porpoise and hill |
Welcome to the Vinalhaven Sightings Report
November 12, 2022
VLT/MCHT team effort!
‘A spraint earned,
is a spraint more delicious’
– old New Jersey saying.
Highlights – Common Murre, Bonaparte’s Gulls, Black-legged Kittiwake, Hawks
and migration, songbirds – including chickadees, sparrows, nuthatches, red
crossbills, Mushrooms, Cuckoos, spraint, lungwort, slime molds,
Business - Hunting season – wear orange – good
habit to get into even if you are just walking around your house. Every
(hunting) season it’s good to meet hunters half way for safety sake by putting
on an orange hat, shirt or whatever. Orange shoelaces probably aren’t good
enough, and neither are orange boxers! Even if you wear them on the outside of
your dungarees.
Sharing season
- Contact us – Why not? Things get buried at times, so it can take two tries,
but still – it’s worth it! Send in your sightings, photos, reports, and
everything nature on the Fox Islands to vinalhavensightings@gmail.com – and share! As in ‘Sunny and share’! Brighten
your own day, and others probably to. Heck – we’ll even take poems!
Tiit trick season – click on the photos to jumbo size them. Lord only knows there are
enough photos in this one!
Welcome Season
– Want to extend a huge welcome to the new Executive Director of the Vinalhaven
Land Trust – Andrea Hogan! Looking
forward to getting to know Andrea and getting out on the land with her!
Upcoming events
this week – Built for Comfort (radio program) Sundays 3-5pm, wrfr.org or (if you are lucky) 93.3 on the fm dial. We are on just
about every week, but this week (Sunday
Nov 13) are happy to say we will be joined by Phoebe Jekielek – lead scientist for the Hurricane Island Center
for Science and Leadership – for the first hour of the show. We’ll talk all
things Hurricane Island – programs, updates, and things cooking for down the
line – as well as maybe get to know Phoebe a little better. I mean, she seems
cool, but can she handle ‘Built for Comfort’? We’ll find out Sunday. Costumes encouraged.
Zappa guarantee - (most of) Side 1 of Burnt Weeny Sandwich.
‘Fishers
are King’ – Rockland Library,
Thursday Nov 17, 6:30-8pm. I’ll be giving my updated and (seemingly) ‘totally fresh’ presentation on that
‘King of Maine Mustelids’ – the Fishers. This talk will have absolutely nothing
to do with Vinalhaven, but will be full of stories, videos and lessons learned
from the mainland mid-coast Maine fisher scene, and may be of interest to
Mustelid lovers everywhere. Educational
and entertaining, or your money back.
Costumes encouraged.
The talk is ‘in person’, but will
also have a Zoom option too (what a world, huh?). Check out the mcht website - https://www.mcht.org/event/fishers-are-king-talk/
- for more information. Zoom address for the show - https://networkmaine.zoom.us/j/84034049112?pwd=VFVLRHBnano5K0pCTy9XdnVuQW5NQT09
Sightings – Horned Grebe – Seal Bay
North Haven raptors – Had day of it biking around North Haven sporting my Hunter Pence/SF Giants away jersey
(bright orange) and trying to blend in. It was exciting.
Anyway, the pulpit harbor area turned
up some nice raptors, two of which I got photos of flying away. One was a Merlin (what a year for Merlins!!!!!),
that had just been dive bombing another Merlin in a battle of turfs? Falcons
frittin’ wit each other? I don’t know. Looked like it was doing what Merlins
do.
male northern harrier flying away
15 minutes later this male Northern Harrier flew over the same
field, but didn’t dive bomb anything, just booked it. I was almost back on my
bike when this dude cruised through, had to chase after it , resulting in this ‘Harrier flying away’ photo.
Young Bald Eagle on Pulpit Rock was nice…
juvenile Northern Harrier flying away
Then on the ferry ride back to
Rockland, a juvenile Northern Harrier
flew by the ferry, resulting in this ‘Harrier
flying away’ photo. 2nd of the day, twas fun.
Also on North Haven….Red-bellied
Woodpecker, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Red Crossbill, Turkey Vulture, Red-breasted
Nuthatch, Dark-eyed Junco, Pileated Woodpecker,
tiny seed, loud noise |
Birch seed dropping – one thing about this breezy day on North Haven was the sound
of White Birch seeds hitting crisp leaves after falling to the earth. Added a nice little audio to
much of my time out there! its the video above!
first winter white-crowned sparrow
Migration – We’ve
mentioned (ad nauseum) the impressive wave(s) of Red-breasted Nuthatch that landed in (on?) mid-coast Maine around
mid-August. Well, they continue to be. Or maybe their replacements are
continuing to be. But there ‘be’ a lot of them around.
Armbrust Hill (10/28)
- Couple weeks back Janet Ghores and
I went up (all the way to the top even!) Armbrust Hill and crossed paths with a
sizable group of White-throated Sparrows.
