Showing posts with label natural history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natural history. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

BioBlitz! Golden Gate National Parks, CA Friday-Saturday, March 28-29, 2014

LOTS of great events happening this weekend in the Bay Area. On the natural history and biodiversity front, Golden Gate National Parks is holding BioBlitz Festival, March 28-29, a 24-hour species count of the many inhabitants of GGNP. Birds and snakes and who knows what else (oh my!). 
Check it out at Crissy Field, Hawk Hill, Muir Beach and beyond....
"The three national park units that make up the Golden Gate National Parks encompass more than 80,000 acres and 91 miles of shoreline along the northern California coast. These parks are home to an amazing array of biodiversity, including over half of the bird species of North America and nearly one-third of California’s plant species!


To better understand, appreciate, and protect this natural treasure, the National Park Service, National Geographic, Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, and Presidio Trust are teaming up to host a 24-hour BioBlitz species count and two-day Biodiversity Festival, Friday-Saturday, March 28-29, 2014.

BioBlitz 2014 will take place in several national parks, including Muir Woods National Monument, Fort Point National Historic Site, and locations in Golden Gate National Recreation Area including the Giacomini wetlands, Muir Beach, the Marin Headlands, Crissy Field, the Presidio, Mori Point, and Rancho Corral de Tierra.

Part scientific endeavor, part festival, and part outdoor classroom, BioBlitz will bring together more than 300 leading scientists and naturalists from around the country, thousands of local community members of all ages, and more than 2,000 students from across the Bay Area."
Hear more about the Blitz, and how scientists are working year-round to catalog and conserve local biodiversity on KQED's Forum, as host Dave Iverson talked with guests John Francis, biologist and vice president of research, conservation and exploration at National Geographic, and Allen Fish, director of the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory for the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy:

Hawk Hill during fall migration 

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

On The Water

Somewhere west of The Farallon Islands

Despite living near large bodies of water for most of my life, I don't know I've spent as much time on it as I have during the past few years. Growing up in Santa Cruz, my parents were landlubbers. After several slightly harrowing attempts, I stayed away from surfboards. And save for a semester in college, when a friend and I rowed a zipper out of the Santa Cruz Harbor three days a week, and a couple of serene kayak trips on Hawaiian vacations, for most of my adult life, I've been content on the water's edge. That's changed a bit lately. Having married a sailor, and now living on an island (albeit a little one) with an active sailing community, time spent on boats has become, perhaps inevitably, a regular event. For the past few weeks, when I haven't been doing a show, I've been heading out on the water.
As with most activities, I'm not so concerned with gear (in this case, boat types) or adrenaline (speed, competition, frequency), but I greatly enjoy the chance to experience another side of nature: how the wind shows its change on the surface of the bay before you feel it, the way seals bob in calm repose when the wind and current are low, diving Least and Caspian terns, low-soaring pelicans, the occasional flash of a sea porpoise. Plus there's something just downright soothing about rocking on water for hours at a time. It provides a reset button I've come to appreciate all the more.
Saturday, we went out on the Bay on a friend's boat for an afternoon of sailing. On Memorial Day, we boarded a whale-watching boat run by San Francisco Whale Tours in a bid to see some of the gray, blue and humpback whales that forage in the deep Pacific.  I've seen hundreds of migrating whales from shore when living on the California coast, gone whale-watching in New Zealand and deep-sea fishing off of Monterey, but I'd yet to whale-watch out of San Francisco.
Memorial Day was threatening rain. A low fog hung over the water, inhibiting visibility out of the Golden Gate and to the Farallon Islands. Nonetheless, I was as excited to see what I could see of the Farallones, even if the jagged rock outcroppings 30 miles out of the gate were slightly obscured.
We could smell the birds who roost there before we reached a safe viewing distance, where could make out thousands upon thousands of nesting Murres, a bird not unlike a penguin. Our on-board naturalist told us how in the early days of San Francisco, locals came out to the islands to forage the Murre eggs (one egg equaled a decent sized omelet) and fur seals. When the effects of all that pillaging became evident, President Roosevelt created the Farallon Reservation to protect the islands and its wildlife. In 1969, it was expanded to become a National Wildlife Refuge. Now the Farallon Islands are an integral part of the Gulf of the Farallones National Wildlife Refuge, the birds and seals have recovered and access is limited. There weren't any other boats at the islands when we pulled up a few hundred yards from its craggy shore. A few seals swam out to check out our boat and a tufted puffin flew overhead as gulls, guillemots and murres wheeled overhead and swam in the inky sea. It was slightly spooky...and magical. I felt we'd gone very far away.
After idling a bit to scan sky and sea, we motored on West, in search of yet deeper waters and the thus far elusive whales....
Entering this part of the Pacific felt like driving across a (cold) desert: there's so much out there, but you have to really look and be in it to get just how much. A vast expanse of water and foggy horizon greeted us. The fog lifted a bit, the water was calm: our captain reported these were optimal conditions for whale viewing. We huddled in our storm coats and chewed on ginger gum, looking at the horizon for signs of spouting. We saw an albatross and another puffin, porpoises and auklets, more murres, seagulls floating on large seaweed 'rafts'...but  the whales, seen only a day previous according to our guides, where foraging elsewhere. Evidently, a small percentage of whale-watching trips turn out this way (SF Whale-Watching graciously offers the next trip on them if you don't see whales). Eventually we headed back across the water, toward the Golden Gate and shallower waters. Though whale-less,  I felt energized rather than disappointed...and happy I have a make-up trip ahead of me.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

