Monday, 27 February 2012

Spring?

Today started cold. Minus thirteen degrees in the middle of the night. By morning though the cold was forgotten as bright sunshine flooded the valley, and all of the surrounding hills, while still coated in a white shawl of snow, were held fixed and focused against the bright blue.

It was a mistake to forget the cold as it was still minus eleven degrees when I left the house for school..

Bohemian Waxwing on Mountain Ash
Female Pine Grosbeak
This male robin busied himself on the snow finding fallen berries.
A pair of Bohemian Waxwings
Undaunted and suitably attired I marched to school knowing that spring, if not totally here yet, was on its way. And I was not the only one to think so. The Song Sparrows were again earning their name. And there was....
American Robin [actually a thrush]



American Robins - the first for the year here in Nakusp! At least six birds were feasting on bright red Mountain Ash berries. They were accompanied by a noisy flock of Bohemian Waxwings some fifty in number. A couple of Cedar Waxwing, a pair of Pine Grosbeak, some Juncos and the ever present Pine Siskins and Redpoll rouned out the obvious birds [save the corvids]. Oh and Chickadees. It was a good way to start the day and happily  they were still about this afternoon when I returned camera in hand.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Nakusp from the south

Kamloops Day - another perspective

Rick Howie, my Kamloops companion, has written up our day together on a Kamloops Naturalists web site. It's illustrated with some great shots of coyote and Rough legged hawks. This shows all too clearly the limitations of my little point and shoot. The address is http://kamloopsnaturalistclub.com/?page_id=271

Speaking of Rick Howie - he had also investigated the mystery behind a purple lake. I posted a photograph of this lake in my post, 'Transit'. Anyway the article explaining it can be found via this link; http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/article/20111106/KAMLOOPS0101/111109830/-1/kamloops/the-mystery-of-the-purple-buse

Nakusp main street this morning
View of Arrow Lakes c.27 km south of Nakusp - taken during my snow wade......
Yesterday i drove south of Nakusp a way following a report of a recently sighted Three toed Woodpecker. Snow had fallen heavily overnight and it was fun to wade around in it. The woodpecker remained invisible and silent. But it was great to stroll around the snowy forest although the constantly falling snow from the branches above made it near impossible to spot birds via movement.  We saw Bufflehead - 5 on Arrow Lakes plus Bufflehead, Common Merganser, Goldeneye plus a great view of a Bald Eagle. Canada Geese honked on by and we saw a distant hawk through trees which may have been a red tailed or a rough legged.   Dwayne, my host, was good company and we finished our time together with a leisurely coffee overlooking his feeders which held Redpoll, Siskins, Chickadees and Red breasted Nuthatch.

Red Squirrel
Pine Siskins having a 'drink'
I went for a stroll this morning but saw little save a few birds at feeders, a lone Canada Goose, a lone Herring Gull, a lone Bufflehead plus a squadron of Ravens. A large flock of Mallard was in residence. Also scored a view of an American Red Squirrel. They have been seen around a bit and i expect that they will become more commonly seen as the temperature continues to increase. At one of the feeder yards the Siskins were apparently drinking from icicles.

Sunday, 19 February 2012

Deer in Nakusp

White tailed Deer's white tail

Beware of Deer because.....
White tailed Deer lack road sense [near Nakusp]


Weekend in Kamloops.

Coyote
Rough legged Hawk
The past weekend I was lucky enough to enjoy the company of Kamloops bird expert, naturalist and all-round-nice- guy Rick Howie and a friend of his, an older gent, named Ralph. Rick had studied natural history and had been birding forever and Kamloops had been his patch for the last thirty years. Ralph was on the wrong side of eighty and had lately lost the ability to drive however he was still keen for a day out birding - something that clearly he had been doing for many many years. An outdoors man of an era perhaps ending Ralph's comments on many species discussed ended with the bold admission that they were, 'good eating'. As a child rabbits were snared for thirty five cents a pair - 'good money in them days'. Ducks were shot as were grouse. Fishing tales were told too and every lake hid fish and their past stories and glories under their ice.

Lac Du Bois Grassland Protected Area
Together they took me for a drive south on route 5A searching for ‘all things natural’ but specifically birds, mammals and some terrific scenery. It was a great day with good spp seen and some good conversation about conservation, birds, nature, indigenous issues, Australian travel and fauna, and birds.

Big Horns....
First target was Big Horn Sheep. And they were too easy. From Ralph’s home in Kamloops we scanned the rugged rock faces and very quickly found a small herd of four rams. My scope allowed good views but the animals were too far away for photos. But still a mammal lifer is a pretty good way to start the day. Not yet having had our fill of the local sheep, we headed towards the nearby Tranquille Chris Creek Road, where a small herd of females and young had been recently seen. They too were quickly found. And we saw some twenty two animals there as well as some Magpie, crows and Ravens plus a few flights of Canada Geese.

