh Natural Reserve below

Groves of Torrey Pines growing on the northern headland.

The canyons near the lodge contain some of the densest groves remaining today.
The following are some additional notes taken from the website:

Naming of the Torrey Pine

Because groves of trees were not common along the Southern California coast, early Spanish explorers (1500-1700 AD) referred to this area as Punto de Los Arboles, which literally means "Point of Trees." They used this area both as a landmark and as a warning that they were too close to the shore in the fog. In 1769, the Portola-Serra Sacred Expedition passed through nearby Sorrento Valley on its way from San Diego to colonize Monterey and establish missions along the way. The trail they used is referred to as El Camino Real. The trees themselves were referred to as Soledad Pines (Solitary Pines) by the first Americans to visit the area. The name remained until 1850.

The first modern account of the Torrey pine occurred with the renaming of the tree in 1850. It was "officially" discovered by Dr. Charles Christopher Parry. This was the year that California became a State of the Union. Parry was in San Diego as botanist for the US - Mexico Boundary Survey. The purpose of the survey was to determine the boundaries between Mexico and California. Parry was a medical doctor with an interest in botany: specifically, why plants grew where they did and how Indians used plants. This area and the Torrey Pine tree were brought to his attention by entomologist Dr. John Le Conte. Parry named the tree for his friend and colleague, Dr. John Torrey, of New York. Torrey was one of the leading botanists of his time. He had co-authored A Flora of North America, and was the sole author of A Flora of New York State. Unfortunately, Torrey never came here. But Parry did send him samples of seeds, branches, and cones. (Judy Schulman)

Protecting the Pines

In 1883, Parry re-visited the area. Surprised at the lack of protection for the trees, he wrote a historical and scientific account of the pine emphasizing the need to protect the tree from extermination. This was presented to the San Diego Society of Natural History.

The first source of protection came in 1885 from the San Diego County Board of Supervisors. They posted signs citing a reward of $100 for the apprehension of anyone vandalizing a Torrey pine tree.

This attempt to protect the trees was reinforced by botanist J. G. Lemmon of the newly formed California State Board of Forestry. In 1888, he suggested that appropriate legislation be mandated to protect the tree. That same year, the mystique of the tree was enhanced by botanist T. S. Brandagee's discovery of Torrey pines on Santa Rosa Island. Several theories have been set forth trying to explain the two stands of trees some 175 miles apart. These include that trees were planted there from bird droppings; that earthquakes moved landmasses over long periods of time due to plate tectonics; and that the trees were once more widely spread along the Southern California coast.

In 1890, some pueblo lands in San Diego were leased for cattle and sheep grazing. This was in spite of early warnings for preservation. In order to clear the land, trees were cut and hauled away to be used for firewood. The present Torrey Pines area was included in this lease. (Judy Schulman)

Establishment of Park

Persuaded by city father George Marston, botanists David Cleveland and Belie Angler, the City Council in 1899 passed an ordinance to set aside 364 acres of pueblo lands as a public park. Unfortunately, the ordinance made no provisions for protecting the tree.

After the turn of the century, the lands surrounding the park were in danger of being commercially sold. Between 1908 and 1911, newspaper woman and philanthropist, Ellen Browning Scripps, acquired two additional pueblo lots and willed them to the people of San Diego. This added to the park the area of North Grove and the estuary. By the time she died in 1932, Miss Scripps had contributed greatly not only to the establishment of our park, but also to the Natural History Museum, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the Zoo, the La Jolla Childrens' Pool, and the Scripps Clinic and Research facility.

Representing the San Diego Society of Natural History and the San Diego Floral Association, Guy Fleming and Ralph Sumner visited the park in 1916 to conduct botanical studies. Their report of damage caused by picnickers and campers resulted in public support for the preservation of the area. The movement was spearheaded by Miss Scripps.

In 1921, Miss Scripps and the City Park Commission appointed Guy Fleming as the first custodian of the park. A former naturalist and landscaper, he later went on to become the District Superintendent for the State Park System in Southern California.

In 1922, Miss Scripps retained Ralph Cornell, a well known landscape architect, to suggest a long term plan for the park. His three-part plan called for restrictions against changing the original landscape or introducing plants or features not indigenous to the area or over-cultivating the Torrey pine to the exclusion of open spaces. (Judy Schulman)

Torrey Pines Lodge Built

Also in 1922, Ellen Browning Scripps financed the construction of Torrey Pines Lodge. The architects were Richard Requa and H. L. Jackson. They applied modern methods to the use of adobe bricks. These modern methods were said to protect the earth walls from rain, capillary moisture, and earthquakes. The lodge was styled after the Hopi Indian houses of the Arizona desert. According to one newspaper article, Indian crews were brought over from Arizona to insure exactness of the construction. Requa was one of the leading exponents of the Mission Revival style. Later he became the Director of Architecture for the 1935 California Pacific International Exposition at Balboa Park.

The Lodge was completed in February, 1923, and used as a restaurant. Both tour buses and locals out for a Sunday drive made it a regular stop. Our current display area was the main dining room. People also ate out on the front terrace. The ranger office was the kitchen and food storage area. The slide room and the docent lounge were the living room and bedroom of the Burkholders, the first restaurant proprietors. The Resource Ecologist's office was the waitresses' bunkroom. (Judy Schulman)

Expansion of the Park

In 1924, the city council added other pueblo lands to the park. This addition was the result of a request for expansion by the City Park Commission and interested civic groups. The park now included almost 1,000 acres of cliffs, canyons, mesas, and beach. Between 1928 and 1930, the League To Save Torrey Pines fought and won against a proposed cliff road above the beach. The purpose of the road was to eliminate curves and grades in the old road. The opponents felt that the road would not only destroy a section of the park but would also be costly to build. One of the reasons the League was so against this new road was that it called for using landfill in the canyons so that the road could go across them.

With the advent of W.W.II, the Army leased 750 acres of Torrey Pines Mesa from the City of San Diego to be used for training purposes. Camp Callan then came into being as an anti-aircraft artillery replacement training center. It extended from the southernmost boundaries of Torrey Pines Park towards the Muir Campus of UCSD. In return for an occupational permit to use the lower portion of the park, the military had to guarantee that no part of the park would be damaged. The park itself was kept open to the public. The camp opened during January, 1941, and closed November, 1945. The buildings were torn down and used for lumber to build homes for veterans.

A special city election in 1956 resulted in giving the nearly 1,000 acre park to the State of California. About 100 acres were appropriated for the construction of a public golf course. The State Park became official in 1959.

Torrey Pines State Reserve Extension was acquired in 1970 after six years of effort. Starting in 1964, local conservation groups (Torrey Pines Association, the Sierra Club, the Citizens Coordinate) became concerned with bulldozing of Torrey pines on the north side of Los Penasquitos lagoon to make roads for residential developments. In addition to support from local civic, social, and school groups, there was a lot of national media attention. The acquisition added about 197 acres and 1500 trees. Plants in the Extension not found in the main part of the Reserve include the coastal blue lilac and the scarlet larkspur. (Judy Schulman)

Map showing the relative position of the northern addition to the main park

trail-map-main reserve
Map of the main areas surrounding the Lodge.

The park extends southwards some distance but mostly occurs as a coastal strip towards its southern limit. The following text is also extracted from the Torrey Pines website based on text taken from Nature Notes by Hank Nichol.

Torrey pine trees is[are] the rarest native pine in the United States. If you take the Torrey pine growing in one small grove on Santa Rosa Island as being distinct, that tree could possibly be the rarest pine of all. The Torrey pine is two trees. The subspecies growing on Santa Rosa Island off the coast of Santa Barbara is obviously different. The island tree, Pinus torreyana insularis, grows shorter, broader, and bushier. It could actually be used as a shade tree. Our local tree gives only sparse shade. Insularis bark is thicker and scalier. Its cones are rounder. However, many botanists think that Pinus dalatensis is the rarest pine in the world. This tree grows on two hills near Dalat, Vietnam, and it was discovered only in 1960. Another candidate for rarest is Pinus rzedowskii. It is a white pine which was discovered in Michoacan in 1968. It is named for Dr. Jersy Rzedowski, a professor of botany at, would you believe, the University of Mexico? Then there's the Pinus maximartinezii. This five-needled piñon has the largest seeds of any known pine. It was discovered in Zacatecas by Professor Rzedowski in 1963. He named it for his friend, Dr. Maximo Martinez, also of the University of Mexico. There could be other species of pine out there waiting to be discovered.

