The waves provided enough fun to turn this surfer board-over-teacup - or some other equally cool surfin' lingo-speak....
Just another grand day on Hendry's....
Things grand in life: nature, art, cars, photography, travel, gardens & plants, our Earth and life itself.
The waves provided enough fun to turn this surfer board-over-teacup - or some other equally cool surfin' lingo-speak....
Just another grand day on Hendry's....
Devereux Slough November 8, 2007. The fall rains have filled the Slough to about 80% capacity. The Slough will 'break through' during the occasional heavy winter rain as high water builds up against the back of the Pacific shore and dunes. This break through will allow the Slough to become tidal for a period until a another storm moves enough beach sand to re-create another 'plug'.
Reddish Egret in a calm moment.
The feeding/hunting habits of the Reddish Egret involve much activity, bouncing around the shallows as if fueled with amphetamines and having a serious case of 'ants in the pants'.
This hunting behavior is very engaging to witness and can be quite amusing to watch.
The sudden movements and flapping of wings as it chases fish make it identifiable at a distance from other more sedate herons and egrets.
In speaking with a friend this summer, she stated that "finding this rare bird (only the fourth Reddish Egret recorded in Santa Barbara County) was just too easy!"
Usually birds - and the egrets and herons below are a great example - can be "here" one moment and "somewhere else" the next. I was birding with a small group of similarly afflicted friends in the morning of 12Aug08, hoping to see something unusual at Devereux. What we saw was quite amazing. The normal summer dry period had begun to seriously dry up the Slough, creating smaller and smaller areas for fish to hide. The herons appeared to be pretty good at finding those places and gathered in numbers totalling nearly a hundred.
Mixed group of Great Egrets (larger w/yellow bills); Snowy Egrets (smaller w/black bills); and a single Great Blue Heron (at far left) at 9:30am.
Same spot of Devereux Slough as above, 11:00am.
Another earlier view in a nearby location within the Slough - 9:30am.
Again, the same view as above, just an hour and a half later, 11:00am.
So, when your buddy calls and says, "A White-bellied Fish Eagle has been seen at Devereux" you either need to know he is foolin' you - or get down the Slough PRONTO!
Chase Palm Park with the Wharf hiding in the mist
Ice Plant covering the misty dunes at East Beach - the Wharf is there - somewhere!So when the first rain does come, it can be a big deal. Rain = Storm in California. Officially, this 'rain' was little more than a daylong off-again, on-again mist with light rain. No wind. No lightning. No thunder. But enough moisture to use the wipers! However, I NEVER got higher than 'three clicks' (of five) on the intermittent wiper setting, and that was on 'the 101' at 55mph. Yet in a short drive to a favored beachfront restaurant for breakfast, I observed THREE bizarre driving occurences. One car passed me on the right along the waterfront, almost clocking a parking car, another purposely broke loose the rear axle around a turn, then spun tires at the next light and the last one simply spun their tires in the rain. Locals say "Stay home!" during rainstorms.
Colors are super-saturated on a sunless and moist day, as seen in the 'cool colors' in the garden of friends where we are house-sitting in Santa Barbara.
While some good birdin' may be found when the weather changes, the light is not so great for long-distance photos, and the contrast is nearly nonexistent. Yet the colors are fantastic!
With similarly cool colors, enhanced by the weather, the Society Garlic makes a nice focus in the garden.
Remember, this 'rain' was officially a trace, although I bet a least one local/weekly paper will call it a storm. Heck, the 'rain' didn't even bring the little kids off the street in my neighborhood!
.JPG)
Kids in the street in the rain.
And upon closer look, the 'rain' didn't even penetrate a rather sparse Coast Live Oak along our driveway. You can see the dry pavers and soil in the center of the photo. So you see? Our first rain was more of a 'mist event'.
Dry pavers and soil under half-leafed out Coast Live Oak
One of the unfortunate happenstances of the rainy season's onset is the subsequent polluting of nearshore waters. All the oil drippings, transmission fluid drops, coolant overflows, and gas station topping off-overfillings lay around on the asphalt all summer waiting for rain to move them downhill - and into the ocean. So today when I parked at the 'honor-pay' parking lot enjoying the views at East Beach, I took a look around.
East Beach with the Pavilion in the mist - I promise!
The following view of the wet parking lot (with a support team for a local 'walk-a-thon' that was not deterred by the mist storm) shows how the water begins to collect on the pavement. The continuing photos show the water as a carrier for road-borne oil and dirt.