We decided then to drive south towards Merritt on the 5A route and stopped on spec or when birds were seen. The most conspicuous birds were raptors. [A Kestrel was actually the first bird sighted for the day.] Bald Eagles, Rough-legged Hawks and Red-tailed Hawks were commonly seen on this route. The latter two species are really quite variable. Rough legs have different plumages for male, female and juveniles however there is much variation on top of that. Red tailed hawks are certainly among the most variable raptor species in the world. So it was a lot of fun to start to learn to identify the species and to work through that variety.

Stump Lake
A few signs of spring were found with a nice flock of two dozen or so Horned Larks; bright yellow supercilliums and throats identifying them as the local breeding race. By the start of March these birds will spread out over the grasslands and begin establishing breeding territories. My first American Robins for 2012 were seen too and I was again reminded how attractive they were. Townsend Solitaires, Northern Shrikes were sighted.

Kamloops' Cliffs
Now a semi expected bonus was another sighting of Snowy Owl. It was perched on a fence overlooking a large snow covered field high on a plateau. While searching for these birds and the  still-yet-hidden Snow Buntings we experienced a few squalls of snow but it was far more pleasant than annoying.

The owls were not the only predators about trying to catch voles and other rodents. A couple of Coyotes were seen actively hunting. They rose up suddenly on their hind legs and pounced aggressively into the snow. As I said two came up smiling with a mouth full of rodent. One turned into a cat of sorts and played with the animal before finally dispatching it.

Too soon the few hours in a late winters BC day were gone and we called it a day, arriving at Rick’s house for a chicken dinner [what else would birders want?] and a couple of glasses of red wine.

Bighorn Ram
Bighorn Portrait
The following day, after scraping the evening’s ice off of my windscreen, I headed back to Nakusp via Highway One; Salmon’s Arm and Revelstoke before heading south along Arrow Lakes.  Before getting on the highway I followed Rick’s advice and took a quiet back-road which too, took me east but on the northern side of the river. The prizes? Great views of more Bighorn! On the northern side of the river the eroded plateau’s cliffs fell away to meadows which bordered the river and it was here the Bighorn had come to graze. A small bachelor herd of rams, that occasionally, with some nonchalance rammed heads while going about the key business of grazing.  Below I will post too many photos.

The Boys are back in Town
Trumpeter Swan
Kamloops River View
Trumpeter Swan and Mallard on Kamloops River
The second prize was a lifer. Tundra swans. Luckily the first swans I encountered, a group of three, were Tundras, clearly identifiable through the scope. Every other swan from that point on however were the Trumpeters. Mallards, Common Goldeneyes and Canada Geese rounded out the waterfowl.  

Satisfied with a couple of hours in the cool it was time to travel and to get some food!   

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MATTHEW!!

Matthew turns 8 years old today!

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Species 54 [in Nakusp]


During Senior English class today I allowed myself to be diverted into the desirable world of natural history generally and birding specifically. During a conversation about the Wordsworth poem, “Daffodils” and its themes of nature and romanticism I was questioned about, first, Australian animals, kangaroos and wallabies, and then birding. This, for me, was a reasonable link and a pleasant diversion and [I’m sure] the students were motivated by genuine interest in nature [and me!?] and not simply because they wanted to avoid further instruction in poetry.

At any rate I answered the questions as accurately and as completely as time would allow. One of the benefits of birding was, I claimed, that you never ever really know what you will encounter and learn about until you start to look. With that statement the class ended and as the students filed out my attention was taken by a flutter across the courtyard – a small dark passerine was foraging on the ground. Obviously intrigued I strolled out into the cool to cut the distance between me and the bird as I did not have my bins with me. I’m glad I did. It was a Grey headed Rosy Finch – a bird that several weeks earlier had been the main motivator for a trip to the Okanagan. I had excellent views down to a metre or two and its identity was never in doubt. Now I have not checked but I’m willing to bet that this is a very rare bird for the streets of Nakusp. And I saw not one but two Merlins fly by.

And all I had to do was look.

Sunday, 12 February 2012

I Like Birds

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSi3_izdRZE

Saturday Night is Hockey Night!