Mixed in was a Fox Sparrow, which we
both remarked was the first one either of us had seen in years. I realized
later that it was actually the first Fox
Sparrow I’d seen in Maine that wasn’t at a bird feeder. ‘Fox Sparrow in the wild’, if you will.
Tons of Juncos, as well as Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Brown Creeper,
Greater Yellowlegs, Song Sparrows.
Lane’s (10/28)
– later that day I made a quick jaunt to Lane’s to check on brown tailed moth,
and found this first winter White-crowned
Sparrow on the beach. Eating seeds. Typical.
Mushrooms! – Slow
fall for shrooms in the mid-coast region, but always glad to find what we can.
Got doused a few times with decent rain fall accumulation, and some fungal response.
shaggy manes
photo by Bannet Moffatt
Banner Moffatt
was kind enough to send in this photo of a small gang of Shaggy Manes (Coprinus comatus). As I have mentioned before (ad
nauseum?) Shaggy Manes get my vote for Maine State Mushroom.
St George Shaggy Mane
They know how to deliquesce!
As if the name weren’t enough (I mean
come on ‘Shaggy Manes’ – ‘mane’ is in it
and it describes most (if not all) year round male residents of the state as
well as a fair chunk of the female population. Well, if that wasn’t enough shaggies
are also yummy to eat – ‘Shags and Eggs’ was a seasonal staple when I lived at
Pigeon Point Lighthouse with Shags harvested at ‘Costalotta’ tent resort. These
days I see more on the grassy knoll at the st George transfer station. And in
my neighbor’s yard. I do not covet
anything though.
Shaggy Manes are also an ‘inky cap’ (Genus Coprinus) which means to disperse
spores their cap liquefies, or deliquesces (to become liquid, typically during
decomposition), into a dark liquid full of spores. Most spores land right below
the mushroom (probably a good place for Shags to grow) while some of the liquid
will end up on insects and be dispersed as said insect moves around. And we like that Shags do this.
And that, your honor, is why I believe Shaggy Manes should be awarded the title of ‘State Mushroom of Maine’.
I rest
my case.
Maze Polypore –
Daelaeopsis confragosa – found some
nice specimen in the Basin preserve showing some cool mazes underneath.
I often see on birch, but maple will
do as well.
red-gilled cort |
Also in the basin was the thickest
patch of Red-gilled Cort (Cortinarius
semianguineus).
Love dem red-gills, this species had
a huge presence during the ‘Fungal Fall of ’21!’ – a trial title for last year’s
nuttiness that was the mushroom scene September and October 2021.
Found this one patch of Honey Mushrooms and figured more
were to come. This was about it for my time on Vinalhaven this fall!
Slime molds – Wolf’s Milk Slime was the slime of
choice for mid-fall.
Fun to see Wolfies of all ages and
stages…
Lichen – Tree Lungwort – here’s a few
photos of some moist Lungwort.
this lungwort was on an apple tree and the rock next to it. felt weird, or unusual at least.
its a beautiful time to take pictures of raccoon scat |
And now for some pictures of poop…..
Raccoons
around Seal Bay have been feasting on berries a lot lately. I was trying to
turn these into Mountain Ash, but those are long gone at this point, so I’m back
to the obvious (and getting more and more obvious with every leaf dropped)
winter berry.
open to hearing what berry others figure it is. for whatever reason I am done thinking about raccoon scat.
bet it took a long time to eat all those
berries
I don’t know – I do a lot of things
when I am learning in the woods – but one thing I don’t really mess with is
Raccoon scat. ‘Love it from a distance’ kind of thing. We all have our things.
and a long to eat all these spraint on wood
And of course Otter spraint (the eternal crowd pleaser) –
I think that some of my favorite
spraints are the ones on granite, or on faded bridging. Blending in – almost camouflaged.
Have to look a little closer at times
to see. Nice to feel that a spraint sighting is earned.
‘A
spraint earned, is a spraint more delicious’ – old New Jersey saying.
Just in from the Ferry –
November is one of the best months to
watch for wildlife from the ferry (top 12 for sure) This Wednesday (11/9) I went over after a few days of
intense winds. There were a 100+
Bonaparte’s Gulls scattered over maybe 10
minutes of the route, actively rising and landing in the water in pursuit of
food.
I rode the ferry last Friday and saw 2 Bonaparte’s gulls total. 100+ was
fun. Plus a handful of Black-legged
Kittiwakes, A common Murre, Buffleheads, Red-breasted Mergansers, Surf Scoters
and several to more ye Olde-tailed Duck.
And this little guy which looks like
a Purple sandpiper.
A few limited editions. Season’s greetings
And a seasonal Oreo pumpkin spice sent in by Tom Chamberlin from the Grand
Canyon Store! Very cool.
see you out there!