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The Vinalhaven Sightings Report is organized and edited by Kirk Gentalen on behalf of Vinalhaven Land Trust and Maine Coast Heritage Trust. Out and about on Vinalhaven, MCHT steward Kirk Gentalen reports on what he and others have seen in their travels. Contributions of stories and photos are welcome, and can be sent to vinalhavensightings@gmail.com.




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Monday, February 23, 2026

 



Welcome to the Vinalhaven Sightings Report

Feb 1 – 15, 2026

VLT and MCHT – we salute and thank you!

 

‘Survival is the mother of desperation’

 





Highlights – Red-shouldered Hawk, Barred Owl, Murder non-mystery, Snow Fleas, Otter slides, Moon Rings, and so much more!

 

Business- vinalhavensightings@gmail.com

 






Said it before, twill say it again – the emails address above leads to a ‘happy, safe place’ where your photos, reports, takes, concerns and questions – anything on the spectrum from ‘naturey’ to ‘naturish’ that has to do with Vinalhaven, North Haven, ferry rides and the surrounding archipelago really  – are received with the utmost respect and gentleness. It’s a nurturing environment where ‘your stuff’ is slightly reshaped, baked, and shared to perfection. We are open and looking forward to your ‘business’, as they say in the business. So have at it!




 

If you love it, why don’t you marry it – hey – you likin’ this VSR?  Well, in this great future you can’t forget your past, so if you have time and are (even mildly) interested there are archival/historical/older VSRs accessible at the bottom of this post. Have at it! (No pressure, this is an optional activity, but all the cool kids are doing it – I’m referring to you Bob! Thanks!).

 





Tiit Trick – it may be a ‘cheap trick’ , but your mama’s alright, and your daddy’s alright and you can dazzle your friends (and yourself!) by simply clicking on the photos as you work your way this VSR. It makes ‘em jumbo sized for better inspection. We know how you all like to inspect. Have at it!

 







(Feel free to) Share the VSR! – tell your friends, forward this sucker to those who might be interested. Spread the share.

 





 


Upcoming event – Hey – it’s been a ‘real’ winter, huh? Well, if you can dig yourself out and make your way to the Vinalhaven library on Wednesday, March 4th at 7pm (1900 hours) I’ll be ‘presenting a presentation’ presently called ‘Psyched for Spring’. It’ll be a show featuring slides, stories, info, and chuckles about ‘naturey’ (and ‘naturish’) things to look for on island over the upcoming months (March-June). The potential for happy feelings, hopeful thoughts and maybe learning a thing or two (or ‘catching a refresher’ so you can say ‘I knew that already’!) in a relaxed atmosphere is huge (the potential that is). In other words – twill be a fun time! See you there!




 

Honest Editor’s AdmissionWe love loopholes!

 









Gunna be some Eagle photos in this post. These were taken from the Rockland Breakwater (which is Vinalhaven Granite!). The VSR covers the ferry ride/route and this Eagle falls into the ‘could have been seen from the ferry’ catagory, which is a loophole that we love.

 

 





Anyway  - this eagle was not paying attention to where it was going, and ended up be startled by my presence. These are photos from massive re-directional it took to avoid flying over me. Scaredy bird

 







ice ring
photo by Cay Kendrick


Sightings – Ring around the moon?  Cay Kendrick sent in a couple fantastic shots of a recently observed ‘ice ring’. Thanks for sharing Cay!

 

Ice rings - an optical phenomenon caused by moonlight refracting (bending) through millions of tiny, hexagonal ice crystals suspended in high-altitude cirrostratus clouds.

 




ice ring 2
photo by Cay Kendrick


Totally into/diggin’ those hexagonal crystals! ‘If they ain’t hexagonal, they ain’t crystals!’  

 







otter belly slide!
photo by Pam Grumbach


Otter slide to salty goodness– Pam Grumbach was sent in this photo of an ‘Otter Slide from the east side’, leading right to the water and otter food! Thanks Pam!

 








greens island otter highway
photo by John Drury


Greens Island Otter HighwayJohn Drury sent in this photo of a well-used ‘Otter Highway’ that extends across ‘Ma’s Point’. This highway actually ends/starts at one of the Greens Island Otter slides spotted/photographed from the ferry and posted in the previous VSR. And leads across Ma’s Point to a den with more than a decades’ worth of historic use at this point!