Five needles is a common characteristic of white pines. Some old books list the Torrey pine among the white pines because it is five-needled. The piñons were put in with the yellow pines because they don't have five needles (one of them does, but it wasn't discovered till later). But the Torrey pine is not a white pine, and the piñons are not yellow pines. The designations "white" and "yellow" have to do with the color of the wood. The terms are inaccurate, unscientific, and make botanist see red. Pines with one vascular bundle running through the needle are called "haploxylon". (These are the whites). Those with two vascular bundles are "diploxylon" (yellow, if you must). The Torrey pine has two. Only a few other diploxylon pines are five-needled. The others, including the beautiful Montezuma pine, are all relatives, and all are from Mexico and/or Guatemala.

Pine trees do not have flowers. This has been explained forcefully to me on several occasions. Pines have "strobili" which serve the same purpose. You can call them "flowers" if you want to. I do. The Torrey pine blooms early, usually in February, sometimes in January. The female blossom forms high in the tree. It looks like a miniature red cone. Flowers of other species of pines may be blue or purple. The separate male blossom grows in a lower branch. It sheds its light pollen which floats in a yellow fog. This coats the conelet, which then tries to grow into a real cone. There are many more of these than the tree can possibly support. Some will abort this year. Some will abort next year. Some of them will never grow at all. In most species of pine the cones mature in two years. The Torrey pine takes three. Only one other pine that I know of is this slow. That is Pinus pseudostrobus of southern Mexico and Guatemala. This "false white pine" also has five needles. Some think that it, or one of its variations, the Oaxaca Pine, is the direct ancestor of the Torrey, the Montezuma, the Digger, and the Coulter pines.

The seeds of the Torrey pine are edible nuts. These are larger than those of all but one rare piñon. They are also much harder. You could break your teeth trying to eat them. The same could be said for the nuts of the Coulter and Digger pines. The Italian and Swiss stone pines are named for their edible stones. You could say that all pine seeds are edible, but many of them are too small for humans to bother with.

The Torrey pine cone drops most of its seeds during the autumn of its third season. The cone will stay on the tree, and some of the seeds will stay in the cone until it falls in two, three, or ten years. There are two seeds under each scale of a cone. An average cone of a Torrey pine will have about 100 seeds. The giant Coulter pine cone can have twice that many. Pines have winged seeds. The purpose of a wing is to carry the seed away with the wind. A Torrey pine has a very large seed with a very small wing. The only utility I can see in this is that the wing is like the fins on a bomb. It may aim the seed straight down and help it spear through the duff and into the soil. It seems as though a lot of Torrey pines are planted by scrub jays. A jay with a full crop buries a seed for later. The bird brain forgets where he hid it. If the seed avoids the attention of rodents, it could possibly germinate.

A six-inch Torrey pine seedling can have a taproot two or three feet long. This will grow down rapidly, then branch out when it reaches bedrock. The roots will go anywhere they can find a little water and a little nutrient. By the time a tree is 40 feet high it may have roots reaching out 200 feet. We usually think of tree roots as preventing erosion. Sometime roots can cause erosion. A tree can give the appearance of growing out of solid rock. Its roots have followed a crack. If the fissure is near a cliff, the growing, swelling root system flakes off the edge and causes a minor landslide. You can see these mats of roots in many places along the cliffs. A slide can cause an occasional upside-down Torrey pine. One of these can sometimes remain alive for many years.

You may read or hear stories of a vast forest of Torrey pines growing from Ensenada to Santa Barbara. Once I read of a fossilized bundle of Torrey pine needles found in Oregon. Personally I think anyone would have a very hard time proving that the local Torrey pine, Pinus torreyana torreyana ever grew any further away than La Jolla or Solana Beach. Naturally, that is. You can plant a Torrey pine anywhere. In any reasonable climate it will grow.

What is special about a Torrey pine? It's not the rarest pine in the world. The Dalat pine is. It isn't even the rarest tree in California. That's the Monterey cypress. The Torrey pine doesn't grow to a great size like a redwood. It doesn't grow to a great age like a bristlecone pine. It isn't known for excellent lumber like a sugar pine. Torrey pine wood is brittle, rots easily, and doesn't even make a good fire. The Torrey pine doesn't even have the dubious distinction of being endangered. So, "what's special about a Torrey pine?" The Torrey pines along the sea cliffs suffer from persistent drought. Their roots are growing in poor sand which can hardly be called "soil". The trees are blasted by storms and cooked in the sun. Some trees die, but the species lives stubbornly on. some trees, like some people, develop character during hard times. That's what I think is special about the Torrey pine..., character!

Bunches of Torrey Pine needles
James viewing Torrey Pines from the lookout
Torrey Pine cones

In the evening we returned to the beach at the foot of the Reserve. I walked part way up the hill to view the pines in the late afternnon light. We headed into Del Mar for an excellent dinner at a roadside restaurant in the high
Street.

Northern slopes of the main reserve. Pines on top.
Erosion of sediments reveal marine deposites

Ancient Torrey Pines on the slopes
Frisbies on the beach below the Torrey Pines Reserve

18 June 2007

June 18th - La Jolla

One of many Brown Pelican passing up the coastline today

Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Birch Aquarium
Tracey, James, Alice (the dog) and I headed down to San Diego this morning in the 'blue Subaru', stopping for a fish and chips lunch at a seaside shop at the end of Ocean Street in Carlsbad. We sat outside overlooking the beach because Alice was permitted to be in this area.
Views from our lunch stop site in Carlsbad
Whale sculptures in front of the entrance to the Birch Aquarium, La Jolla

We then headed for the Scripps Institution's Birch Aquarium in La Jolla. Here we spent the remainder of the afternoon. The Aquarium is set in a magnificent location overlooking the sea and although not large is very well worth a visit. The exhibits are magnificently displayed and there were plenty of activities to amuse James. In fact, he was perfectly content to sit in front of an aquarium tank and gaze at the brightly coloured tropical fish, although he was especially intrigued by Moray eels!
Jellyfish of an unknown species; a Triggerfish (Balistoides sp?) and some sort of pomacanthid or Angelfish?
A Moray Eel, possibly a Gymnothorax sp. (Green Moray G. prasinus?)
Multiple rods once used in tuna fishing
I found the story of the early days of tuna fishing off the southern California coast and the use of multiple rods quite fascinating. Up to four rods are shown in action on an accompanying film clip to the above exhibit!
Front of the Aquarium overlooking the sea
James enjoying the hands-on experience!
An excellent display on global warming and the alarming rise
in atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels
Superb example of camouflage.
An unknown scorpionfish-like sp. wonderfully matching red algae
Another superb example of camouflage.
A syngnathid or seahorse, possibly the Leafy Seadragon Phycodurus sp. looking like drifting seaweed

James amusing himself!


