Brought to you by



The Vinalhaven Sightings Report is organized and edited by Kirk Gentalen on behalf of 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.




______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Sunday, April 5, 2026



Welcome to the Vinalhaven Sightings Report

March 15th – April 1st, 2026, edition


Happy Easter!

 

‘Lots of videos’ – A special ‘fantastic’ edition!




like this otter video....

 




Thanks to Maine Coast Heritage Trust for the support!

And thanks to you! For reading, looking and sharing!

There wouldn’t be a VSR without you!

 

 

Skunk Cabbage Spathe

Highlights – Comb Jellies at night!, Otter latrine scene, Finchus Irruptus, Dung Mimicry & Skunk Cabbage, Dwarf Mistletoe, A Correction!, Stacking wood with Walt, and so much more!

 

Business: vinalhavensightings@gmail.com

 





Brown Tailed Moth web
not too late to nail em
but time is running out
Don’t forget to share and be part of the action! Send nature sightings, screenshots, stories to the address above and have your name up in lights! Or at least under the photo – photos credits galore!

 

Keep ‘em Rolling – Been adding some emails to the list lately, and with that in mind we want to extend a big ‘hello’, ‘welcome’, and a ‘laurel and hardy handshake’ to those who may have only recently became aware of the VSR.





dwarf mistletoe


We appreciate your interest and hope you enjoy the posts!

 

We also hope that when/if the mood suits you – you send in sightings/photos/ stories from around Vinalhaven and the greater Fox Island area. No sighting is ever turned away, although at times things do get misplaced – so at those times you may need to be patient with us! Equal opportunity observers and equally opportunistic space cadets through and thru! All email addresses are welcome!

 





Tiit trick – click on the photos to make em fill up your heart, as well as your screen!

 








Upcoming events! - Woodcock walk – Friday April 10th, 7pm at Lanes Island! -  We’ll meet in the parking lot and quietly work our way to a couple of spots where catching views of male Timberdoodles ‘peent’ and perform their aerial display ‘are best’. Appropriately warm/comfortable clothes – this is not an ‘active’ walk - lots of standing, listening and being appropriately entertained! Binoculars are a good idea!

 



fresh Witches Broom
that's where to look for 
Dwarf Mistletoe


Basin Clean-up – Saturday April 11th – 9am – Hey! We’re going to meet up at Skoog Park and then head up to the Basin Bridge for some quality ‘baggin’ trash’ session. Roadside and in the marsh – dress appropriately (there we go again), bring some work gloves and get ready to ‘walk and pick’!  

 




 

SightingsComb Jellies! - Lydia Brown was kind enough to send in this visually and auditorily pleasant video of Comb Jellies lighting up the waters recently around a North Haven dock. Take a look!

 

 







Lydia mentioned that a few weeks back (mid-March) she noticed a lot of Comb Jellies in the Thoroughfare and then, in Lydia’s words - ‘when I learned they have phosphorescent superpowers I went out at night to watch their light show’. And show time it was! Fantastic, super cool and thanks for sharing!

 




Otter Latrine Scene – up Barney Point Way - Otter latrines (spraint spots with poop piles) are fantastic places to learn about, well, otters, of course! More than that, otter latrines are often used by other animals (Raccoons, Mink) and routinely are located along trails that other animals travel along (beaver, muskrat), so you never know what animal sign you might pick up at a latrine. Like maybe big ol’ footprints from this snowshoe hare…

 

 





Just look at these big ol' feet!


 


 

…Full disclosure - I have two motion-triggered trail cameras on MCHT preserves on Vinalhaven, one at an otter latrine and another on a deer path. Neither of which are close to human trails nor face the direction of human trails, ‘pains’ are taken to ensure there’s little to no chance of human’s triggering the cameras! Your off leash dog? That’s a different story of course…

 




 

  I recently changed out the memory card of the camera facing the otter latrine and the results are fun! Here’s a couple of otter clips and then more clips will be shared later in this VSR! Enjoy!