More Medicine From The Out-of-Doors: The Point Reyes Birding Festival

Those who really know me, know I'm somewhat of a bird geek. I grew up in the country, our TV got 2 1/2 channels, and our phone service was so geared to rural living that we shared a 'party line.' So the out-of-doors was where it was at. And boy was it! Birds were radical, I soon found, and became fairly adept at identifying hawks and doves, towhees and waxwings, at a young age.  My dad gave me binoculars before I was five years old and I think my first book was The Sunset Magazine-issue 'Introduction to Western Birds.' Owls, eagles and egrets—I found all of them wondrous and inspiring. When college got confusing, I switched my major so I could work summers for the Predatory Bird Research Group, dabbling in what it meant to be a field biologist. And I thought that's what I'd do after college, applying for a coveted internship at The Point Reyes Bird Observatory, getting accepted only after my life choices found me pointing my compass toward writing, and Colorado, and a lot of other places on the map since then. Nonetheless, once a bird lover, always a bird lover: It's no accident I got married at a local bird sanctuary last year.
So I was both pleased and sorry — I'll be traveling elsewhere this weekend so will miss it—  to hear that The Point Reyes Birding Festival is starting this Friday, April 26 and running through the weekend. The festival features birding trips, informative talks and a wine and dessert reception to compare notes with your fellow birders. Even if your interest in birds is cursory, you really should go if you're in the area. Point Reyes is truly one of the most beautiful and diverse places in the world. And what better way is there to learn about the avian world than from the host of master birds and ornithologists who will be on hand?
Point Reyes Birding & Nature Festival April 26-28
Environmental Action Committee of West Marin
P.O. Box 609
Point Reyes Station, CA 94956
Email: prbnfestival [at] gmail.com

Monday, April 15, 2013

Turkey medicine

Many years ago, when I was living for a time on a multi acre ranch on the coast, I reported my daily wildlife sightings to a friend who, in turn, divined their meaning for me. "Frog" or "Rat," or "Whale medicine," she'd murmur, when I told her about the amphibian who'd hopped across the floor, the rodent gnawing on the walls, or the cetaceans I'd see off the coast. Then she would leaf through her animal totem book or medicine cards, and tell me what it all meant.
The exercise was fun, and definitely helped me renegotiate my relationship with some of my less welcome sightings, but not something I've kept up.
Sunday was another lovely spring day in the East Bay, and has been the call of the last few weeks, we headed for the hills to go hiking for part of the day. On the way to Wildcat Canyon/Tilden Park, driving through a stretch of the Berkeley hills we happened upon a ...what is that...a Turkey? Not sure where this guy came from, but he evidently was feeling the season, mistaking (or hoping) each car that passed was his long awaited mate. We literally had to back up and go around the amorous fellow who made a display of his long lovely feathers as we attempted to get around him.
Turns out the wild turkeys of Berkeley aren't new (see "Wild Turkeys of Berkeley Out and About Again,")
But what else might seeing this turkey mean?
 Evidently Turkey Medicine is about 'giving away' in a good way:
"Let go and give away the past. Share your gifts with generosity. Feel the freedom gained."
Sounds like a good direction to me.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Read.Eat.Listen: Stay