 

 





Here’s something different - Barred Owl on island! – Libby Young was kind enough to share this cool video she took of a Barred Owl on Vinalhaven! Check it out…

 

 


Through the sunroof of a car no less! Libby (and her sister Alex) spotted the owl along the North Haven Road in the first week of February! Libby also mentioned that other folks had also seen the owl at roughly the same spot over the course of a week or so. So, what’s the deal here, beyond the cool sighting of a cool critter for a cool week (or so)?

 

Rockport Owl Jan. 2026

Well, living in St George on the mainland (10 miles from VH ‘as the crow flies’), I can attest that Barred Owls are not an uncommon sight in Knox County. They breed all along the coast and can often be heard making their ‘Who Cooks for You, Who Cooks for You Allllllll’ calls. Barred are the most likely owl for folks to cross paths with when in the mainland portion of mid-coast Maine and beyond.

 




St George Owl  Feb 2026


That said, while living and owling (often, regularly and a lot) on Vinalhaven (2004-2015) I never once heard nor saw a Barred Owl on island. There were random reports of ‘em, I even saw  a photo of one taken on island taken in the Perry Creek area. All in all, I would say over those 11 years there were 3 isolated reports (that made it back to me) of ‘single serving’ Barred Owl sessions on island. One (day) and done – just like college is supposed to be!

 




St George Owl Feb 2026


Whatever I feel like I want to do. Gosh - Why (so few) or (better yet) why not (more sightings)? Well, first off – there undoubtedly have been more Barreds that have visited VH and simply went ‘under the human radar’. Maybe not many, but undoubtedly. Which brings up the timeless questions - if a Barred owl ‘cooks’ in the woods and no one hears it, does it still ‘cook for you all’?.

 





Great Horned Owlette
North Perry Creek 5/06
A fair bet here is that the island’s healthy and robust Great Horned Owl population has something to do with the lack of Barreds spending quality time on Vinalhaven. The 8- 10 Great Horned Owl nesting pairs on Vinalhaven and surrounding islands (Not to mention North Haven GHO nesting pairs! We love ‘em!) should be enough to scare any Barred away. You see, Great Horneds will escort/chase off any visiting Barred off island but would rather feast on ‘said Barred’ if it got the chance. ‘Survival is the mother of desperation’ and a solid reason to leave quickly, so it’s kinda of impressive that this one stayed so long.

 





Great Horned Owlettes 
Long Cove, VH May 2015

On the mainland, conversely, I hardly see or hear Great Horneds – in fact I haven’t experienced a non-island GH for a few years at this point.

 So, the next question is the same question and happens to be my favorite question - why? Why would a Barred venture out to VH in the first place? Well, here’s what the internet says on that –

 


Great Horned Owlettes
Long Cove, VH May 2015


‘Barred owls are generally non-migratory and territorial, but they can become irruptive—moving south in large numbers—when northern food supplies (mice, voles, rabbits) are low. These movements are not as consistent or predictable as those of other owls (e.g., Snowy Owls), but they do occur during food shortages’.

 






back to that eagle


Thanks internet! So yeah, on the mainland its easy to tell when these (winter) Barred Owl irruptive events occur – you see loads of ‘em and this year so far has been a ‘good’ one for Barreds. Well, ‘good for humans to see them’, but as with any Owl sighting it’s fair, and a good idea, to assume there the owl is most likely stressed, at least a little, in its efforts to survive. Not all sightings necessarily…

 






Rockland Breakwater Eagle
 So far this year I’ve seen a dozen Barred Owls on the mainland – 9 alive, 3 roadkill – where I might have seen 2 in 2025. (13th yesterday while working on this post! So, a baker’s dozen, 14th in Rockland the next day). And ‘following’ mainland observers on ‘the social media’ (me Instagram handle – ‘Baldfulmar’) I’ve seen a lot of people posting about Barred Owl sightings this winter, often with photos taken in backyards. Yard Owls Rock. Sure, there is something to timing and luck, but sometimes you have to face reality, accept it and just say ‘there are a lot of  Barred Owls around’. So many that at least one went to Vinalhaven to look for grub. Irruptive behavior is so cool.

 







So great to hear a lot of people got to see this owl and hope the owls in your future are only very mildly stressed! - Thanks for sharing Libby! Great video!

 

 





golden-crowned kinglet


(The) One good thing about crowsMurder of Crows – my dad once asked me why they call a group of crows a ‘murder’. My response was instant – ‘because if you hang out with them for any length of time you want to murder them’. Still stand by that comment.

 

And that is the energy (to a certain extent) I’ve felt this winter both on Vinalhaven and on the last Ferry when it’s been pulling into Rockland. The winter of 2026 is a ‘winter for murders’. Totally and fur real.