17 June 2007

June 17th

Black-crowned Night-Heron

Santa Barbara

An early morning bird walk around the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB) campus with Charlie and Tracey. This followed an overnight stay with Charlie and Jenn. This morning David stayed behind with Jenn looking after James.
We set off at 6AM and return at 10:30AM It was a Graduation day! Crowds were gathering from 8AM and the ceremony started at 9AM with Elgar's 'Pomp and Circumstance' march on perpetual reprise, to my great amusement. So British at an all American institution! The morning was cool and overcast.
We saw a good range of birds starting with a pair of White-tailed Kite and their two dependant but flying young. Some Snowy Plover, a Killdeer were spotted at the end of Slough Road, Ocean Meadows, and many Cliff Swallow were hawking low across the beach. Strictly speaking the area is restricted access (UCSB) requiring some sort of permit but we were not challenged. It seemed that some Least Tern also had a breeding colony in the dunes at the back of the beach. A probable Pelagic Cormorant was seen passing offshore and a Pigeon Guillemot. Excellent views of a male Bullock's Oriole, several Ruddy Duck and many Red-winged Blackbird on the slough. Mallard here seemed to be males in the main with many of them in full wing moult and most well into eclipse plumage. All told about 50 of them. A couple of Canada Geese a Pied-billed Grebe a few American Coot and an American Goldfinch were also noted.
Near the Marine sciences buildings at the end of Lagoon road and alongside the UCSB lagoon, we found 3 obliging Black-crowned Night-Heron, a Belted Kingfisher and a Western Grebe. Also a loafing group of Brown Pelican and some Double-crested Cormorant on an artificial 'floating' island. Four Willet and a probable Common Tern were seen at the top of the lagoon near the lawns were the Graduation Ceremony was under way. Eucalypts growing everywhere and many other Australian species such as Myoporum, Acacia and Casuarina (sensu lato).
Seven Caspian Tern, all in full breeding attire and several Rough-winged Swallow at Goleta Beach at the end of Sandspit road. Also we found a dozen or more Great Egret, a Greater Yellowlegs and, visible in the tall gum trees on the opposite side of Goleta creek, a Great Blue Heron heronry with perhaps 10-12 nest but maybe more in total. Large young were visible on some nests and some of these young herons had already fledged and were now stalking about the lagoon shoreline. Also found amongst the motley collection of gulls (mostly Western Gull of various sub-adult stages) a very worn plumaged individual that might have been an immature Glaucous-winged Gull.
Black-crowned Night-Heron

Brown Pelican and Double-crested Cormorant
Squabbling Caspian Terns.
Three of seven in full alternate plumage at this time of year

Is this an immature Glaucous-winged Gull?
Unidentified Eucalyptus sp. with massive flowers and fruits


15 June 2007

June 15th

The Vanguard at berth Oxnard Harbor

ANACAPA Island Revisited

A day out with James and Tracey. Laurie van Stee was also on the Island Packers tour. She was working as crew on the Vanguard and she had organized for us complimentary tickets. Bart Francis, a volunteer naturalist, was the chief guide on the island.
Opposite the marina berth from which we set off was a small colony of Great Blue heron. At least three nests were visible in the crown of a pine or cypresses and two nests had two large nestlings apiece. On the way out we passed through a feeding frenzy of Brown Pelican and Double-crested Cormorants with a few Western Gulls working over a large scattered group of 100+ dolphins.

Dolphin riding a wave
Tracey and James
Distant view of Anacapa from the north
Brown Pelicans loafing on rocks at the cliff base
Part of small colony of Brandt's Cormorant.
Note the blue faces not shown in field guides -at least not in Sibley!
Distant Pigeon Guillemot - traveling fast
The landing on Anacapa
Getting off the boat across the stern
The Vanguard departs
James at a colourful poster
The stairway up to the top of the island
Arriving on the main plateau
Rangers quarters
Lunchtime outside the Visitors Center (sic)
Benches in front of the visitors 'center'
The old lighthouse.
A very loud fog horn blasts away constantly -
irrespective of visibility!

View west from near the lighthouse
Heading west across the plateau of the island
Central area of the island looking north.
Here is the only campsite
Northern cliffs above the seals - looking west
South side of the island looking west
Steep slopes and ridges at the western end of the island
The Western Gulls had chicks, many now well grown downies. Our best vagrant find was a Rose-breasted Grosbeak and a possible Ovenbird was seen briefly by Laurie shortly after we had re-located the grosbeak moments before we had to scurry off to meet the boat for our return to Oxnard.
Splendid male Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Orange-crowned Warbler - numerous on Anacapa
Some Brandt's Cormorants with spectacular blue faces were seen on the north side of Anacapa. We spotted these, in a small colony of about 30 birds, as we cruised along the the cliffs just before arrival. A few Pigeon Guillemot were seen and three Surf Scoter that appeared to be sub-adult males or males already loosing alternate plumage. There were large numbers of Brown Pelican and several good sized groups of Californian Sea-lions. However, without doubt the day was mainly taken up by noisy gulls!

Noisy adults including a flagstaff sentinel!

Various downy chicks and sitting adults
Most broods were of three chicks
Mites around the eyes perhaps?
A fight that started with three adults
Seems to me that there is a great danger of eye injury in this sort of encounter
Triumphant!
The eye of the gull!

Brown Pelican
Noisy bull Californian Sea-Lion guarding harem
Californian Sea-lions loafing in the kelp
About half way back on the return trip to Oxnard harbour we saw a Blue Whale but only at a distance and mainly as a clear view of the tail fluke as it sounded It was an overcast but pleasant day with light winds and hardly any swell.
Looking up at the old and new light.
The one on the left is the automtic system now in operation
East end of the island as seen from the sea
The remarkable arch rock off the east end of the island.
Viewed in calm conditions!


Tail fluke of the Blue Whale
Sub-adult Brown Pelican

California 2007

Young James birdwatching!
June 5th to 14th

In and about Calle Salto Thousand Oaks
On the beach at Osmund
Least Tern
American Avocet
Black-necked Stilt
Waders at the tide edge
Willet, Marbled Godwit and Whimbrel
Marbled Godwit
Killdeer and feigning injury

All the above were from a morning at Osmund beach at the lagoon where I have always found something interesting to watch. This time a group of 8-10 Ruddy Duck with males displaying but too far off for useful pictures.

Airport Cafe Camarillo
James at the Airport Cafe Camarillo
Airplane Museum Camarillo


The Getty
June 13th


Tim Hawkinson's Uberorgan suspended in the Entrance Hall

Getty Museum gardens Los Angeles
Tidal Creek and Old Warehouses south of Southwold, Suffolk c 1886
P H Emerson - albumen print


At the Getty today with Tracey. In particular I wanted to see an exhibition of photographs taken in East Anglia by Peter Henry Emerson during the period 1885-1895 - The Old Order and The New. The above picture of a bridge crossing seems to be familiar to me as the location of the footbridge crossing still present to this day. Many other fascinating images of life on the Broadland marshes were depicted by Emerson. Reed cutting, bulrush (Gladdon) cutting, leading to such evocative picture titles as Quanting the Gladdon along with Rowing Home the Schoof-Stuff (grass for fodder). There were some pictures of decoys pipes, punt gunning and snipe shooting.
The following are some of the very best of Emerson's work.

The Old Order and The New
The Wealth of Marshland
The Haysel
A Suffolk Dike
The Gladdon-Cutter's Return
Marshman Going to Cut Schoof-Stuff
Gathering Water-Lilies
In the Barley Harvest
Rowing Home the Schoof-Stuff
A Winter's Morning
Marsh Weeds
At Plough- The End of the Furrow
(note the fall off in focus away from the horses)
Snipe Shooting
Gunner Working up to Fowl
The Fowler's Return
That Southwold bridge again!

Another fascinating exhibition was Oudry's Painted Menagerie. Enormous canvases depicting exotic animals including one of an Indian Rhinoceros - the famous 'Clara' that became a traveling exhibit touring most of Europe over a 17 year period between 1741 and 1758 and, as a consequence, spawning a whole industry of pictorial and sculptural Rhino representations. Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686-1755) was probably the first European to correctly depict this species from life. Before him pictures were based on drawings derived from descriptions, notably a famous one by Durer that became the model for most other artists. The copying error is easily traced by the fact t hat Durer shows a mythical extra horn between the shoulders - this feature is faithfully included by all plagiarists! Oudry's massive canvas of Clara was 'lost' for 150 years until it was recently discovered in the archives of the Staatliches Museum Schwerin and restored by the Getty Museum Conservation Department. Other notable paintings on exhibit were a Sarus Crane, a Cassowary, African Crowned Crane and the Great Bustard. Numerous line drawings by Oudry were also on display.