 


Lots of rolling and sprainting at the latrine!


 


 

bohemian waxwing


Wood Stacking with Walt / Walt's yard - (3/25) Crossed paths with Walt Day recently – every path-crossing with Walt is a good path crossing – and he told me of the hefty amount of bird action at this house that morning.

 






screen save
by Walt Day


Turns out that while Walt was stacking wood the birds were making such aa racket in his yard – not an uncommon happening with Walt, birds, and his yard – that Walt turned on the Merlin app on his phone and saw this…

 

Now – we are on the record as currently not being part of the ‘Merlin app’ target audience (maybe someday). We do acknowledge that the Merlin app is a very useful tool and that ‘you can’t put the same shoe on every foot’ with learning and blah blah blah. Let’s cut to the chase - To me, what was great was that his phone picked up Bohemian Waxwings!  

 




For much of March, Bohemian Waxwings have had a heavy presence in the Rockland/Thomaston/St George region (and beyond no doubt!) – much of mainland Knox County. Flocks of over a hundred could be seen/heard/ appreciated.   

 







While the Waxwings have been a ‘sight to look for’ on the mainland, I hadn’t (and still haven’t) cross paths with ‘Bohemians of the waxwing kind’ on Vinalhaven itself this winter (VH is a different beast habitat wise). Hadn’t heard of any sightings from anyone else either.

 







I to
ok these Bohemian Waxwing photos in March while on a walk with my buddy Randall in the St George neighborhood I live in. The flock, or multiple flocks graced the neighborhood with their presence for maybe three weeks or so – sometimes here, sometimes there, sometimes somewhere else (Rockland and 131).

 

Thanks Walt for sharing and for having Bohemian Waxwings on your Merlin list! We look forward to more reports from Walt, whether its while wood stacking or not (wood stacking is optional), just hearing more about what’s up on Calderwood Neck! Thanks Walt!

 


purple finch


Huber stuff (3/24) - There was also a second page of Walt’s merlin birds that morning, which had Pine Siskins & Purple Finches to go along with American Goldfinch and Red Crossbill. 4 Finch species is a sign of ‘Finchus Irruptus’, and in late winter no less.

 




purple finch
It was cool to see that Merlin had picked up the finches (and more!) as the day before (3/24 for those keeping track) I crossed paths with a huge flock of birds at the Huber Preserve. The racket this mixed species flock of birds made! Probably similar in tone and volume to Walt’s experience. The flock had some of the ‘Usual Suspects’ – Black-capped Chickadee, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, Golden-crowned Kinglet, Dark-eyed Junco, and Hairy Woodpecker.

 

pine siskin


This mixed species flock was largely comprised however of Pine Siskins, Purple Finch, American Goldfinch (in numbers in the spruce forest) and Red Crossbills. An island wide Finchus Irruptus.

 


pine siskin


Red-breasted Nuthatches(3/24) cool note – I saw three different paired-up Nuthatch couples along the Huber trail that were starting to excavate nesting cavities. Whether they use them or move on to other cavities, only time will tell, but fun to see them start…

 



How about a couple of quick muskrat clips (don't blink or you'll miss 'em!) and a beaver clip. I won’t tell you which is which, but the beaver has the big tail.

 






 

These are from up Barney Point Way, same otter latrine as before.

 

 




Plant stuff! - Skunk Cabbage! – Is raging right now! So much so that we have this special PSA - While driving, please fight the urge to stare at the roadside Skunk Cabbage flowers that are just popping up! Be safe!

 







So many patterns – here’s shots of a bunch from the Huber Preserve and Barney Point Preserve.

 

Couple of notes about their flowers – From good ol’ Johnny Eastman! And his fantastic book – The Book of Swamp and Bog…. Now, here’s Johnny!

 




spadix in the spathe


As the flower buds emerge in late winter, they increase in temperature, often melting snow around them. When the surrounding group and air warm above freezing, respiration of the ‘Spadix’ produces a quire constant of about 72 degrees, which the surrounding, air-pocketed ‘Spathe’ helps maintain’

 

Vocab break Spathe - The skunk cabbage spathe is a mottled, maroon-to-purple, hood-like bract that emerges in early spring to enclose and protect the fleshy spadix (the actual flower cluster).

