Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas morning about 11am took the kayaks out for a family paddle. Time constraints and approaching weather required a choice between kayaking and ice skating. Glad that kayaking won out, it had been a long time since I went for a paddle. The weather was sunny and not too cold (34). The water was pretty calm, there was a west swell which was small enough that it didn't interfere with using the binoculars. Deirdre brought her camera and didn't seem to have too much trouble keeping the horizon. She graciously provided the photos.


We started from the Galankin Dock and went west around Rockwell lighthouse. A pretty large flock of Common mergansers (25), 7 mallards , one Common loon and most of the Surf Scoters (8) were between the dock and the lighthouse. Two sea otters were just southwest of Rockwell island. They let us come relatively close for otters (about 50ft or so). Continued on to Ferebee Rock (I call it Cormorant rock), about 54 or so Pelagic cormorants took off as soon as we headed that way. They are impressively sensitive to approach. I'll count myself vaguely stealthy when they let me get close. Continued on around Galankin inside of Sheep island. A Sharp-shinned hawk was on the north point of the island, it flew to a tree on Galankin and unfortunately I lost sight of it. Also saw a Horned Grebe on the west side of the island.


There were 3 eagles (2 mature) in the trees on the west side of my lot. The Crows that have discovered the deck feeders were down on the rocks below the house (fresh water? mussels?). On the way to the Twins, found another sea otter close to the southern most Gillmore island. By the pass between the two islands (by Michelle and Roland's dock) found a few more Surf Scoters (4)and Harlequins. On the far side found Buffleheads (6) and a couple of Common Mergansers.

Went through the Gillmore islands back to the main interisland basin then Ian and I took a peak between Kutkan and Breast islands before returning to the Galankin dock. Found a few more Harlequins on the north side. The only alcids (2 Marbled murrelets) seen were on the return to the dock.
I lost track of the number of gulls; did notice several Mew and Glaucous-winged and one Thayers gull.
Made a first attempt to record a trip using Google Earth, the result is a little clumsy.

Also seem to have been cooking alot the last few days; one thing turned out especially good for a recipe-less creation. In hope of making a successful seafood pie again some time, I'll include the recipe here. Maybe I'll find this one.
Leftover fish pie recipe:
white sauce (1/4 cup butter, 1/4 cup flour, 2 cups milk (mixed non fat and half and half), 1ts salt. Added an unknown amount of tabasco sauce and lemon juice . Sauted 4 chopped stalks of celery and a purple onion until relatively translucent. Filled a 14 inch diameter pan with the cooked vegetables, leftover coho, scallops and shrimp. Sprinkled about an ounce of smoked blue cheese over the filling, then poured the sauce over. It didn't look quite moist enough, so added some cream until it looked evenly moist.
The top crust was a pile of mashed potatoes. Just before putting in the oven, Deirdre brushed it with egg yolk (beaten). Baked it at 350 for 40 minutes.
The deer in the greenhouse made it to the freezer yesterday, it yielded roughly 30 lbs of meat. The kitchen scale is pretty marginal, so I'm not sure how reliable that number really is. Cut 4 roasts out of the hind legs; the front legs, ribs and everything else except the backstrap went into burger. The kitchen aid grinder was rather hot by the time the process was complete. Kept the rib meat burger seperate, I'm kind of curious how it compares with the rest of the meat as it has a bit more fat included in the grind. If the second island deer is harvested, I'll make some sausage and maybe try to make jerky as well.
Snow, hail, thunder and lightening last night.

Monday, December 22, 2008

The cold, clear weather has been around for most of the last week. The morning of the 16th was rainy, but it was sunny by noon.

There is still a very thin crust of snow and frost and a nice thick layer of ice on the trails. The Rhododendron leaves are curled up against the cold, also noticed that the Cornus canadensis looks a bit on the dry side. The shinier wintergreen herbs don't look to be as vulnerable to the cold and dry.

The last few nights, we had a nice view of Venus in the west and even luckier, we've seen Mercury just after sunset on the commute to the island.

I was trying to get a photo of where the sun came up and where is sits at noon on the Solstice. I wasn't terribly successful, the photos were definately on the bizarre side. The best description that I have of where the sun comes up is east of the Pyramids, near Deep Inlet over a low moutain locally (perhaps ) called Eureka Mtn at about 9:30am. At noon the sun was just to the west of the Pyramid mtn and not too far above the peak.

The photo of Cross Mountain was taken from the upstairs deck. Didn't have much to do with sunrise or noon, but the mountains have been rather beautiful in the snow and sun.


Celebrated the solstice by cutting 5 Sitka spruce for the auditorium. 3 were in the garden and would eventually block the sun getting to the vegetables. They had to go sooner or later and at least at this point they were relatively easy to move around, as the tallest was about 12ft. The neighborhood had a skating party and bonfire at the Galankin lake in the evening. The stars were out and the ice was very smooth. Most were skating with headlamps which looked pretty interesting gliding around the ice in the very dark night. I turned mine off a couple of times once I was pretty sure that the ice was smooth. Interesting, but a bit on the scary side.


There were 2 deer on the slope north of the green house when I walked home the other night. They were starting to walk off when I noticed them and stopped. I tried the low whistle, they stopped and listened, then resumed eating after a few minutes. One is now in the greenhouse waiting to be butchered. It had already shed its antlers which seems a bit early, but I guess I don't really know when is normal.

