Where the Action Is

Arbutus on Little MountainRecently I took advantage of a rare sunny, cloudless morning in the midst of the current monsoons to head up to Little Mountain to check out its woodland of beautiful smooth trunk arbutus trees and views beyond of the valleys and island mountain range. I was not the only one with this bright idea. Already settled in were several wildlife photographers, all ready for action with big cameras and tripods. They were focused for the moment on a big group of hummingbirds, who were, as usual, not playing well with each other, on top of the arbutus trees, but what they really were hoping to point those big honking lenses at this day were the dwarf pygmy owls who live up there. I was told that these owls were about the size of a robin. Oh great. If I have such a hard finding the 2 foot tall Barred Owl in my own forest, what are my chances?

Chatting with one of the photographers who had travelled up from Nanaimo to hang out this day on a mountain in Parksville, I asked her where else she liked to go around here, what were some of her favourite places. “Oh that depends on the season and on what’s happening”, she replied with a very dreamy smile. “I’m up around the beaches at herring fishery season, or over at the Little Qualicum Estuary to see the trumpeter swans that winter there, or up to Fanny Bay where the sea lions hang out in winter. I go where the action is”.

A gal after my own heart (albeit with a much bigger camera lens). I too have been hanging out where the action is this fall, in this case the nearby rivers and estuaries where the salmon are returning from the ocean to spawn in their home rivers and then die.

In the clear, sunny days of late September it was the Coho run I first witnessed. At the estuary, the fish linger for awhile in the mix of salt and fresh water getting used to the change and when high tide comes in, swelling the waters, they make their move upstream, running the gauntlet of the supporting cast that lies in wait for them. The gulls perch on the sand and gravel of low tide, dozens of eagles watch from their panorama viewpoint at the tops of tall cedars and the anglers wait as well, by the side of the estuary, moving around from time to time to cast a line as the waters change. The stony ground crunches under my feet and I notice I am actually walking on the bed of the river and ocean. I spot herons, both on the beach and sitting in low scrubby trees and out on the rocks I watch 3 otters munching away on a couple of salmon carcasses.

Otters at the Estuary

I run into an artist I know from life drawing class who arrives to set up his easel on the high end of the tide line. “Ah it’s autumn, you can tell from that haze on the mountains”, he says, inhaling the sea air with a grin. He tells me he did his chores for the day – chopping firewood – this was his reward, to hang out and paint this beautiful scene, his life as well one of going where the action is.  His wife, a keen birdwatcher, watches the action from her telescope on a tripod on the beach. I chat with a fisherman, in his waders and boots and jacket full of pockets, carrying his rod as he walks back along the beach towards his car. He caught 3 fish out there this day but had to let them go. They were wild and he’s not allowed to take them. I’m puzzled. Wild? He educates me. These fish are returning to a river where some end up at the fish hatchery upstream. Before they release the new fish back to the river they mark them by removing the adipose fin, a small, fleshy bump just above the tail. This way you know whether they were raised at the hatchery or wild. You can keep a quota of hatchery fish but not the wild. He tells me that the system is self-regulated for the most part as over the past decade government fisheries staff have been cut by 80% and there are now only 2 fisheries officers covering the coast from Campbell River to Nanaimo. He speaks with regret about the big one – hands spread wide, wider – that he had to put back.

Gull's Salmon Lunch

Upriver near the hatchery operation in September, the river was a beautiful sight, with fall colours reflected in the water, and only a few salmon yet visible if you looked closely. A lot of fishermen hanging out in the water casting a line.

That was then. By now, mid-November, these idyllic upriver scenes are now a shocking and wonderful vision of noise and what looks like mayhem. Except it’s not.

The river now roars and fills its banks as it white waters its way down to the sea, fueled by 40 days and 40 nights of rain in these parts. Circling gulls shriek. Large white carcasses of recently dead Chum salmon float in the calmer side channels, piling up against the banks. Bodies are littered everywhere along the shore and further inland, dragged up by one or the other of the wildlife that also hang out where the action is – racoons, gulls, eagles, gulls, bears, in addition to those estuary birds and animals at the beginning of their journey up the river to spawn and die. Walking the paths along the river bank you literally have to step over the bodies. The air was heavy with the smell of, well, death.

Spawned Chum Big Q Hatchery

The sight of this huge nutrient dump that forms the ecological backbone of these coastal forests made it all finally make real sense. I had read about it and seen images and video (thank you nature photographers and filmmakers) but the sight of the sheer volumes of fish, thousands upon thousands upon thousands of them,  piled up in the river was something I was totally unprepared for. This is a scene that repeats along this Pacific North American coast and beyond up around the Siberian coast on the other side of the ocean.