 




Not sure what triggers ‘merican Crows ‘round these parts to ‘murder up’, but they can get into large groups in the winter  – in the 100s and 1000s in some places , and in the Midwest 10s and 100s of thousands and more! What a nightmare that must be.

 

Anyway – this winter (2026) it’s been particularly hard not to notice murders of crows around. On lanes recently John Drury and I saw a decent sized murder (~20) that was harassing a Red-shouldered Hawk. Wouldn’t have seen the Hawk without the help of the rowdy Murder. Or at least wouldn’t have seen it at that moment.

 



And that is the charming/annoying thing about a good murder. They are super aware and loud when it comes to being around predators/humans. Sometimes the racket of the murder (murder racket) can tip you off about another bird’s/mammal’s presence. This (crows annoying/being annoyed by things) can be a great way to locate owls, and that is why we say they Crows are ‘barely better than squirrels’. Barely

 




And while I jokingly joke about Crows being  overrated’(95% truth there), they can be (selfishly) useful in this way.  We were happy to see the Red-shouldered that day, and I’ve seen many an owl via murder. Pro-murder? That might be a stretch – I’m not an ‘ends justify the means’ type of dude. More of a ‘there has to be a better way’ fella.

 






rockland terminal murder action
sent by Peter
screen shatted by Margaret
Anyway – there has also been a huge murder of crows that have been stage around the Rockland ferry terminal around sunset for the last few months. I’d been seeing them when the 3:15 pulls into Rockland – and it’s been  like 100s of em. Peter Drury sent in this photo that his better half (Margaret!) screen-shotted (screen-shatted?) from the Rockland Ferry Terminal camera. Just look at those murderers! The guess was they were there eating salt – sounds good to me!


snow pole fleas 

 

Snow Fleas – Warmer days with snow means more chance of crossing paths with Snow Fleas. Here are some in an imprint of  a winter hiker’s pole.

 






And a video!

 


photo by Claudia Dengler



But hey – Claudia Dengler sent in this photo of gross Mac and Cheese! Thanks Claudia!

 







What?


And what the h*ll (could be an ‘a’) happened to Cheerios!

 







is this fruit loops without the cool bird?


cocoa is real


protein gets out protein


Leif and Mom
photo by Amy Palmer


And a few from visiting my mom last week in South Carolina.

 





squatters rights!



alligator and wood stork squat session


photo by Amy Palmer


Love you mom!

 

Always a great trip to see her!


And we'll see you out there!

Monday, February 9, 2026

 

view south

Welcome to the Vinalhaven Sightings Report

Jan 16th – 31st, 2026

With the backing of VLT and MCHT - much appreciated!

 

‘Sure as Spraint’

 

 


belly slide


HighlightsMushrooms!, Snowy Owl, Belted Kingfisher, Otter slides, Red Crossbills, Black Scoters, American Pipit, Eastern Bluebirds, and so much more….!

 

Businessvinalhavensightings@gmail.com

 





There you have it – the email address above is the/a place for sending in photos, sightings, and stories – anything naturey – that you feel like sharing.

 








It is also the place to send email addresses of anyone interested in this sort of  a blog thing. We are open for business and are currently accepting new emails to be added to the ultra-exclusive list of ‘those who receive an email whenever a new VSR post is posted’. 

 



compact snowshoe hare track



Tiit trick – click on photos and watch what happens! It is very exciting!

 






yellow billed cuckoo
photo by Claudia Dengler


SightingsBlast from the pastClaudia Dengler sent in a couple of photos of a Yellow-billed Cuckoo that was trapped in a building back in October. Such a beauty of a bird – the red on the wings is fantastic!

 







yellow billed cuckoo
photo by Claudia Dengler


Two flavors of Cuckoos (to choose from)– Black-billed and Yellow-billed (Cuckoos)
– can be seen on Vinalhaven. Personally, I tend to see them more in the fall in migration, but ‘recent’ observed nesting attempts on island by Black-billed Cuckoos (Pocus Point), an increase in non-fall Cuckoo sightings and an increase in ‘caterpillars tent webs’ (generic label) leads (every)one to believe/assume that they have been nesting on island. Un-, or under-detected, but that is not surprising due to their ‘under-the-radar’ lifestyle they follow. Life in ‘Cuckoo-time’ has a gentle pace.