I enjoyed Tim Hawkinson's Zoopsia , particularly Leviathon which 'envisions dinosaur vertebrae as a line of figures rowing, each stroke frozen in time like an Eadweard Maybridge stop-action photograph'. The gigantic Octopus was created from reshuffled images of body parts, in particular fingers and lips ,to montage an enormous pink beast. The Uberorgan, a massive music playing construction suspended in the Entrance Hall of the Getty, is another of his works.

Manet's A Bar at the Folies-Bergere was on exhibit . It was on loan from the Courtauld Institute of Art in London. I had previously seen it in Canberra some years ago when works from this Institute were brought to Australia while renovations were being done at the Courtauld.

We had time, briefly, to look at Defining Modernity - European drawings 1800-1900 and A place in the Sun a contemporary photographic depiction of Los Angeles, particularly along the path of the Los Angeles river, by John Humble. He captured well the 'incongruity and ironies of the Los Angeles landscape'.
Examples of John Humble's work


Hummers in the Calle Salto garden
Allen's and Anna's

Using the Leica Elpro close up lens attachment on the Canon EF 70-300mm IS zoom!
No tripod and Auto focus. Not the best way to do it! But it sort of worked.
Large fly and a small bumblebee

Squirrel
Conejo Botanic gardens

08 June 2007

Delaware Bay - New Jersey

SHOREBIRDS
May 2007

May 12th

I joined Clive Minton and Susan Taylor at Melbourne Airport - but only just! My early morning flight into Tullamarine from Canberra was almost thwarted by fog. After a long delay circling in a holding pattern, until almost the time we were going to be diverted back to Canberra, we were finally able to land during a short spell of better visibility. That was not the end of it because the unseasonal fog also held up our incoming international flight which was diverted to Sydney before heading into Melbourne. We got away three hours late and, despite some time catch-up during the crossing of the Pacific, we still missed our original connexion in Los Angeles for the onward flight to Philadelphia. After getting over the formalities of immigration followed by some harrowing efforts at re-organizing our onward flight we eventually got ourselves, and luggage, onto the next available aircraft - although this meant a much later arrival was now certain. A phone call to our colleagues in the east let them know that we were delayed. They were expecting to meet us at the airport and drive us the last hour and a half to our destination at Reed's Beach on Cape May. We finally arrived at Philadelphia airport and it was good to see Humphrey Sitters and Larry Niles at the baggage retrieval area. We quickly loaded into the truck for the final segment. It was raining! We arrived safely sometime after 11:00 PM and very tired!

Our Green House -83C North Beach Avenue.
It is the house behind the car
Views of and from our bay side veranda
I was delighted to find that we were to stay in the same house that I had stayed in during my last wader expedition to New Jersey -back in May 1999! The 'Orange House' was now GREEN! Things were much as I remembered them, but with many improvements and redecoration of the interior. The house was pretty full but I was able to have a room to myself, at least for a while. Home from home! And so to bed after more than 30 hours on the go with air-travel from Canberra to Cape May.

For the official website see: http://www.shorebirdproject.blogspot.com/

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07 June 2007

Day One





Laughing Gulls, Rudy Turnstones and Sanderling roosting at high tide
Note the Red Knot and Short-billed Dowitcher in the bottom picture

May 13th

Up early for a check on the local beaches. Still very overcast and dull but many birds at some sites. We Checked out the Reed's Beach area then briefly scanned Cooks and Kimbles beaches before running across to Stone Harbor, but not going far out on the point. Most of the day was then spent sorting out at base and shopping at Acme!
In the mid afternoon we returned to Stone Harbour and walked to the point to scan a few Red Knot just before high tide. Piping Plovers were scattered across the area with 13 pairs breeding we later discover. American Oystercatchers at this site have all lost eggs to predators (fox claimed to be the culprit) in addition to some recent stormy weather washing the tide across the spit. We see a fine summer plumaged Common Loon on a small lagoon near the car park. A few Killdeer seen but lots of Semipalmated Plovers in small flocks scattered across the sand plains. Probably 200 or more in total. Not much else of note except a few Common Terns in courtship flights, some Least terns darting about and a scattering of gulls mostly (American) Herring Gull and . Red Knot numbered less than a 100 along with a few Sanderling and Ruddy Turnstone. At high tide they seem to be settling on a small crescentic ridge or going across to Champagne Island to the SW.

Beaches at dawn

Stone Harbor spit
Clive, Alice and Larry checking out the Red Knot

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Day Two

May 14th

Today we made our first catch. I did some photography along Reeds Beach Avenue up to as far as the creek in the morning. After an early lunch the Canon net was set at Reeds Beach (South) (N39 07 05.4: W74 53 29.3) and we made a successful catch of 141. This catch included only one Red Knot, but 78 Ruddy Turnstone (7 recaptures) and 62 Sanderling (4 recaptures). In fact it was really the second catch of the expedition because on the 10th a preliminary catch of 92 was made at Reeds Beach. This catch included 27 (9) Red Knot, 33(5) Ruddy Turnstone and 50(4) Sanderling.

Sanderling crowded together at high tide roost near the Green House
Red Knot feeding along strandline
Ruddy Turnstone and Red Knot
Mixed flocks of Ruddy Turnstone, Red Knot and Sanderling at the strandline
Eastern Cottontail Sylvilagus floridanus
Red-winged Blackbird in song
Boat-tailed Grackle
Horseshoe Crabs along the beach
Laughing Gulls
Reeds Beach


Setting the first net, waiting to fire and processing the catch
A Brazilian banded Ruddy Turnstone recapture

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Day Three

May 15th

An early check on the beaches at 06:30AM revealed the possibility of a good catch being made at Cooks road so the crew was assembled following a small party that headed out to set the net and the canons fired at 07:30AM, barely an hour after making the decision to go ahead! A good catch although the net was held up a bit by the breeze but we had 153 shorebirds netted. This time we had some Red Knot 48(2) a few Ruddy Turnstone 28(6), 76(7) Sanderling and one Semi-palmated Sandpiper. I should point out that most catches include some Laughing Gull but these numbers do not figure in the final statistics (not strictly shorebirds!) and they are released unbanded.
Sanderlings (mostly!)
Ruddy Turnstone
More Sanderling including a flagged individual
Horseshoe crabs at the strandline in daytime
Laughing Gull
Forster's Tern feeding nearby our processing area
Larry, Mandy and Phil at the processing table
Mandy and Phil checking a bill measurement
Laughing Gull, Sanderling and Ruddy Turnstone
Willet on station in the marsh at Cooks Road
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Day Four


May 16th

A repeat day. We go for another catch at the site used yesterday and set the net for a 9:0AM catch. Today the New Jersey marine fisheries council and some other VIPs had been invited to join us. A successful firing of the net occurred soon after 9AM with a large catch which disappointingly included few Red Knot. In the end we processed 66 (13) shorebirds with 6 Red Knot, 57(13) Ruddy Turnstone (but many were released unprocessed because we had already examined enough for our quota) and 3 Sanderling. It was windy but a screen had been erected to give us some shelter.
Preparing and waiting for the catch
Net set
Three, two, ONE - FIRE!
Settling after the catch
In the afternoon, with the wind increasing from the SW, Clive and I headed across to the Stone Harbor spit to meet up with the local ranger Chris Vogel. Chris was going to accompany us while we checked on the Red Knot roost at the late afternoon high tide. It was, to say the least, unpleasant at the point with the sand blowing in streams ahead of a strong sou'wester combining with an ominous looking dark sky that was inexorably creeping towards us from the NW. Heavy rain was forecast for this evening and so, eventually, without making much headway with any numbers of Red Knot we decided to beat a retreat before getting wet!
We learned a lot from Chris about the bird populations at the spit. He was amazingly enthusiastic and full of very useful local knowledge. Having worked overseas in many places including Bolivia and Vietnam and working for many years with the AMNH (American Museum of Natural History) he clearly brought a wealth of experience to his job as the Stone Harbor ranger. He would be joining us tomorrow evening to dinner.
Downwind sand streams at Stone Harbor spit
Clive and Chris Vogel in the distance at Stone Harbor spit
The gathering storm over Stone Harbor spit

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Some weight-gain statistics including those of birds caught this year up to today.