I watched through the shallow water as now small numbers of the fish swam over the bodies of their compadres reaching the rock and pebble beds of the channel, home at last, and watch others stop moving much on their own, drifting towards the shoreline to join others snagged among the grasses and branches along the shore. I was watching the end of their lives. Watching them die. Home at last after an epic journey from thousands of miles out in the open ocean back past the estuaries, past the rapids, past the predators lined up at the buffet, to the river where they create the next generation before feeding the forests, animals and trees alike.

I will not forget this sight.

Salmon Reflections Little Q Hatchery

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63 Year Old Mama

How can it be that life just keeps getting better and better?

odometer

Last week Number One Son Steve piled his possessions into his van, and along with Rosie the Dog and his brother Mike as co-pilot, made the epic 4534.9 km cross-country trip from Ottawa to Vancouver Island, where he is returning to a BC life based in Victoria. For the first time in many many years we are all together now in the same time zone (for awhile anyway, until Mike heads off back to the Arctic – to return in December to spend a month in The Bunkie writing his thesis).

mike-rosie-steve-at-lake-louise

Six or 7 years ago, Steve was living in British Columbia and went back to Ottawa for a visit. Once there he got, shall we say, majorly distracted, and it’s taken all this time for him to make his way back, to stay for good.

So this year’s birthday present to me on this day, November 5th, is the fact that Steve is now only a 2 hour drive away. I couldn’t be happier.

Well yes I could. That would be if Mike moved out to this time zone as well. Who knows, stranger things have happened.

The birthday song du jour this year is courtesy of the late, great, Koko Taylor. Rock on 63 Year Old Mama. The best birthday ever.

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La-De-Da-ing Through the Forest

Bear Sighting

A few weeks ago I found this handwritten sign at the entrance to the path through the forest by the Englishman River estuary. Oh. I immediately reached into my messenger bag, pulled out my camera, removed the lens cap, and hung it around my neck. Slipped the strap of my binoculars off my shoulder and grasped them in hand. The date was several days previous, but just in case, no?

The river was clear, the moss and algae on the rocks along the banks almost fluorescent green under the sunshine and as I stood watching the water flow by through the estuary to the sea, I saw a group of 5 or 6 large salmon swimming in the opposite direction, upstream. Ah this is the season when the salmon return from the ocean to spawn in their home rivers – and then die. On their way they pass by a veritable line-up at the buffet – shore birds, eagles, river otters, fishermen and…bears. All looking for lunch.

Englishman River near Estuary SeptemberThe bear sighting sign was no surprise. A month or so ago my friend’s houseguest spotted a bear at the end of our street. When it noticed him it took off, climbed the chain link fence (you can see where it is bent out of shape) and disappeared into the forest. Our forest.

Bears in AreaThe interesting thing was the reaction of some of the neighbors when told of the sighting. Some didn’t believe it. “Oh that’s not possible. There’s no bears here. There haven’t been bears here for 15 years.” Wrong. One was a couple of blocks away the first year we were here, sightings have been reported in the local paper for several years and I met a man a week ago who had a very disturbing run-in with a bear on his property on the outskirts of town two years ago. (A word about the term “outskirts of town”. This is a small place. That would mean only a few blocks away). This guy did everything wrong, everything you shouldn’t do, when he encountered this bear and ended up royally pissing it off. He went out to the yard with a stick and confronted it, in an attempt to chase it away. Instead, to make a long story short, he ended up cowering in a neighbour’s gazebo in terror. He eventually managed to remove himself from a tense situation but was subsequently afraid to be out in his yard for at least the next four months. I’m sure he wishes he’d just stayed inside and turned up the volume on the TV.

Ultimately, it doesn’t go well for Bear when it comes too close to where humans live.

On this day at the river, after watching the shorebird and eagle action at the estuary, I decided to return back to the parking area by another pathway I hadn’t used before. When I came to a place where the path narrowed tightly through some high thick bushes I stopped. Berries. Hmm. What else do bear like to stock up on in their pre-winter sleep gorgefest? This was a little dodgy. So, avoiding the berry patch path I turned away and took another pathway that I thought would be a shortcut through the forest to the main entrance.

Some shortcut.

There I was, all by myself, deep in the woods, between the river salmon and the berry patch with bears on my mind.

Bear Forest 2

I started to sing.

“La de da, here I am, coming through, la la la, no need for alarm, it’s only me, la de da”.

I don’t know the pathways of that forest as I do my own and it took longer than I thought to cross through. Or maybe it just felt like a long time. It felt dark in those woods, even though it was the middle of the day. Along with thick brush under the trees were large old stumps from logging of yesteryear, each one looking like an outline of a dark bear. Had I not seen the handwritten sign at the entrance they would have looked like tree trunks. Whose bright idea was this to go off the main path where there were other people walking and travel through deep woods all by myself?

I sang louder.

“La de da. Here I am. Coming through.”

So if you happen to be in the woods one day and you hear the sounds of someone trying to make a racket singing to bears, do not be alarmed. It’s just me – Goldilocks.

 

hipster-bear

Hipster Bear – Angie Roussin pinastyles.com

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