 



Spadix - The skunk cabbage spadix is a fleshy, knob-like, or club-shaped spike (5–10 cm long) covered in tiny, petal-less flowers, enclosed within a mottled, hood-like leaf called a spathe.

 

Back to Eastman …

 





‘The tiny flowers of the spadix have no petals. They are protogynous (female parts mature first); they begin to bloom at the spadix top and progress downward. When the lowermost flowers emerge, the male flowering likewise descends the spadix.’

 







Pollinators? – sure, we got em! –

 

This plant is probably the first spring pollen source for Honeybees (Apis mellifera). Honeybees do not fly well below 65 degrees, but they are sometimes seen inside skunk cabbage plants when air temperature drops as low as 42 degrees. It is theorized that the warmth in successive spathes serve as ‘heat stops’ for the bee, allowing it to restore energy for flights between spathes and to and from the hive. Sometimes bees become trapped in narrow-gapped spathes.

 


Other pollinators are chiefly flesh flies (Sarcophagidae) and carrion or blow flies (Calliphoridae). These early-season scavengers are attracted by the plants liver-colored streaks and fetid odor, some botanists cite this as an example of dung mimicry, which may have evolved as an attractant for these pollinators.’

 







So, a lot going on with these Skunk Cabbages right now. Classic example of ‘Sex before Food’ in the plant world. And ‘dung mimicry’ – ain’t that just the spraint. Leaves to emerge soon! We will continue monitoring and reporting on these wonderful harbingers of spring!

 




dwarf mistletoe in bloom




More plant stuff – Dwarf Mistletoe in bloom! Huber and Barney Point way, right along the trails.

 






dwarf mistletoe in bloom


And a correction – in the last VSR post we talked, at length, about Accipiter Hawk and the trickiness of telling the species apart. Well, it’s still tricky to tell them apart, but it turns out that the three species traditionally referred to as ‘Accipiters’ aren’t all accipiters after…. all.

 







Good friend (some might even say we are ‘BFFs’), fantastic observer, haiku master (www.kristenlindquist.com) , and longtime VSR reader Kristen Lindquist was kind enough to forward info on a recent lesson of bird relationships that was learned through DNA testing. Here we go:

 





fresh mistletoe right in
the Barney Pointing parking area


 Fun fact: Cooper's Hawks and goshawks are no longer technically accipiters!

From the interwebs:

Based on recent 2024 genetic studies, as of late 2024, the Cooper’s Hawk and American Goshawk were reclassified to Astur.

Relationship: This shift indicates that Cooper's Hawks and Sharp-shinned Hawks are not as closely related as previously thought.





Colloquial Usage: Despite the scientific reclassification, some, as a user in a Facebook group mentioned, may still refer to them functionally as "accipiters" or "bird hawks" due to their similar appearance and hunting behavior, though the formal taxonomy has changed.

 

Crazy to learn that Sharpies and Cooper’s Hawks aren’t the same genus! Must have split a long time ago, and then Goshawks evolved from Coopers?

 




It can be hard to keep up with the lessons that DNA studies teach us about relationships between different species – be them birdies or shroomies. We laugh that ‘back in the day’ Ovenbirds were considered Thrushes, but in truth there are still tons of lessons to be learned that will blow the lid off of things we take for certain today. Who knows what will be next, but I would never have guessed that Sharpies and Coopers weren’t that closely related.

 





And that’s why, at times, you’ll hear me quoting the great ‘Weird’ Al Yankovic when I say ‘everything you know is wrong’. We’ve come a long way baby, and clearly have a lot more way to come.

 

And no – I will not be referring to Sharpies and Coopers are accipiters anymore. Why not? Because its not ‘right’. Sweet and simple!

 




But hey – enough of my yackin – get out there….

 











….and we’ll see you out there!