Day Five

May 17th

A day exploring the shoreline of the Bay with Clive, Pablo and Victor northwards to as far as Fortescue. First, we headed to Thompson's point where a team from the Audubon Centre was mist netting Semipalmated Sandpipers and Least Sandpipers on the high tide. When we got there they said that the catch had been poor and the water level was getting too high to continue netting. On the way out we see a couple of Common Merganser on a pool close beside the road.
The "Semipalm" banding team at Thompson's -
a small biting midge paradise!

Tidal marshes at Thomson's.
These have been consolidating in the years since I last visited
Sub-adult Herring Gull
Banding a Least Sandpiper
Barn Swallow collecting nesting material
Glossy Ibis silhouetted












Heaps of pictures of Least Sandpiper
We moved on to Heislerville where the concentration of small shorebirds was fantastic. At least 22 000 had been counted the day before. Only a week before the basin was full of water but draining it had provided excellent high tide roosting areas for many species. Largely Semipalmated Sandpipers, but also many Dunlin, Black-bellied (Grey) Plover and Short-billed Dowitchers. A scattering of other species with noisy Semipalmated Plovers, at least one White-rumped Sandpiper and a Curlew sandpiper in reasonable alternate plumage. The latter was attracting much attention being a rarity hereabouts. A few gulls on the mud banks, mostly Ringbilled Gull but including at least one Boneparte's Gull. A fantastic place!

Heislerville. Overlooking the impressive gathering of about 20 000 shorebirds!
Lower picture shows the bank dividing the pool from the tidal marshes

Huge assemblage of smaller shorebirds - about 20 000 all told!
Distant but distinctive view of a White-rumped Sandpiper
Semipalmated Plover
Semipalmated Plover and Short-billed Dowitcher
Short-billed Dowitcher
Massed shorebirds at Heislerville
Semipalmated Sandpiper and a few Semipalmated Plover

Brood of Greater Canada Geese
We then moved on to Fortescue for Red Knot flag scanning. We were very successful at this with sightings of several birds marked in Chile, even more from Argentina and a Brazilian marked bird apart form many locally flagged individuals. The bugs got worse and worse as the wind dropped and eventually drove us off! Then followed a quick dash back to the Audubon Centre at Goshen to see if we could buy some bug-shirts for our two Mexicans. We thought it closed at 4PM but in fact it closes at 4:30PM!
Fortescue Beach
Laughing Gull
WilletHorseshoe Crabs in the wash at the tideline
Beach near Fortescue
A lone Dunlin with Semipalmated Sandpiper and Short-billed Dowitcher
Red-winged Balckbird on the beach





Ruddy Turnstone near Fortescue
Red Knot, Ruddy Turnstones and Horseshoe crabs

Day Six


May 18th
Today I went to Cape May with Jerry. We headed for the Audubon centre then took a look at the shoreline where we would 10+ Purple Sandpiper on a weed encrusted concrete-boulder groin. At sea large numbers of terns out to as far as we could see and a couple of Northern Gannet far off. Heading then to the park and the Hawk Watching platform from which we then walked along the the back of the dunes and took a circular trail back through the marshes to the car park. Piping Plover breeding on the dunes and a good number of Least Tern incubating. Nice close up of a Mute Swan on nest beside board walk. Jerry got me onto a number of useful birds. Headed then out to the Rea Farm because Jerry was an Audubon member and had access permission. Pleasant walk then back to Reed's Beach.

For more information and a different slant on our activities try the official website at: http://www.shorebirdproject.blogspot.com/

Cape May lighthouse and dunes where the Piping Plover nest
along with the Least Tern colony

Singing male Red-winged Blackbird
Cooperative Mute Swans close beside the boardwalk
Kitten Eastern Cottontail alongside the boardwalk
Rea Farm at Cape May
Lower picture shows Jerry walking a track ahead of me
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Day Seven

May 19th

Unsuccessful at making a catch north of Cooks so it was then out to Fortescue for a late catch with horrendous bugs!

Shorebirds gathering at Cook's Beach
Waiting in the dunes
Clive and Pablo dismantling the Cannons
Great Black-backed Gull
Short-billed Dowitchers

Common Grackle

Day Eight

May 20th

All day outing to Bear Swamp for a botany/butterfly walk with birding thrown in and then to dinner at Jane's house beside the Maurice river. The prominent trees included: Acer rubrum Red Maple, Ilex opaca var. opaca American Holly, Juniperus virginiana Red-cedar, Liquidambar styraciflua Sweet-gum, Liriodendron tulipifera Tulip-tree, Nyssa sylvatica var. sylvatica Black-gum, Pinus rigida Pitch Pine, Pinus virginiana Virginia Pine. Memorable birds in the regrowth forest with some old growth remnants were: Bald Eagle, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Great Crested Flycatcher, Tuftled Titmouse, Blue-grey Gnatctcher, Wood Thrush, Prothonotary Warbler, Ovenbird and Louisiana Waterthrush. Purple Martin were seen using 'nest gourds' at Jane's where we could also see in the far distance on a ridge a Bald Eagle nest with at least one large nestling and much nearer several sitting Osprey on nesting platforms up and down the river.
A night birds foray after dinner and on the way home gave us excellent close contacts with a Chuck-will's-widow, Eastern Screech-Owl and Whip-poor-will. All heard to replay call up but none actually seen! Out until close to midnight and then Marsh Wren recording behind my house at 1:00AM with Clapper Rails in the distance. Mostly windless but increasing in the late PM which kept the bugs at bay. Ticks a problem but nobody seemed to be hit despite finding a few on our clothing. I had one large one on my red socks next morning! Fantastic day
Assembling before the walk
Setting off after taking measures to protect against ticks!
Gravel extraction pits now filled with water
Mark Peck and Jerry from Canada
Sweet Gum
Sweet Gum
Toxicodendron radicans var. radicans Poison-ivy
Sweet Gum and Red Maple. Dominant trees hereabouts along with American Holly which can grow to massive size with some up to four times their normal stature
A large remnant Black Gum
Cryptic moth
Mark and Bruce
Tortoise
Alice Ewing
Our guide on the moths and butterflies
Lunar moth female
Lunar moth male
Probably onto a Prothonotary Warbler!
Woodpecker activity!
Whip-poor-will heard here after dark but about 1.5 km away to the left

Flying Squirrel
Birdwatching late afternoon - later to return here after dark for Chuck-will's widow
Maurice River at Jane's
Purple Martin nest 'gourds'
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Day Nine

May 21st

A catch at Cooks. Still windy but from NW and sunny. It was calm overnight when I was recording the Marsh Wren. A Red-necked Phalarope at the north end of Reeds' Beach at dusk. A summer plumaged female.
Glossy Ibis feeding alongside the road out to Cook's Beach
Red-winged Blackbirds
Build up of shorebirds off Reeds Beach south and passing the catching area
Forster's Tern
Bruce twinkling from the south
The net is fired!
Shorebirds wheeling past in large numbers
At the net and beginning the extraction of birds
Settling in to processing the catch
A retrap Ruddy Turnstone
Measuring the wing on a Ruddy Turnstone
Views of Red Knot in the hand
Measuring the culmen on Red Knot
Taking a rectal swab from a Ruddy Turnstone
Fixing a 1.5g radio transmitter to a Rudy Turnstone
Some Red Knot

Some retrapped Red Knot. The centre one is from Argentina
The processing teams
A flagged Red Knot
Head portraits of Red Knot



Larry, Mark, Clive, Phillipa, Jerry, Angela, Bruce, Barrie, Mandy, Humphrey and Dick.
Most of the main team.