East Beach parking lot with accumulating water
+(Medium).JPG)
The water collects and begins to show telltale signs of the summer's oil accumulation.
+(Medium).JPG)
The water runs downhill, towards the ocean, through the curb-cut and collects in the sand - still bearing oil.
As you can see above, this collecting polluted water doesn't have far to go to reach the ocean. And that's not too bad unless you prefer to have life in your oceans and on your beaches - oh, and use them for recreation as well.
Oil - so far we can't live (well) with it, and we can't live (well) without it. Yet another reason to find a balance of energy sources to sustain our standard of living and power our transportation so that we can live with a lighter footprint on our Planet, the WATER Planet.
+(Medium).JPG)
With the mist storm about most all the day, and having enjoyed the beach views in the morning mist/light rain/haze, the only thing left was to get to your little house and have your best buddy nearby.
.JPG)
Carbon allowing her dog, Cody to bunk down in her Little House.
Nooooo???!!! How can this be? Where's the freakin' Vermillion? With the mask?+(Medium).JPG)
Vermillion Flycatcher (juvenile female) on introduced/escaped Nicotiana.
On Friday 5Sept08, I took a look at Devereux Slough on the UCSB Campus, and while the dabblers were a long ways away, they seemed different than the Mallards that have inhabited the Slough all summer. My binoculars are fairly decent and 8x, yet really weren't sufficient to bring in the birds from the distance at the far western edge of the Slough. I took this photo at 500mm with my DX digital camera, equalling 750mm of reach. With the average human eye working at approximately 50mm, this totaled 15x. Then when I got home, I enlarged the image. If you don't have a scope, or the $$ to get one, then you have to do a LOT of steps to get any sort of an identification of distant birds - and then only if the birds are the size and coloration of these Cinnamon Teals. Peeps? Forget it! WAAY too small at that distance.
These Greater Yellowlegs were much closer.
Red-necked Phalaropes do nothing at less than warp speed. While my long lens has good 'reach' it is slow to focus, so I was fortunate to catch these zippy little birds at all.
These Wilson's Phalaropes were at Devereux Slough on 12Aug08. Twenty percent larger than the Red-necked Phalaropes, Wilson's Phalaropes seemingly do not partake of the caffeinated crustaceans as much as their relatives.
Occasionally I remember to LOOK UP! And am often rewarded. You'd think I would do it more often. In this case I was fortunate to have this raptor circling quite low, as I didn't have my long lens, and was limited to 200mm. If you're having difficulty recognizing this very large eagle, it was also new to me - a White-bellied Fish Eagle! And no, this is actually not just a post about Devereux Slough - remember? These are birds I have seen lately! I visited Singapore in late July and saw this bird circling overhead. It is a widespread bird from India through Malaysia to Australia. While mostly feeding on water-based animals, they also eat carrion, and have been know to take birds as large as swans. Look out, Fifi.
While watching the White-bellied Fish Eagle, I noticed another raptor-looking bird circling overhead as well. Turns out this is a Brahminy Kite, another common raptor with widespread distribution in Southeast Asia. Not as large as the WB Fish Eagle, this individual looks like it came out second in a fight.
.JPG)
Now THIS bird may look familar, as it is related to our own Brown Pelican. This is an Australian Pelican, seen in the Singapore Zoo. Somehow, just not as 'dignified' as our Brown Pelican, do you think?
Last fall, when I was first 'into' looking around Santa Barbara, CA at birds, the Black-crowned Night Herons covered the tamarisk trees at the south end of the Slough (near the renowned Bridge-to-Nowhere - this is an old wooden bridge with the distal portion removed - not to be confused with the as yet unbuilt bridge noted all-to-frequently by Sarah Palin.) On 12Aug08 there were three back in the same tamarisks.
No, this Southern Cassowary did not pop out from behind a jacaranda tree on Foothill Road. A native of New Guinea and New Zealand it is a rainforest bird second (at 150lb+!) only to the Ostrich in size among living birds.
WHOA! Now THIS bird just looks like it has been hitting the double espressos! Again at the Singapore Zoo, the Saddle-billed Stork is native to much of Africa from Sub-Saharan regions to South Africa. Just waaay too colorful and amazing to leave out of this eclectic post.
Oh, and the very FIRST bird in the post? It's a Victorian-crowned Pigeon, also from the Singapore Zoo, and just too fancy for belief!