 



'merican Robin? Nahhh
The Newfoundland Robin (Turdus migratorius nigrideus)
A 'darker' 'merican Robin subspecies





Anyway – this one got trapped in a building and met its fate. We’ll end it at that. Thanks Claudia!

 

 






snowy owl
photo by Peter Drury


Snowy OwlGreens IslandPeter Drury – ‘Good ol’ Capt’n Pete!’ – spotted a Snowy Owl out on Greens Island earlier this month and snapped this wonderful photo of it. Peter mentioned that was the one time he’s seen a Snowy Owl on Greens –

 


rodents



Peter also mentioned that he ‘hung out’ with the owl for about a half an hour, had a ‘great conversation about how tasty snowshoe hares are’ with it, and that they (Peter and the Owl) are better beings for the experience. When Snowies are involved it’s always good to share experiences! Thanks, Capt’n !

 







Birds around island – A Belted Kingfisher (or at least one) has been seen around island - apparently making an attempt to overwinter…Eastern Bluebirds (Coombs Neck)….American Pipit (State Beach)….Evening Grosbeaks at a few feeders around island (Thanks John!) …

 






And then we get back to the Red Crossbills… and the Goldfinch, Purple Finch, Pine Siskin and Pine Grosbeak that are being seen/heard around island. We’ve covered this before – here’s a link to some background info –

 

https://www.mcht.org/story/pardon-the-irruption/

 





red crossbills have been getting 
frisky and been singing some
courtin' songs as of late

But really, checking out and cashing in on irruptive behavior can be so much fun. These are the birds of the north – birds that are fine staying way up there (North) but only come down when food sources up there (North) plummet. Where and when they turn up, well, nobody really knows. John Drury has reported that a group of Evening Grosbeaks has been visiting his feeders each morning, while other feeder stations get nailed all day, and other feeders aren’t visited at all. In the woods – well, Red Crossbills are everywhere, but Redpolls and Pine Grosbeaks are hit or miss – see them one day in the Basin and then ‘not see them’ the next day. Pine Siskins - I’ve seen them three times this winter as they cruise through looking for grub. Three different locations, three different weeks. Better than rarities.

 


So, it’s an exciting winter for viewing irruptives – and the Snowy Owl that Capt’n Pete is another example – but it’s all about survival for them, the irruptives. So fun to watch, but at the same time we also know we are seeing them because they are stressed enough to migrate/irrupt in search of food. One of those bittersweet thangs, good luck funky irruptive tweeters! Survival.  

 





young RBC
photo by Cay Kendrick




MushroomsCay Kendrick sent in some photos of mushrooms in winter, and when we (the royal ‘we’) daydream about ‘shrooms in winter’ - ‘Polypores’ often come to mind.

 




RBC
photo by Cay Kendrick


Cay sent in photos of two polypore species that take different approaches to spreading their spores. First – the classic, Red-belted Conk (Fomitopsis pinicola), or RBC. These are relatively ‘young’ RBC shrooms, some haven’t even developed the dark layered caps with the red-edge (the ‘red belt’ if you will). In southeast Alaska they are sometimes referred to as ‘Bear’s Bread’ at this stage. Not sure why…

 





RBC

RBC undercarriage
photo by Cay Kendrick
is noticeably large/sizeable, even at this young stage. The RBC fungus within the tree takes its spore dispersal seriously (like all good fungi should) and invests heavily into (maybe) a handful of large shelves that last (and keep growing) for several years. Each RBC shelf’s undercarriage is lined with gagillions of pores, potentially pumping out trillions of spores a year.    

 



Trichaptum abietinum
photo by Cay Kendrick


The Violet-toothed Polypore (Trichaptum) , or VTP species complex, on the other hand, is a (group of ) polypore(s) that goes for the ‘more the merrier’ approach when it comes to spore dispersal. These fungi opt to ‘pump out the spores’ with lots and lots of small shelves whose undercarriages are full of pores and teeth. We all have friends like this.

 


If VTP is growing in/on hardwoods then it is considered Trichaptum biforme. And if growing on conifers , well, then its Trichaptum abietinum .

 

T. abietinum
photo by Cay Kendrick
Sounds simple. But are there more species here? Probably, undoubtedly and for sure. One limitation with mushroom identification is simply a lack of knowledge -  we, the human things, simply do not know a lot of fungal things at this point (but we are learning!). Heck – wasn’t that long ago that a fungus was considered a plant (you wish plants!), so as far as humans and fungal knowledge its ‘we’ve come a long way, baby’ but still have a long way to go.