Last night I experienced a slice of Canadiana; my first live hockey [ice hockey that is] game. A few of my students were playing for the Nakusp Falcons and they were playing a team from the southern town of Grand Forks.
Now to try to describe Ice Hockey and the way in which it is viewed here in Canada is a little difficult.
Let’s begin with how the game is viewed here. To say that ice hockey is similar to a religion here is not an overstatement. Canadians worship this sport. It unites them as sure as a maple leaf on a backpack. True sporting worship in Australia is difficult to relate to outside of Melbourne. Melbournians would get Canada and hockey. [I once picked up a Geelong supporter hitchhiking from Uluru back to the Yulara accommodation area who claimed he had just climbed the rock. Did he enjoy it I enquired? “Yes I spelled out, “Go the Cats!” in rocks on the top of the rock”, he said, smiling in proud memory.]  Hockey is never too far away from any individual Canadian’s consciousness.
One reason Canadians watch hockey carefully...
Let’s now move to the game itself - I describe it as people moving fast on ice, hitting a hard rubber puck fast, hitting each other quickly, smashing heavily into boards that encircle the ice. There is violence, speed and violence in equal parts. Oh, and they keep score when the puck enters the small net.
Here’s a description from Wikipedia;
“Ice hockey is a full contact sport and carries a high risk of injury. Not only are the players moving at around 20–30 miles an hour (around 30 – 45 km/h), quite a bit of the game revolves around the physical contact between the players. Skate blades, hockey sticks, shoulders, hips, and hockey pucks all contribute. The number of injuries is quite high and includes lacerations, concussions, contusions, ligament tears, broken bones, hyperextensions, and muscle strains.”
“According to the Hughston Health Alert, "Lacerations to the head, scalp, and face are the most frequent types of injury [in hockey].  Even a shallow cut to the head results in a loss of a large amount of blood. Most concussions occur during player to player contact (49%) rather than when a player is checked into the boards (35%). Not only are lacerations common, “it is estimated that direct trauma accounts for 80% of all [hockey] injuries. Most of these injuries are caused by player contact, falls and contact with a puck, high stick and occasionally, a skate blade.” One of the causes of head injury is checking from behind. Due to the danger of delivering a check from behind, many leagues, including the NHL have made this a major and gross misconduct penalty(Boarding). Another type of check that accounts for many of the player to player contact concussions is a check to the head. A check to the head can be defined as delivering a hit while the receiving player’s head is down and their waist is bent and the aggressor is targeting the receiving player's head. Checks to head have accounted for nearly 50% of concussions that players in the National Hockey League have suffered. Concussions that players suffer may go unreported because there are no obvious physical signs if a player is not knocked unconscious.”
So hopefully you will get knocked unconscious?
Anyway, like many sports in North America the combatants were well padded and armed. I use the term combatants advisedly as this quote from Wikipedia suggests;
“Although fighting is officially prohibited in the rules, it is both a source of criticism and a considerable draw for the sport. [snip] Enforcers and other players fight to demoralize the opposing players while exciting their own, as well as settling personal scores. A fight will also break out if one of the team's skilled players gets hit hard or someone gets hit by what the team perceives as a dirty hit. [snip]Crowds seem to like fighting in ice hockey and cheer when fighting erupts.”
And so it was at the local Nakusp stadium. In fact my right ear may never function properly again as I was positioned centrally in the stadium for maximum crowd effect and excited whistles and yells of, “C’mon Boys!” were never far away.
It was, for the most part, an exciting game. The dirty Forks, as many Nakuspians would call them and indeed many well remembering Monty Python fans, quickly got out to a two nothing lead. This was neither what the fans were expecting nor perhaps the players as earlier in the week several school boy players insisted that that Grand Forks were crap and that they would win by about ten goals.
That was not the script for the night’s contest. Grand Forks were leading 3 -1 at the unofficial half time. It was then the fairy tale began. Nakusp coming back. First a goal. Then another, and another. Soon the Forks were trailing and then trailing badly. By the end of the game the Falcons had soared to 8 or 9 to 3 – I’m afraid my interest started to fade as the result blew out to a beyond-doubt victory for the home side.
Needless to say there were high fives, hugs and various attempts at whooping… both from the players and the sizeable crowd that had assembled.  I, myself, smiled.
Earlier that night I also tried my first hot dog within North America. It was good. You have got to love cultural experiences….
Speaking of American culture perhaps Dr Seuss would describe the hockey game thus:
First Fighting Falcons with sticks come.
Then Fighting Forks with sticks come.
Hard puck come.
Fighting falcons fight Forks with sticks.
Fighting Forks fight Falcons with sticks.
Fighting Falcons hit Forks with sticks.
Fighting Forks hit Falcons with sticks.
Sticks hits hard puck.
Forks hit hard puck and hard boards on ice now.
Falcons hit hard puck and hard boards on ice now.
Hard Puck hit boards and Falcons and Forks and ice now.
Now and then puck hits nets gets point. How?
 Well great mates fast skate, sticks hit, don’t wait, puck hits no new sticks, into net it slips.   