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Day Ten

May 22nd

Census day. Early morning trip to Jake's landing 0645-1100 with Alice, Mark and Jerry. This road runs off from the highway not far from the Audubon Center in Goshen. It ends at a launching ramp into a creek. Good birding. Several excellent parulids including Northern Parula, Yellow, Yellow-throated, Pine, and Prairie. Also Seaside Sparrow, Red-bellied woodpecker and Yellow-billed Cuckoo.

This is the first of two shorebird census days with the counts synchronized to be at the moment the airplane flies overhead. This should be at about 4PM which is timed to be about 4 hours after high tide. I am at the main creek south of Kimble's with Phillipa and Dick is south of me across the creek. I do not have to bother about Cook's to the north because that is in the next count section. All goes well but we have few shorebirds on our section. We are in position by 3PM with about 100 Semipalmated Sandpipers along the beach and 1200 Laughing Gull in the creek mouth with about 200 Herring Gull and 50 Great Black-backed Gull - many of the later two species being in immature plumages. Only 1 Eastern Willet visible and a couple of Forster's Tern. By 3:10PM we can add 300 Sanderling but the gulls have increased to 2500. I find 3 Least Sandpiper up the creek side nearby and 20 Ruddy Turnstone, a Ring-billed Gull, 1 Short-billed Dowitcher (dowager!) and a single Red Knot! At the fly over (4:07PM) our count is: Sanderling 500; Ruddy Turnstone 300; Laughing Gull 2000 (not used in the count). Two Dunlin found after the plane passed! during our time scrutinizing the beaches we saw two Black Vultures soaring behind Kimble's Beach together with several Turkey Vulture.

Pine plantation
Jake's road opposite the pine plantation
A particularly productive clearing on the south side of the road
Spartina marsh at the end of Jake's Road.
Good for Seaside Sparrow and Saltmarsh Sharp-tailed Sparrow

Creek edge where I had excellent views of Seaside Sparrow
Black Rail have also been recorded from this location
A pair of Great Black-backed Gull
A Herring Gull drops in
Laughing Gull at the tide edge near our house on Reeds Beach, late afternoon

Day Eleven

May 23rd

On 8:30AM ferry to Delaware. At the opening of a new visitors centre by the Governor of Delaware at 1100AM followed by a lunch and then a boat rip to view the 15000 shorebirds on the opposite bank. Real time video viewing from the centre. Excellent displays. Fabulous Red Knot numbers 8000-10000 present. Leucistic Great Black-backed Gull.
Dawn over the Reeds Beach marshes this morning
Imposing entrance to the Cape May-Lewes Ferry (CMLF) terminal at Cape May
Stacking in the cars
Leaving the drive-on drive-off dock at Cape May
Crossing Delaware Bay. Only interesting sighting was a Bonaparte's Gull
Stern view
Wake
Arrival in Lewes (it is, after all, in Sussex county, Delaware!)
A gathering crowd for the opening of the DuPont Nature Center at Mispillion Harbor
Nigel (from the BTO) addressing the press
The Governor of Delaware officially opening the Center.
She spent her childhood locally
The gathering of about 1500 and the opening
Views from the Center over Mispillion Harbor
Clive, Nigel and Allan Baker
Laughing Gull on the shoreline as usual
Steve Gates talking to the technical consultant who put in the video link

Humphrey and Larry admiring the real time wireless video link

Many excellent displays in the centre explained estuarine and Delaware Bay ecology including information on the biology of shorebirds and Horseshoe Crabs. One item in particular attracted my attention. It was a very effective real-time wireless-video link to a remote camera installed on the nearby sandbar on which the shorebirds concentrate at high tide. It was possible to manoeuvre the camera remotely and zoom in on the birds to the extent that close up views could be seen on the wide screen within the building! Unfortunately, today the wind was strong and causing vibration of the tower on which the camera was mounted. This took the edge off the sharpness of the image. Also the windy conditions created some breakdown in signal but in calmer conditions, clearly, it would be possible to read leg flags remotely using the system. An exciting innovation that showed what can now be achieved with this sort of digital technology.

One of the excellent displays on the biology of Limulus
Wood carvings of Redhead and Mute Swan
A superb example of taxidermy - Adult Bald Eagle on a drake Oldsquaw
The DuPont Nature Center at Mispillion viewed from the water
A leucistic Great Black-backed Gull in Mispillion Harbor

Pablo and Victor
Clive, Victor, Pablo, Alice and Angela as we approach the roosting shorebirds
Massed concentration of shorebirds at Mispillion
(probably 8000-10000 Red Knot with lesser numbers of Ruddy Turnstone, Short-billed Dowitcher and other species including a single Black-necked Stilt - all amounting to 12000-15000 birds!)

The Solar-powered video-camera installation from which
remote controlled real time images are beamed to the Center

Horseshoe Crabs at the tide edge
Slaughter Bay where large numbers of Sanderling were present along the tide edge
The accommodation used by our colleagues from the BTO
who work the Delaware side of the Bay

Gear in the garage of the Slaughter Beach house
Marsh at the back of the Slaughter Beach house
Heading back on the Ferry. Our car in the centre (second row)
Sunset over Delaware Bay

Day Twelve

Laughing Gull gorging themselves on Horseshoe Crab eggs at the tideline.
Reeds Beach
May 24th

Meeting at Goshen Audubon Centre in the morning to discuss the plight of the Red Knot of Delaware Bay and this was followed by a catch at Gandy's Beach in the afternoon. At the Center I buy a bug shirt!
Gandy's Beach at the north end.
We set the net near this point in the foreground
Big catch of Red Knot (75 including 7 retraps) and Ruddy Turnstone (104 including 8 retraps) with a few Sanderling (6). Red-necked Phalarope female again at the N end of Reed's Beach at dusk. Excellent views of it using Jeannine's Apo Leica scope.

Catch processing teams
Sue Taylor
Banding a Red Knot
Portrait of a Red Knot
Measuring the culmen on a Ruddy Turnstone
Portrait of a male Ruddy Turnstone
Keeping cages under shade cloth for protection
Spade, firing cable, jiggler and bag of wooden pegs

Day Ten+three

Laughing Gull in the surf
May 25th

Some of the team leave today. Mark, Jerry and Bruce from Canada have to head home. There is a morning catch of some Laughing Gull and an afternoon effort directed at Sanderling. We go for a catch at Nordberg's, which is two beaches north from where we are staying. We set out at 1:30PM and fire the net soon after 2PM finishing the catch processing by 4PM. A good catch of Sanderling (81 with 3 retraps) with a few Ruddy Turnstone (11). Good opportunity to take pictures of fat Ruddy Turnstones feeding on eggs buried in the sand on the beach beside our Green House.
Barn Swallow
Tree Swallow
Mourning Dove
Purple Finch
Red-winged Blackbird in song
House Finch pair with male singing

Ruddy Turnstone digging up Horseshoe Crab egg masses

Day Fourteen


May 26th
Airshow at Millville

We have VIP entry courtesy of Jane and Peter Galetto. Arriving early the queue was already horrendous to get in the place! Anyhow by the time the flying display got underway soon after 11AM we were comfortably seated and out of the intense sun. A hot day with a rather hazy atmosphere. The following is a picture memory of what we experience. I found the static display as interesting as the flying from the pint of view of interesting things to photograph.
A C-130 'Fat Albert' during rocket assisted take off (JATO).
This aircraft also has a short landing capability and can taxi backwards!

F/A-18 in formation and other manoeuvres
B-25 Mitchell bombers
Tomcat
Fascinating position for a gauge!
How the hell do you read this one from the cockpit? You don't is the answer!
Starter motor!
A tour around the static display and some of the aircraft seen in the air

THE BLUE ANGLES


The Blue Angels prepare for take off and go in formation

Clive enjoying the noise
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Day Fifteen

Fortescue
Some well protected in Bug shirts!
Forstecue beachfront at high tide
Fortescue beach on falling tide
May 27th

See the official blogsite for a lively account of today's exploits!
http://www.shorebirdproject.blogspot.com/

Fortescue most of the day

Catch at Fortescue in the morning with "no-see-ems" very irritating. We catch on a falling tide after a long wait. In addition to our official tally we also had about 130 Semipalmated Sandpiper passed to David Mizrahi's team from the New Jersey Audubon Center for Research and Education based in Goshen and at least another 80 or so Sanderling released without processing.
Getting the covering material over the catch

Keeping cages covered by shadecloth

Getting ready to set up the processing team
Jeannine and Sue
Processing teams working on Fortescue beach
Measuring the culmen on a Red Knot.
Note basic plumage

Banding and weighing Red Knot.
Two birds in the middle are of contrasting condition - thin on the left and fat on the right


More shots of Knot in a tube!