 

T. biforme
photo by Cay Kendrick


Another limitation, fungal identification wise, is that it can be hard to keep up with what is being learned. And so, we leave things vague, because ‘vague’ kinda sums up fungal knowledge to a certain extent.

 





T. biforme
photo by Cay Kendrick


Anyway, mushroom watching and fungus tracking are exciting and fun activities that always come with a humbling element. Like – after 20 years of learning Latin you find out ‘everything you know is wrong’ (Weird Al). We appreciate that fungus ‘puts us in our place’. Sometimes that slap is a good thing. I’m not asking to be slapped.

 

 







Otter slides
– Cay also sent in three photos of otter tracks and trails from the ‘southeast’ side of the island (vague enough for you?). This is a fun collection that highlights a few things ottery. Let’s take a look.

 





photo #1
photo by Cay Kendrick


Photo #1 – the scene – this photo does a wonderful job capturing the tracking scene here. A belly slide on the left and bounding pattern on the right. The belly slide and size tells you otter, as does the bounding pattern on the right. Is this a case of ‘up and down’? Where the otter bounded up the hill, maybe visited a latrine, and then slid back down? We’ll see.

 







photo # 2
photo by Cay Kendrick
Photo #2 – simple set of tracks. Its an interesting set of tracks, and as with all tracks conditions, especially snow depth and consistency, play a role in the otter’s movement strategy and thus the trail pattern left behind. From the first shot (#1) you can see the otter was working hard, (pretty much) bounding up the hill. Mustelids bound a lot, but otters not so much as mink and weasels. Deep snow on hills tends to remove the ‘more regular’ ‘loping’ option from their movements. In this photo the otter almost makes the perfect bound – where back feet land exactly where the front feet were – but ends up looking more like a hopping pattern – snowshoe hare and squirrel being examples of hoppers. Anyway…

 



photo #3
photo by Cay Kendreick


Photo #3where the trails cross. This is a cool photo that shows a bottleneck, or the top end of a bottleneck of sorts – where the bounding trail going up the hill and the belly slide heading down the incline meet. It’s towards the bottom. Take a look at the first set of tracks in the bounding trail. The left track of the otter bounding kicked up snow into the belly slide, thus was made after the belly slide had happened. So, what does this mean?

 




spraint on the rocks
photo by Cay Kendrick


Well, hard to tell, but I would say that this is a trail worth following. Here are a few likely/possible scenarios of what this scene is – 1) the otter has a den wherever this trail leads to and was resting in it when this photo was taken. B) this trail is part (one end really) of a longer, over-land short cut trail between two bodies of water and this is the regular route the otter takes. 3)  that there was a latrine up the incline that the otter visited but took a different/alternative trail/route back to the water. Trails, dens, and latrines – solid options, fun to speculate on.

 




spraint - maybe at the beginning 
of a trail?
photo by Cay Kendrick


Following otter trails PSA – now, we here at the VSR clearly encourage people to explore and learn about the wildlife of Vinalhaven (and everywhere else) firsthand. That’s the way we learn best, so why not you? 

 







otter bound


Well, some people over the years haven’t quite been on the team ‘learn by experience’ so much, to the point where twice I was asked ‘do you think its appropriate/responsible to tell people how to find otter dens?’ . My answer both times was ‘yes’. Mostly because few if any people ever actually do look for otter dens, but still I do see the point they were trying to make and it’s all about impact. And that’s a huge thing, or at least it can be. So here are a few points to lower your impact on otters if you decide to follow their trails.

 



A) never bring a dog to an otter den, nor when you are looking. Impact potential shoots through the roof when a pet is brought along, and if an interaction does occur I can almost guarantee your dog is going to get the worst of it. bad idea to bring a cat as well. Parakeet? I’ll leave that up to you  

 






2) do your business well away – does an otter spraint in the woods? You betcha, and sometimes humans do too. But whether its peeing or pooping, it’s best to do ‘it’ well away from otter dens, trails, and latrines if you can – especially if you drink so much coffee that your pee comes out caffeinated.

 






C) keep other smells away – could be food for a picnic, or you have a nicotine addiction and smoke like a chimney – either way, keep it away from the dens! And the latrines. Be aware, be responsible, be cool and be low impactful.

 







 

Ferry Ride – (1/21) Olde-taileds, Common Loons, Black Guillemot, Black Scoters, Surf Scoter, Harbor Seal, Common Eider, Red-necked Grebe, lots o’ Bufflehead, Red-breasted Merganser, Black-legged Kittiwake,

 



black scoters


Stories here – Black Scoters – they are around but I don’t see them from the ferry all that much. Some winters no sightings at all, this is the first this winter for me, always fun to see..

