Welcome to the Vinalhaven Sightings Report
November 12 2020
Thanks to the Vinalhaven Land Trust and Maine Coast Heritage Trust
Let sleeping purple sandpipers sleep
Highlights – Ducks, Loons, Grebes, Eagles, Crossbills, Grosbeaks,
Siskins, Shrooms, otter spraint
PSAs – COVID Alert - So as of this typing
North Haven has 13 confirmed COVID cases, and Knox County (as well as the rest
of Maine) has seen an increase in cases as ‘community transmission’ has been
acknowledged/determined/popping up all over the state. What more, forecasts/predictions
for COVID spread thru the winter months are not painting a pleasant picture. Yikes. I still love winter though.
life is like a seaweed factory....
One nice thing is that you can do
your part in stopping/controlling/limiting the spread simply by wearing a mask, practicing social
distancing, and washing your hands. Have you heard about these three
things? It’s been the same freakin’ broken record of a message since March.
got my Zappa mask - I know I am
wearing it wrong in the photo,
but it doesn't make sense without
a nose above.
I put it back on correctly
after photo
Some doofuses (doofusii?) say wearing
a mask is just being ‘politically correct’. Are you nuts? All too often actions
are labeled ‘PC’ when they are just being respectful. Show that you care and are
respectful of others by wearing your mask. ‘Don’t be a mask-hole’, ‘Just wear the damn thing’ – I love that
commercial.
Keep up with the changes and alerts
by following/checking in with the Town of Vinalhaven website - https://www.townofvinalhaven.org/home/covid-19-1
And the chamber of commerce site as
well - https://www.vinalhaven.org/
two too many selfies in this post
wear orange!
Survival - Hey
Buddy – Get some orange on! We can’t emphasize it
enough. November is deer hunting season with usage of firearms and the trails
are for everyone to use. If you venture out for some piece of mind, do yourself
a favor and put on an orange hat, shirt, coat, gloves, socks, skivvies,
whatever – heck even an orange mask would be helpful! November is full of
beautiful days to not get shot. No hunting on Sundays and any time, any day on
Lane’s! Enjoy the month safely!
Business – as
usual - Contact us – vinalhavensightings@gmail.com. We will respond! And if we don’t
you can always write back again! Anyway – send us your sightings, email
addresses, photos and nature whatnots. VSR is all about sharing.
Crockett Cove |
Tiit Trick –
click on the photos to jumbo size them – have the photos take up your world!
Click ‘em – I dare yah!
scales in spraint |
Sightings – Long
Cove - A little more on the River Otter scene in Long Cove that Jim Conlan videoed,
sent in and was then included in the previous VSR. It took days before it – ‘it’
being my brain – clicked and remembered an email I had gotten from Alan Farago
earlier in the fall where he described seeing pretty much the same action in
Long Cove. Otters actively hunting
during the day? What might bring them out? My guess is food, and lots of it. Or
hunger….same thing?
Here’s what the ‘Louisiana Sportsman’
has to say about the bait fish the otters are most likely to be pursuing in
these reports.
‘In
the sea, it seems like every fish eats another fish — they are all carnivores.
Or almost all. At the bottom of the fish food chain sits the menhaden, commonly
called the pogie.’
Word for much of the summer/fall has
been the impressive numbers of Pogies swimming their little fins off. Calmness
in coves and along shorelines around islands and the mainland (even at the Rockland breakwater)
have been interrupted with ripples and wake action as Pogies rise to surface,
most likely chased from below by a hungry critter. Anyway – so cool to hear
about people having observing predator/pogie sessions, and the Long Cove otters
seem to have taken a fancy to these tasty fishies. Always awesome to watch a
predator in action, much less a bunch of predators!
Black-legged Kittiwake common eider
crappy Red-throated Loon photo
photo crappy, not the loon
spraint |
A couple of quick stories…
(11/6) – Hunters in the mist, otters on my mind….monitoring easement properties is a
serious, yet fun part of my MCHT gig. You get to visit cool lands and never
know what you might find there. I keep posts about these visits vague as to
location as often it is with somewhat ‘special permission’ that I go to these
areas. So it goes….