Horseshoe Crabs
Some that will not be going to sea again

Mixed flock of loafing gulls

Sanderling and Semipalmated Sandpiper
A Sanderling in front of the Semipalmated Sandpiper









Semipalmated Sandpiper


Lone Sanderling amongst the Semipalmated Sandpiper
Dunlin with Semipalmated Sandpiper

Clearing up after the catch
Higbee's!
Typical shallow drafted Delaware Bay fishing craft
Abandoned?
Bidwell Creek at the crossing of Highway 47

Couple of signs beside Highway 47 near Goshen

Late afternoon at Stone Harbor
Quick return to base then out in boats to Stone Harbor for a catch on the spit. Much twinkling and a reset of net ended with great catch of more than 80 Red Knot! While twinkling I was entertained by Dunlin and Red Knot in full song at close range. Quite something. The catch was transported by boat and processed in the dwindling light of the late evening at the launching ramp beside Stone Harbor bridge on Nummy Island! A 14 hour working day.
Heading off with a load of cannon netting gear
Angela, Humphrey (at the helm) and Dick on the way over to Stone Harbor spit
Alice, as usual, takes every opportunity to scan for flagged birds!
Setting to and processing the catch back at base near the bridge
A precocious bird going into partial alternate plumage?
Look at the undertail differencesLarry with a retrap Red Knot from his Tierra del Fuego expedition

Day Sixteen

Marsh Wren
May 28th

Motor-sail in the Schooner A J Meerwald from Bivalve at the Maurice River mouth. On board at 8AM and back by 12:30PM. Up river to as far as the Maurice River Bride. On the way we pass Dorchester Wharf, where this vessel was originally made. We then turn downriver and go to the estuary and outlet to the Bay. Total bird list was 55 - a new record! Wonderful morning.

Website at: http://www.ajmeerwald.org/index.htm









The fully restored oyster dredging Schooner, the A J Meerwald, at the dockside

Semipalmated Sandpipers flying round the docks.
A large flock of several hundreds was roosting on the roof of the Wharf building
Another hull under restoration
Waiting to board the Schooner








Aboard the A J Meerwald
More views on board
Another converted oyster boat rotting on the river bank
Bank near the river mouth
Osprey
Immature Bald Eagle
Maurice town church from the river
Flaking the sail at the end of the cruise




Some typical New Jersey housing in Port Norris
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Day Seventeen

May 29th

This morning we count shorebirds again on selected beaches to coincide with an aerial count at 1100AM. I was at Cook's Beach and did the north side while Alice covered the south side and Steve Gates did Kimbles. To the north of us Sue and Phillipa covered the beaches from the breakwater at Bidwell Creek down to as far as Reeds Beach south; the latter I could see, in fact, from my observation point.
Our counts were as follows:
Reeds Beach:
Ruddy Turnstone 705; Sanderling 125; Semipalmated Sandpiper 770
Cooks:
Ruddy Turnstone 1220; Sanderling 620; Semipalmated Sandpiper 850
Kimbles:
Ruddy Turnstone 300; Sanderling 900; Semipalmated Sandpiper 380
In addition we had 1 Short-billed Dowitcher, 1 Dunlin and 2 Eastern Willet

Overall, our counts for the New Jersey side were:
Red Knot 128
Ruddy Turnstone 7172
Sanderling 6929
Semipalmated Sandpiper 7020
Dunlin 320
Short-billed Dowitcher 37
Willet 34
Black-bellied Plover 3
American Oystercatcher 5

Giving and total of 21,646 shorebirds on the sampled beaches.

In the afternoon we caught on the beach alongside our Green House. The catch was 53 Ruddy Turnstones with a mean weight of 146g. They are still all here, it seem, because almost all of the 30 radio tagged Ruddy Turnstones are still on the Bay according to the team that tracks them. They are certainly getting heavy with the largest weighing up to 180g and such individuals in the hand feel very plump! However, there are small numbers of very light weight birds (100-120g) most of which are clearly birds of the year. However, late this evening, following a nigh time flight by the Ruddy Turnstone team to check on the radio tagged birds, I hear that only 15 remain. There has been a significant departure.

Semipalmated Sandpipers on the beach feeding at the tideline
Cook's Beach north
Ruddy Turnstone and Semipalmated Sandpipers
A courting pair of Forster's Tern
Male Red-winged Blackbird
Apache or is it a Blackhawk above?
Laughing Gulls
Aerial survey team passing my count position
Marsh Wren in full voice and typical pose
Marsh Wren nest under construction
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Day Eighteen


May 30th

An attempt to catch Red Knot at Fortescue on the falling tide in the morning ended with no joy. As far as we could see only three Knot were present. Many migrant shorebirds have now departed to their northern breeding areas and the last wave of Semipalmated Sandpipers now dominate the beaches in many places although they too are dwindling slowly. David Mizrahi and team set a Whoosh net near the creek side not far from where we had set the cannon net as we left. No other alternative site could be found with the best number of Red Knot reported today being about 100 at Cooks', not far from our base!
To Kevin and Dale's for an evening meal at 10 Reeds Beach Avenue. Their block of land is about 5 acres and is alongside the marsh we look out onto ourselves but on the opposite side. On one side of their garden they have a raised viewing platform overlooking the marsh. Quite splendid. Kevin is a professional wildlife photographer and tour guide. He took some of us up to his studio where we were privileged to view some of his splendid work. Kevin now works entirely in digital (raw of course!) and uses Canon equipment (of course). He has some neat idea about using digital and is fanatical about shorebirds - hence his part in the excellent new guide to the shorebirds of North America my copy of which he has kindly inscribed.
My end of the second house. Both windows open into my room!

Views on Reed's Beach Avenue and the local Wawa store
Commercial Fishing boat at Fortescue
Herring Gull (American) immatures
Bunches of Semipalmated Sandpipers loafing on the sandbar as the tide falls
Horseshoe Crabs in the creek at Fortescue

Eastern Willet
Dismantling the left side cannon
Setting up a Whoosh net to catch Semipalmated Sandpipers
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Day Nineteen


May 31st

A very tiring day with in the end no catch! We set out for Money Island and things looked good for a catch on the ebb after high tide. despite a lot of frustrating movements of birds, with twinkling, the potential of a reasonable catch of Semipalmated Sandpipers, Ruddy Turnstones and even a few Red Knot just didn't happen. A circling light aircraft at a critical moment put paid to our chances. It was the radio-tracking plane and they had obviously got onto a signal from one or more of the birds in our area. All day in the scorching sun and nothing to show for it - again!
We finished the day with a massive feast of 'game'. Venison (white-tailed?), beef, Chukor, rail (Carolina), quail (Bobwhite?) compliments of Jane again! Fantastic.

The waterfront near the catch beach at high tide
Purple Martin

Barn Swallow
Rough-winged Swallow
Lots of Horseshoe Crabs about
Boardwalk out to the house
Swirls in the tide

Beach houses
Crab boat in action lifting the pots
Boat-tailed Grackle whistling and growling
Grackle
Another crabber
Eastern Willet
Extraordinary sight of a Black Duck with egg
Super energetic singing Marsh Wren close to a nest
The tide falls slowly
The potential catch site with camera crew at the ready but no joy in the end!
Back to Higbee's for drinks and a snack!
Some more typical New Jersey Delaware Bay housing
Canopy my need some repair!