 





Black Guillemot
molt startin'


Black Guillemots – the molt is on! – We here at the VSR are on record as saying one of our favorite things about winter ferry rides is learning from Guillemots. And here we go – January 21, 1 month into winter, one month into longer daylight parts of days – and Black Guillemots are already starting to show signs of molting.

 





Black Guillemot
back of the head turning


Fact - Everyone (should) love(s) Black Guillemots – the easily observable, underappreciated Alcid of the Maine Coast. Instead, everyone wants to see Atlantic Puffins, a desire based largely on the birds’ appearance and aesthetics (ick and ick). Can’t blame people for this -  it’s the same spraint society/the world wants everyone to appreciate – but this the root issue (pretty privilege) that turns out a ‘puffins over cormorants’ kinda scenario. Puffins are worth saving, but great cormorants? They are kinda fugly…. 

 



olde taileds


But hey, let me ask you this – where are the puffins now? One thing’s for sure - they are not teaching us about daily increases in daylight length and the effect that has on birds. (Thanks for nothin’, Puffin!) .

 





olde tailed


Meanwhile the Black Guillemots can’t help but show off their teaching skills, and class is in session from the ferry (and any boat or shoreline!). You see, ‘birds’ (‘funky tweeters’ to the layman) have thin skulls in general. Why so thin? Because like so many animals, the sun and the length (and changes) of daily daylight play a huge role in hormone release/production/reduction in birds, which leads to changes in behavior and physical appearance. In other words (and to generalize), ‘when daylight gets longer, the birds get Randy-er’. And how do birds know the daylight length is increasing? Bird brains, baby. Birdbrains of course!



 

otter slide on Lawry's
goes from way to the left
 over to the crack
Some people call specialized cells in bird brains ‘cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-contacting neurons’, others just call them ‘photo receptors’. Still others call them ‘light triggered sensory brain parts’ . Whatever you want to call them (the neurons don’t give a spraint what you call them) there are cells in the brains of birds – and many other animals other than mammals – that can tell when the daylight length increases. They, in turn, trigger the release of hormones that inspire molting and the disintegration of ‘mixed species flocks’ or even groups of a single species that have formed over the winter. Socializing time is over, time to get ready to get down to business. Passing on the genes, the old-fashioned way.

 

otter belly slide on Potato Island


Locally – and along with Eagles and Owls Black Guillemots show observable sign of this hormonal change ‘earlier’ than other birds. But while Eagles and Owls are gearing up for breeding and sitting on eggs very soon (let the dance begin!), in January Guillemots show this change by molting. A decerning eye (two is even better!) on the ferry might  notice the subtle changes the Guillemots are undergoing – more dark feathers on the face, head and even the body on some.

 



belly slide up the beach on Strawberry


It’s still early – there is much molting ahead of us! – before you know it the loons will be getting all mottled up with molting – so not every Guillemot is showing , but some are showing and we are now more than halfway through the winter – winter moves too fast.

 


Ma's point otter belly slide
Greens Island


The real story on this ferry ride was the otter slides – everyone loves a freezing ferry ride, but what makes those rides even better – the cherry on top even – is seeing otter belly slides along shorelines of islands. Well and by gum – I spotted 7 different slides from the ferry on this day – here’s the breakdown

 





 belly slide on island



1 on Lawry’s island

1 on Vinalhaven - 'worst ever'

2 on Greens

1 on Strawberry

1 on Potato

And 1 on an island I don’t know what it’s called.

 


Greens island belly slide 2


Was this a personal record (PR) for otter slides seen from the ferry? I have no idea and who cares anyway? PR about nature observation is funny, and not necessarily in a good way, because nature observation doesn’t have to be about the observer and their life lists and PRs. It’s appreciating what’s in front of you – no competition, not even with yourself.  

 




'worst ever' belly slide


That said – it was cool to see all these slides. The deep snow and cold doesn’t really affect otters too much (look at me – speaking like I know what otters are going through) and I say that because all they need is access to water- be it under the ice or in the salty ocean – where they can find their food. But they still must get from their dens and latrines to the water – and that’s where the snow captures the action for all of us to gawk at. Gawk gawk.

 






Oh man – this is long enough and old enough and will be posted promptly.

 

Hope you’ve enjoyed and hope you are getting to enjoy this winter wherever you are.

 

Stay safe, stay warm and we’ll see you out there!