Anyway, I was walking a property
boundary (somewhere on island) on this day when I found a sweet new otter
latrine. Right on the line! So many otter latrines, so little time.
hunters |
Anyway, as I was clicking my camera –
so important to document these things – I heard voices. Not the ones in my
head, these were fella-like voices from behind me. Sure enough, 4 hunters were
chatting it up maybe 75 feet from me (maybe). I was almost on the top of a
small hill, and even though there were young spruce and fir saplings between
myself and the group, I could clearly see them in their camouflage, with their
firearms and all. The fact they were talking clued me in that their hunting
session was probably ending. It was late morning, but the fact that I could see
them and they apparently didn’t see me in all my glorious orange was a little
off setting. Should I announce my presence with a loud ‘Hi guys! How’s the
hunting?’? That seemed like the most
likely way to get shot, so instead I backtracked along the boundary line and
got the heck out of there.
otters have been busy knocking
down the cattails
otter trail through the cattails
I didn’t have that last thought until
about 10 minutes later, after the group had left without ever seeing me and
after I had gone deeper into the woods. It was then that I took the ‘selfie in
orange’, just to leave evidence of my wearing such colors in case things went
down a horrible road. It was also then that I decided my monitoring visit was
just about over. And so I switched gears and proceeded to walk along the fields
as I made my way off property.
little otter trail trail is little, not the otters |
It was awesome and exciting and a
nice change of pace from seeing the hunters – who I am sure are nice fellas. It
was so exciting to see, and located so close to the edge of the pond that I
couldn’t wait to get out and take a closer look. My excitement got ahead of me
though as I immediately started to march out to inspect. What I hadn’t
inspected was how wet and mucky the zone was right along the shore where I was.
I was sure the cattail area would probably hold me, but I forgot I wasn’t an
otter, and that I weighed more than an otter, and that I would have to get to
the latrine first.
raccoon scat as well.
is this a symbol for something?
To make a long story short (too
late!) I quickly sunk into the muck, almost up to my waist. I had to make a
hasty retreat with pants soaked and extra-tuffs full of some of the stankiest muck
you can imagine. The whole scene was
comical. The day was warm and I had clothes and boots in my truck, so I wasn’t
cold or anything. Just wet and stinky, which I never too far from to begin
with.
It was an odd visit, with final
tallies of 7 otter latrines, 4 hunters, and 2 extremely wet boots. That reminds
me, I still haven’t dried those out. Ewwww!
(11/5) Had a great walk at North Perry Creek with Linnell Mather- the Linnell Mather, Executive Director
of the Vinalhaven Land Trust. I get the privilege of hiking with Linnell 6
times (or so) a year, spread out over a handful of days, over a handful of
weeks. I realize that I spend more in the Vinalhaven woods with Linnell than
with anyone else. I am down with that, she is fun to hike with and we always go
to beautiful places!
Great Horned Owlette
circa 2006
A few days before this outing, Willie Drury, the Willie Drury of Maine
Magic Mud fame, reached out to me with a tale of an owl sighting along the
trails of North Perry Creek. You may not know this, but Willie and I have a history with the owls of North Perry Creek.
Back in May of 2006, when Willie was in 7th grade, he joined me on
an outing to see how things were going with a potential Great Horned Owl nest I found. Adults had been seen,
pellets were everywhere, and snowshoe hare legs piled up, but it was impossible
to get a look into the snag top where I assumed the owlettes were. On this
particular day in May ’06 Willie and I spotted two great horned owlettes that
had ‘left the snag’ and were roosting in one of the big White Pines at the
beginning of the saltonstall section of the trail system. I took this picture
of one of the owlettes that day, and Willie got photos of his own (I think). I
was asked later if it was hard to find them and get the photos. And I answered
no.
Anyway, the walk with Linnell was
highlighted by otter spraint on the
trail, snow on the ground, and a Great Horned sighting along the ‘round the
rocks’ trail on the way back. I give Willie full credit for my seeing the
owl, got my owl-dar working. Once he told me what he’d seen it felt like
destiny. So thanks Willie! Look forward to more owl connections….
(11/6) –State Beach – somehow I had about 20 minutes of ‘free’ time on island and so I
headed to state beach, which felt dreamy and full of great memories from over
the years. 25 Red-necked Grebes were a highlight, plus about a dozen purple sandpipers on the ledges
off shore. More to come and I hope more time at state beach!
(11/10)
– Basin, Jim Mack’s Pond – White-winged
crossbills were numerous, loud and active throughout much of this 4 hour
outing to the Basin platform trail system. Pine
Grosbeaks were seen/heard by the trail head, and a few times groups of Pine Siskins noisily flew over the
trail, buzzin’ there way to the next feeding area. Red-breasted Nuthatches, Black-capped Chickadees, Golden-crowned
Kinglets, and Dark-eyed Juncos were everywhere.
you can eat false chanterelles,
and maybe you can convince yourself
that they taste good.
And mushrooms – Tons of False Chanterelles out there,
plus Angel Wings,
yellow tuning fork and
redbelted conks.
Old Harbor – (11/10) – Belted Kingfisher
And some limited editions –
sloths drinking coffee are the reason for the season |
for kids? |
america gets the runs from dunkin... |
And some of Leif – Halloween with his buddies
And hiking in Acadia, up the beehive trail.
Good times, stay healthy, and we’ll see you out there!