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Day Twenty

The pair of Starlings nesting in the roof of the front verandah of the Green House
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June 1st

We seem to have a Starling that is imitating Willet and sometimes we think it gives the breeding grounds call of the Red Knot! Is it imitating Mandy's occasional on-demand renditions or has it heard the real thing? I suspect it is only Willet that it is mimicking.
A attempted catch at Norbury's landing failed to develop mainly because too many gulls occupied the spit. We set early at 7:30AM ahead of a high tide expected at about 10:15. There had been good numbers of Ruddy Turnstone and Sanderling on the spit with some Semipalmated Sandpipers before we put out the net and indeed a good number of Red Knot - perhaps 200. Laughing Gulls and Herring Gulls then crowded back onto the sands but the shorebirds just flew past! It was hopeless. We moved to Sunray Beach and made a quick catch of 35 Ruddy Turnstone and 10 Sanderling with 1 Red Knot (a bird of the year in dull alternate for the first time and mixed tail feathers with replaced centres but worn outers). Some conflict with a local who thought we might be terrorists and this brought out the police but, after some long winded negotiations it was resolved , though not to the complete satisfaction of the couple who made out that they were distressed by our activities. A scan at the north end of Reeds Beach with Jeannine late in the afternoon revealed only three flagged birds but they were difficult to read. We got the Ruddy Turnstone and a Sanderling but a Semipalmated Sandpiper carrying a dark green flag and an assortment of other bands defeated us!

Day Twenty-one

Purple Martin
June 2nd

Very early start and off to Money Island again but this time a different catching beach. Set the net and then waited. And waited. In fact waited all day only to abandon after failure at high tide and on the falling tide. Birds just not cooperating and we simply could not get enough knot into the critical area. I patrolled the road all day keeping an eye on two beaches. Mostly I had Semipalmated Sandpipers and very little else but I was to ensure that no build up of crucial species like Rudy Turnstome, Red Knot and Sanderling would occur at these sites. It didn't! In fact, we sweated it out in the glaring sun and almost still airs. A photographer from National Geographic (Joel Sartore. See his website at www.joelsartore.com) was parked on the road expecting to do some "studio" portraits of our captured knot. He did not waste his time but spent it instead getting some stunning shots of Horseshoe crabs walking or rather lumbering forwards. He seemed unfazed by the long wait, filling his time with work on other available subjects. Eventual the days efforts were called off and we returned to base via Higbee's! Knot 4 us 1.

Male Red-winged Blackbird
Female Red-winged Blackbird

Song Sparrow

Willet

Marsh Wren

Semipalmated Sandpiper




06 June 2007

Day Twenty-two


June 3rd

What I am sure will become known as the legendary late season catch at Gandy's Beach. We headed out early to a spot on the south side of Gandy's. We took a boat and Clive, Larry and myself launched at the marina to take a look at a spit no more than 500m to the south. It had looked good to Clive yesterday when he sped off to Fortescue during our frustrating efforts at Money Island to hire a boat to see what he could do to find some Knot in the area. He spotted this site having a concentration of about 600 Red Knot and it seemed promising for a go today. Sure enough they were still there and we quickly set about getting the catching gear to the site by boat and the team across the creek at the marina to walk in. All went well with setting the big three cannon net. Everyone in position, Clive and Larry in the boat and Dick and I at the firing position. The birds began to collect below the catching area and soon we had a good number of Red Knot amongst them. Tide rising quickly in a strong wind and threatening rain. Suddenly groups of Ruddy Tunstones, Red Knot and other species began to pour in. We fired and took a great catch of 170 knot and 75 Ruddy Turnstone, several Laughing Gull and a Herring Gull were released with any Semipalmated Sandpipers. It started to drizzle. Birds were quickly extracted to the carrying boxes which were then taken back to the marina by boat in two loads. We packed up the net and walked back after loading everything on the second trip. Rain increased but thankfully we had the cooperation of Chuck at the Marina who let us into his workshop so we had a fantastic dry area in which to process the catch. It bucketed down on several occasions and we would have been in trouble if we had not been lucky with the generosity of Gandy's boatyard. A magnificent late season catch of Red Knot. The best ever in the 11 years of this study. However, the weights suggest that half of them were not ready to make the journey north with a good body mass. The radio trackers tell us that only one marked Ruddy Turnstone remains in the Bay! Departure is all but over!
Net setting almost complete
The net set and ready to go



Five frames for a sequence of eight to show the way the net came out.
Note the American Oystercatcher that just missed being caught!


Processing the catch in the shed at the Gandy's South Marina



05 June 2007

Day Twenty-three


June 4th

Out early at 8:30AM to try for a catch at Eldridge Road, north of Villas. It was overcast and dull with occasional heavy showers but a small team of Larry, Clive Dick, myself and Steve Gates set the small two cannon net quickly at the top of the beach and before Steve could properly twinkle a large catch of Sanderling, which was in the offering, the net fired on being armed! Our only misfire of the trip. All the same we caught 16 Sanderling and about half that number of Semipalmated Sandpipers, which, in fact, we released at the net. What a bummer. We are winding down now with our Mexicans departing at noon and the rest of us general clearing up. Cleaning the two houses being the main order of the day. I took a walk to the marina at the top of Reeds Beach road early in the afternoon and took some pictures and then returned at 5:45PM to try for some sound recording of Willet because the wind had died down. Not really still enough for good sound and they were not performing as they had done earlier in the afternoon.

Some gull studies.

This American Herring Gull is feeding on Horseshoe Crab egg masses
Adult American Herring Gull
Is his a second year American Herring Gull?
Great Black-backed Gull
Great Black-backed Gulls (?)

American Herring Gull
Fish Crow
Laughing Gulls on the tide wrack - mostly dense Horseshoe Crab eggs
Opuntia in the dune at Reeds Beach lookout
Willet anxious and calling

The mail man who cannot see the mail box at 83C


04 June 2007

Day Twenty-four

The beach where the last cannon net for this season was set
June 5th

Last day at Reeds Beach. Off at 9:00AM to the same beach as yesterday - just north of the end of Elderidge road. Tide well out and plenty of birds to the north and south. Set the smaller two cannon net quickly at the top of the beach and then we waiting. Sunny day with a light wind from the SW. Some difficulty getting sufficient numbers onto the beach below the net with the expectation that the rising tide would cause them to run up into the catching area. Sort of worked but the eventual catch of 16 Sanderling and 55 Semipalmated Sandpipers was not as good as we might have expected from the build up and the numbers of birds moving about in the area. Nonetheless, it was a nice rounding out to the season. Processed the Sanderling and called in Patty and the Audubon team to hand over the Semipalms for them to deal with. They were happy and we returned to the Green House for a quick final clean up and lunch before heading into Philadelphia to catch our late afternoon flights. Dick Veitch is to stay on until Thursday but Humphrey and Phillipa Sitters headed back to the UK on a separate flight from Alice Ewing who was also heading that way but via Chicago! Clive, Sue and I set off for LA but I left them at LAX and headed to Thousand Oaks for the next three weeks while they continued their journey home to Melbourne.


Upper tideline with many Horseshoe Crabs, mostly dead


Clive and Larry selecting the net site
Getting ready
Mandy, Larry and Dick at the firing position
Clive joins the team and things look good!
Gear in the Marram Grass
Dune stabilizing Marram Grass

A small and sharply pointed live Horseshoe Crab


Alice and Sue hold the little crab


Small Horseshe crab back in the sea
A plump Sandering ready to go!
Measuring the culmen on Sanderling
Taking the wing length of a Sanderling
Banding and flagging Sanderling
Sanderling in the weighing tube
Sanderling in the hand
Another plump Sanderling
Close up of Sanderling heads
Contrast in plumages: mostly basic versus mostly alternate
Clive and two Sanderling
The processing team working on the Sanderling
Patty getting ready to deal with the 55 Semipalmated Sandpipers
Alice and Sanderling


Sanderlings

End of the 2007 Delaware Bay Shorebirds Project.