Tuesday, May 23, 2023

First Black Oystercatcher Monitoring Trip of the Season

 Since 2005, I've been monitoring Black Oystercatchers on the Oregon Coast for various agencies. Eight years ago Portland Audubon took over the largely abandoned project, kept going only by volunteers who didn't stop monitoring even though there was no agency using our data. I kept monitoring but did skip out one year for various reasons, but mostly because of changing access to my sites. Now the access issues are even worse since the road I drove into Cascade Head washed out year before last, so I could not monitor there at all. This year I hope to hike in and at least monitor the closest Cascade Head site. As of last year, I have another monitor to take turns doing the long hike into The Thumb at Road's End. That hike is getting to be too much for this old body, so who knows how much longer I'll be doing this. 

Yesterday, Monday, May 22, I made the two mile trek up to The Thumb, with the help of my trusty ski pole to lean on. It turned out to be very worthwhile.

My co-monitor, Casey, who is younger and more athletic, had hiked in twice earlier in May but seen no BLOY nesting activity. Yesterday, the BLOY cooperated for me. 

Not seen or heard at first, I finally heard a quiet call and then saw a BLOY preening on the east side, the side I can see from The Thumb, of what I call Middle Rock. It is a long look and I use binocs to spot the birds, then my camera to document their location. Scanning the rock, I found a bird setting. It stayed in that place a long time which told me it was almost certainly on a nest. I took photos and will just let them tell the story (in captions). (I had North and South mixed up in my original post, so have now corrected it.)


Almost there! The Thumb is visible between trees.

A view north to Cascade Head

A whole cliff side of these flowers were in bloom.

This is Middle Rock, where BLOY have long nested.

A BLOY sitting for long periods means a nest. Thank goodness for that red bill.

This is South Rock where BLOY have also nested.

A BLOY was here on sentry duty, but looking not toward the traditional South Rock nest area, but rather toward Middle Rock. I think it is the other half of the Middle Rock nesting pair.

The long view showing South Rock on the left and Middle Rock on the right with "Back" or "Black" rock behind it.

Having found the setting BLOY, I just let my camera take frame after frame in hopes it will capture any happenings, which it did. Way too far for me to see even with binoculars.

Second bird showed up in bottom right quadrangle of this photo. Nesting bird top left quadrangle very near the top of the photo.

I did not know about this until I got home and saw the photos on the computer. Nesting bird is putting more pebbles next to her egg.

Egg barely visible here. Bird with pebble in her bill.

Gathering another pebble. And now the egg is visible!

I have never documented pebble additions after egg laying before. Never knew it happened!

Here is the aftermath of a nest exchange. One bird leaving, one bird about to settle down on the egg.



Mission accomplished (almost two hours after arriving), I left. On my way out, this Gray Jay was grooming for quite some time, ignoring my attempts to get a photo. It finally held still long enough.


 

  BLOY usually lay 3 eggs, so the story has just begun. Thank goodness my co-monitor, Casey, will be going up next time. My aging legs could use a rest!

Monday, May 15, 2023

Johnny's Farm Projects

 Admittedly, I write mostly about my projects and my interests (birds and flowers) on this blog. Johnny works on farm projects that are harder to photograph and explain. For months he has been replacing our 40 year old decrepit fences with old used fencing. If that doesn't make sense, well, it's like this... Years ago we became acquainted with and friends with people who had a 500 acre spread not far from us where they kept endangered antelope and other creatures that zoos gave them to raise. They gave us permission to do our monthly winter raptor survey through their property and to come other times to visit the red pandas and giraffes and other fascinating animals. But eventually, they sold and moved their exotic antelope to Arizona, where the weather was better for those animals. Here is the post I wrote about the fencing we bought from them when they had it taken down after the animals were gone. https://lindafink.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-fence-project.html  The "new" fencing is 74 inches tall rather than the 39 or 48 inch that we normally used. However, 74 inch tall fencing requires 8, 9, 10 or 12 foot posts which we also got from them.

Other than the tall posts for gates described in the above, the wire has sat coiled behind the machine shed for years. Here are some of the fences Johnny has put up in the last few months with this very tall, used but quite usable, fencing. 

This is the south edge of the "C" field, where the goats have access. The area in front is our new winter road area since the former road farther south was too muddy this winter to navigate. So nice to have a high and dry route to the lower "pump pasture"

The west side of the "A" field, where the dog used to escape at will. No more!



 

The east/west fence of the South field from horse barn to Qi Gong wildflower meadow


 This is the north/west corner of the South Field with the Qi Gong meadow to the right (west).


All our animals now stay where they belong. No longer can Annie the dog get through the fences to forbidden fields, leaving "her" horse, Nightingale, screaming and running up and down the fence line hysterically. (Nightingale seems to think Annie is her foal.) And we will be able to cut hay this year without "help" from the goats since Johnny has gated all the fields and between the fields. 