Despite my many comings and goings, the San Francisco Bay Area has always been home. But it took me a long time to admit that: My process has involved lots of taking off to see what it might be like out there, elsewhere. The shadow side of this curiosity is the addiction to the short-term excitement of taking off to new and exotic places and the 'hey, I'm back' novelty of returning. Not to mention the continual adrenaline of figuring out the who-what-where between trips. Last year, however, I did two things that were radical for me, if actually completely ordinary: within six busy months I got married and bought a house. With these two commitments, I gave my word to really seeing and being where I am. Which of course is the point, and the call, no matter where you are (and, well, everyone figures this out at a different rate). While it's not that I'm not thinking of elsewhere, or planning on going other places anymore, my internal perspective has probably shifted as much in the past year as it has in the last ten.  Staying, I tell you, allows you a whole new regard.
Read: "The Mountains of California" by John Muir. Last week, we played a last-minute gig at a cozy Berkeley neighborhood restaurant, The Westside Cafe. On our break, the friendly staff plied us with fine glasses of wine and food* and discussed local music. Somehow, the conversation turned to Martinez, a town north of here, a little east of the SF Bay on the San Pablo Bay. It's home to a handful of music clubs as well as a whole lot of history I hadn't quite grocked — think Pony Express and California Gold Rush and you start to get the idea. So we drove up there the next day and found, lo, naturalist John Muir's mansion and former ranch. I read oodles of John Muir's writing about the Sierra Nevada and his role in the conservation movement while studying natural history at UC Santa Cruz, but somehow failed to absorb that he settled down...in Martinez, living and writing there 'til his death in 1914. We enjoyed wandering the rooms— including Muir's book-filled study— of the stately mansion on the hill, before heading for a nature walk of our own along the Martinez Regional Shoreline.
Eat: Artichokes have always been my familiar. My dad grew them. They covered (and still do) the fields on the coast north of Santa Cruz. While they seem like the could be native to California, artichokes owe their roots to North Africa, have been cultivated in Europe since the ancient Greeks, and came to the US with French immigrants, reaching California via Spanish immigrants. But until I reached adulthood, I really thought they were disgusting. But now...a roasted artichoke with a glass of red wine is among my favorite things to eat.  Simple. Good. Good for you. (Did I mention, Westside Cafe had them on their menu? Good call).   
Listen: Vintage Jackson Brown, "Stay" which is about going as much as staying, and how for musicians, well, wanting to stay, and play, and go, are all mixed up... another old song that keeps on giving.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Hello 2013: Turn, turn...

It's hard to escape reviewing and revising and resolving amid the New Year, but rather than making big resolutions (well, of course I want to be better at the things I do and a better person overall), I've been taking stock. To whit isn't this a lovely photo of Mono Lake? I spent New Year's Eve in Berkeley eating great food (curly kale, agnolotti, at Revival) and listening to great music (Chuck Prophet & Tender Mercies @ Starry Plough) rather than the Eastern Sierra. However, due to vagaries in phone apps, phone upgrades and phone near-drowning-experiences, some photos I took in August miraculously reappeared in my files. For months, I had no record of a string of shots I took when we drove across much of the Western states, including a stop at Mono Lake, one of my favorite places in the world. This saddened me. As you can see, it was a lovely day of mountain and lake-side vistas and I just don't get to that area much anymore. And of course, Mono Lake is a prime example of something precious and vital being nearly destroyed due to ignorance. [Read about Mono Lake history and conservation efforts here] But, voila, what was seeming lost reappeared. The same thing happened with some rings that went missing three years ago and resurfaced amid moving. How often something we want is ours already, provided we turn to see it. Hello 2013, pleased to meet you...

Thursday, August 16, 2012

A List of (Western) Birds: August Road Trip 2012

Jessica Feis photo
I'm a long ways from that college kid who worked summers for the Predatory Bird Research Group helping release Peregrine Falcons back into the wild in The Sierra Nevada. Nonetheless those summers honed my eyes for identifying an eagle or falcon at distance in a glance. So while our Come Ashore adventures didn't include official birding forays, I kept a good pair of binoculars at the ready under the passenger seat as we traveled through two national parks and more national forests and BLM land than I could count. Despite time spent in Yosemite and along the East Side of the Sierra, I did not see a Peregrine this trip. Nonetheless, I was pleased with many of the sightings. Following is a list of birds IDed as we drove, hiked and played our way through California, Nevada, Colorado and Wyoming this August (no real order here albeit vaguely grouped by family):
 
Crow
Raven
Wild Turkey
Turkey Vulture
Ferruginous hawk
Red Tail hawk
Swainson's Hawk
American Kestral
Bald Eagle 
Golden Eagle
Osprey
Great Egret
Great Blue Heron
Magpie
Steller's jay
Scrub Jay
Clark's Nutcracker
Loggerhead Shrike
Western Flycatcher
Western Kingbird
Western Meadowlark 
Brewer's Blackbird
Red-winged Blackbird 
Common Grackle 
Gambols quail
Mourning Dove
Band-tailed pigeon
Cliff Swallow 
Rough Winged Swallow
Cave Swallow
Avocet
Spotted Sandpiper
American Pipit 
Killdeer
Canada Geese
Mallard
Gadwall
White pelican
 Brown Pelican
Western grebe
Pied bill grebe
Sandhill Crane
Cormorant
Common nighthawk
Brown Towhee
Black-chinned hummingbird
Broad-tailed hummingbird
Robin
Chipping Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Pine Siskin 
Dark-eyed junco
Mountain bluebird
American Goldfinch
Lesser Goldfinch
House finch
Yellow-rumped warbler
White-breasted Nuthatch
White-faced Ibis