And a Merlin was sighted on way home earlier in the day. [Nakusp spp number 53]

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Musings on yesterday

Summit Lake Ski Slopes
As usual sitting in front of my fire -early in the morning procrastinating about getting ready and going to school.

Some students smiling because I can't ski.
Went to the local hot springs last night for the second time - it is a good way to kill [that word again] an evening. Actually very beautiful - not me half naked - but the surrounds. Minus two degrees air surrounding a mountain which is clothed in a thick pelt of pines, themselves frosted in snow and a clear sky above with stars, in Banjo's words, having 'a wondrous glory'. And me chilling [if that is the right word] in a very warm pool.

Before that had a brief chat to young Megs, who has currently ran away from the kids and is in Tassie, visiting rels down there. And then ended up chatting with Wren on skype also. Her name is Wren, after Jennifer was transformed into Jenny Wren. She seems to be having a good time down under - which i'm glad about.

The highlight though from yesterday was the school's snow day. Some twenty minutes away from Nakusp is the local ski slopes; Summit Lake. The lake resides peacefully under snow and ice on the north side of the road and the ski slopes take the south. The kids were great and busily went about preparing and getting into the runs on either skis or snowboards. Teachers didn't say [or did not have to say] jack. Even though a few kids turned up to ski who rarely attend school - it's just known that that's them and nobody heavies them or anything and they too are really sweet and polite. Anyway any secret dream i may have had of conquering the slopes were quashed when i saw even the smallest of kids belting down the slopes at full pace only to pull abruptly up a lazy metre before the line - [the line to the rope pull - a poor man's ski lift that drags the kids to the top of the slope]. All of the kids appeared to have been sking or sliding down ice and snow before they were born and i'm sure many had. Sadly the sight of all of this excellence put the brakes on my beginner's steps.
Scenery.....

I recovered a grin, if not my pride, in the afternoon when they opened up the tube run for some of the special education kids, er, and me. The tube run is a specially constructed run with berms on the sides and at the end such that you can't just slide down onto the highway as the tubes have no specific way of braking [or should that be breaking?] Anyway it was fun as hell. I was reminded as i was sensationally sliding that Force = mass times acceleration. An equation that I doubtless re-tested positively as i raced easily to the top of the end berm into the bamboo supported safety tape at the run's end. The manager said, kindly, that the run was fast because of the ice. I did not argue. The students smiled broadly, the sort of smile one makes when a baby messes itself and only the father is there to change it,  too when i boasted i had been at the tube park.

Birds? Well yesterday de nada save for Pine Siskins, Raven and a single noisy Steller's Jay.

Anyway time for breakfast.

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Overcast Sunday

Bohemian Waxwing - because i like them
After a wee bit of a sleep-in and the obligatory domestic duties - washing and the like. A quick walk around Nakusp under her heavy and dark clouds was the order of the day. Surprisingly it was cold but the birding started straight outside the front door; Starlings, BC Chickadees, RB Nuthatch, Downy Woodpecker, Pine Siskins, Song Sparrow and Redpoll were in attendance at my feeders. Crows, Flickers, Golden-crowned Kinglet completed the neighborhood species.

Along the waterfront some 40 mallard, 20 Horned Grebe, 1 Pied Grebe, 1 Bufflehead, 1 Goldeneye, and three Canada Geese competed for attention with a nice group of ten Trumpeter Swan, the first i've seen in Nakusp. [spp - 52!] Also a nice little flock of Bohemian Waxwings.

Redpoll on lawn [?]
Golden-crowned Kinglet - at least showing why it is so named!
The afternoon called for watching the Superbowl where the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots in what seemed to me to be a close game. The subtleties, if that is the right word,  alluded me but still i quite enjoyed it. Now some crap piccies from today;
Note that despite the 'balmy' weather we've been enjoying there is still quite a bit of snow aboooot and that it is underlying all of the selected pics.

Nelson

A quick visit to Nelson saw some wonderful scenery under blue skies. Nakusp, apparently stayed cloudy....

A brief bird walk - wednesday afternoon 2/2

2/2
Brief walk around Nakusp after school; down to the compost bins before walking the waterfront.
Pine Grosbeaks – 8
House Finches – 5
Redpolls – 8
Song Sparrows – 8
Pacific Wren – 1
Crow
Raven
Blue Heron – 1
Bufflehead – 1
PB Grebe – 1
Herring Gull – 3
Common Merganser – 3
Mallard – 6
BC Chickadee – 6

Additional waterfowl seen far out however did not carry scope. Blue Heron was number 51 on the Nakusp List 2012 for KC [that's me...]