Although we have more fences to replace, the critical ones are done, so Johnny started preparing for haying season. That means getting the equipment (all very used) ready. The mower is an ancient one we borrow from a neighbor. Every year it seems to have more broken parts. This year one of the round discs was totally mangled. I'll have to get Johnny to explain. I just take photos.

I did not get a photo of the contraption before the broken disc was replaced. But this photo shows what the mower looks like. The disc on the left is the replacement one.

 

 

 

Here is the rusty, mangled disc.

 

 

After talking to Johnny's various repair guru friends, it was determined that a cast iron fry pan, large size, would work






And here it is. I wouldn't let him use mine so a friend bought him a new one.


Here is the disc repaired with fry pan bolted on.

Having the mower repaired and the weather turned hot and dry, Johnny was itching to cut hay. Our lotus fields are not ready since lotus come up later than grass and grows slower. But the grass around the barn area and pond was tall and heading out, so Johnny cut it with the repaired mower... which worked just fine. 

When he came in for lunch he said he thought he should cut the orchard grass, too, as it wasn't going to get any better (or some such reason). I think he just loves to cut hay. I went upstairs to check the weather on the computer... and came downstairs laughing. "You aren't going to believe this..."

Here is what it said: 

...FLOOD WATCH IN EFFECT FROM 3 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 10 PM PDT THIS
EVENING...

* WHAT...Flash flooding caused by excessive rainfall is possible.

* WHERE...Portions of northwest Oregon and southwest Washington,
roughly including the Coast Range Crest and points eastward.

* WHEN...From 3 PM this afternoon to 10 PM PDT this evening.

* IMPACTS...Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers,
creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations,
especially in urban areas. Debris flows are possible in areas of
the 2017 Eagle Creek Fire, the 2020 Wildfires, and the 2022 Cedar
Creek Fire.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...
- Slow moving thunderstorms and high atmospheric moisture have
produced conditions conducive for localized very heavy
rainfall. Amounts in excess of 1 inch per hour may occur with
the most stationary storms.
- http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood 
 
Meanwhile, back at the ranch at 2 p.m., nary a cloud was in sight. 
By 3 some thunderheads were visible to the north. Johnny paced...
  

Monday, May 8, 2023

Unusual Swallow

Addendum: Apparently, the good birders think this is just a Tree Swallow. It is the brightest blue Tree Swallow I've ever seen with a black and white face pattern I have not noticed before. Gorgeous bird. 

 

 This bird was flying and perched at the far end of our South field this morning when I was closing the horse and dog into that area. All I could see was an intense blue bird acting like a swallow but deep, bright blue. I went back to get my camera and walked, staying out of the bird's view, to where I could get a closer look. It looked like a tree swallow... except it was intense blue with no trace of green... and with a black mask. Is it a color morph of a tree swallow? 

It was all alone. Meanwhile, across the trees and creek in our fields behind the goat barn, scads of violet-green and tree swallows were swooping around as usual, gathering stuff for their gourd nests and eating flying insects. This bird spent most of its time perched on the tall fence around the South field, near the new nest gourds I have put up which the other swallows have ignored... probably because they went up after all the old gourds in the fields behind the barn were already chosen.







 

Sunday, May 7, 2023

Spring Has Sprung

Three weeks of being out of commission has left me with a ton of chores to catch up on: trimming goat udders, trimming goat hooves, cleaning goat pens. Not to mention getting the garden readied. But I am working through them... except on Sunday. Sunday is my day of rest.

Today is Sunday. Johnny, friend Mary and I flung feathers for the tree and violet-green swallows. We do this every year and the swallows love it. They swoop down and try to grab a feather before it hits the ground or gets snatched by another swallow. Then they try to elude their pursuers who are trying to steal the prize and stuff the feather into their gourd. All the swallows have chosen their nest gourds by now. I am running out of white feathers so will have to ask friends and neighbors for replacements... and to come join the fun.

Afterwards, Mary and I hiked around the Qi Gong meadow, where I have planted wild flowers. Happily, many native checkermallows are up near where I planted new ones. And Mary found the pea vine that is native but scarce... just coming up. She also spotted a tiny tree frog resting in the sun on our orange quince bush in the yard... so tiny and cute. Can you find it?


 On another day, I took photos of birds and wild flowers during a rest break. 

This first one is a bird I had to look up... to my surprise it's a female Red-winged Blackbird.

 


Canada Goose on our section of Agency Creek

Oregon Bluebell almost open

Bleeding Hearts

Oregon Grape

American Robin

Golden-crowned Sparrows in an apple tree

Mourning Dove


A singing Bewick's Wren

 

Photos of  "our" swallows are in the previous post.

It is raining again this Sunday afternoon, but I don't mind. The mud has dried and the spring flowers can use the shower. 

Happy Spring!