The trail count of birds remains pretty spotty, I did hear and eventually see a Brown creeper on the 20th and there was a robin in the garden on the 21st.
12/15/08 12/16/08 12/17/08 12/18/08 12/19/08 12/20/08 12/21/08
Pelagic Cormorant 3 5 4 1 4 2
Scaup 2
Long-tailed duck 3
Surf Scoter 12 3 4 3 1 20 15
Barrow's Goldeneye 3 11 7 1 35 23
Bufflehead 10
Common Merganser 12 3 5 3
Thayer's Gull 1 1
Glaucous-winged gull 2 2 3 2 4 2
Gulls 5 6 2
Common Murre 1
Kingfisher 1
Bald Eagle 1 1 2
time 8am 8am 8am 8am 8am 2pm 10:30am
weather calm, cold, isolated skim ice calm, raining calm, cold calm, cold ice, calm small waves, cold small waves, cold

Sunday, December 14, 2008


It's been rather nice the last few days, sunny and cold enough to keep the small amount of snow from melting. I'm wearing the giant, calf length coat, two pairs of gloves and a scarf across my face for the commute. It takes me a bit of time to acclimate.
If I remember right the snow fell on Wednesday and Thursday. The bayliner's fuel lines froze on Friday, that skiff seems to succumb every winter, fortunately the aluminum skiff remains functional. It took a good 10 minutes to untie the boat on Friday because of frozen lines. Swan lake was still open on Friday (finally got a good look at the Canvasback), by Sunday morning only a bit of open water remained. There was a bit of thin ice at the harbor mouth on Saturday.
The full moon was pretty spectacular, both at night rising over the Sisters or Verstovia (depending on my location) and setting in the morning. It set over what I assume is a peak on the north end of Kruzof, or maybe toward Partofshikof island. I thought that the moon seemed a bit larger than normal that morning, presumably it looked on the cinematic side because of not only being full, but also at perigee (221,560 miles).
The fungi are frozen. The only creature I collected this week was a Xylaria from a Sitka alder. Haven't dissected it yet for spores, some seem flat and divided like hypoxylon others were round like something different.
This week I left the house a bit earlier and the slightly darker conditions added a bit of a challenge to identifying gulls, so I had to make use of the gull spp category.
Common Loon 12/8/08
8am
12/9/08
8am
12/9/08
2:30pm
12/10/08
8am
12/11/08
8am
12/12/08
8am
12/13/08
8:30am
12/14/08
10:00am
Common Loon 1 1
Double Crested Cormorant 5
Pelagic Cormorant 2 4
Great Blue Heron 1
Mallards 3 4
Harlequin 1
Long-tailed Duck 2
Surf Scoter 25 16 29 12 13
Barrow's Goldeneye 18 27 18 22 21 19 18
Bufflehead 1 3 8
Common Merganser 3 7
Glaucous-winged Gull 5 3 1 3 2 2
Gull spp 1 11 2 7
Bald Eagle 2 3 1 1
Raven 2


The feeder remains popular with nuthatches, juncos and chickadees. Stood out near it for awhile Sunday afternoon trying to get a photo of a junco. No luck, but did notice that the chickadees taking off from the deck rail sound alot like a cat purring. I assume that it is there wings that are responsible for the sound.

Sunday, December 07, 2008


Still have a crush on the Nuthatches that are visiting the feeder. They have been joined this week by 10 juncos, at least 5 Chestnut-backed chickadees and a Brown creeper. The creeper was working the trunk of the tree that the feeder hangs in.

Week Three of the commute count. I've been taking notes on the sea state, so thought I might include them here. What I have noticed is that the choppier the seas, the more ducks near the Galankin dock. In any weather most of the birds I see are between Galankin Island and Kutkan island. The exceptions are the Long-tails and the Common Murres which so far are closer to Crescent harbor.

12/1/0812/2/0812/3/0812/4/0812/5/0812/6/0812/7/08
Common Loon11
Horned Grebe1
Pelagic Cormorant42442
Great Blue Heron1
Mallard9
Harlequin222
Long-tailed Duck21
Surf Scoter321227848
White-winged Scoter5
Barrow's Goldeneye1361912182225
Bufflehead773
Common Merganser510
Mew Gull3
Thayer's Gull1
Glaucous-winged Gull23418535
Common Murre2
Raven1
WeatherCalmCalmCalmChoppyCalmSW rippleCalm


There are still fungi to be found in the area. Mostly Panellus spp, Mycena occidentalis and M. epipterygia. Also fruiting is Guepiniopsis alpina (gum drop jelly?). The Panellus longuiquus I've found this week has varied from hot pink to grey in color. I've found the small white version of this fungus on Vaccinium parvifolium, Menziesia and now on exposed roots of a small windfall Sitka spruce.

Found my first Panellus serotinus on Western Hemlock this week. It was growing on two trees, both had numerous fruiting bodies of Fomitopsis pinicola. Apparently hemlock isn't an unusual host, I just haven't seen it here. Found a particularly large one growing on a Red alder. It attracted my attention to another alder with several Xylaria. Not sure which one it is yet. It isn't hypoxylon and it doens't look like polymorpha. I need to locate spores to use the key I found, but so far the perithecia are immature. Fortunately, Xylaria dry and store pretty welll.
Another or maybe the same Western Screech owl was in the commons this eveing around 5:15pm. It was sitting in a willow at a height just above my head (way less than 6ft up). It let me walk within about 2ft of it. I stopped and spoke softly (some very inane nonsense), then walked past. After I passed by, it flew off.