Night Herons at Fort Hill

Years ago I happened to be at Fort Hill around dusk waiting to watch the sunset and noticed that all around me black crowned night herons were vocalizing and flying out over the marsh where they feed. And yes, they feed at night or just after dusk, hence their name.

Black crowned night herons are fairly common on the Cape though they tend to secretive by day and some people never seem to see them. There once was a huge colony at Sandy Neck but over the years that rookery was destroyed again and again and if they are once again nesting there it is not in the same numbers that once proliferated there. There is a great account of that old Sandy Neck rookery here.

The bird above is a black crowned night heron. We also can see yellow crowned night herons here. I don’t have one of my own pictures of a yellow crowned night heron but you can see what one looks like here. Immature night herons are pretty stripey and brown and can be confusing to identify by species, especially since they tend to hang out in the reeds and can be confused with bitterns if one just gets a quick look. Immature Green herons are also brown and stripey.

This weekend we had to go to Wellfleet just after dusk so it was a great time to stop at Hemenway Landing in Eastham to watch for night herons. We were not alone. There were probably a dozen other birders there. You can also reach Hemenway Landing by following the trail from the Fort Hill parking lots and there is also a great place to watch where the little pavillion and big rock are along the trail–that is actually where I usually watch them from…

The sky got darker and the almost full moon rose…

and then we began to hear them… quawk!!!! quawk!!! They sound like some funny old man squawking as they fly overhead and in some parts of the country they are actually referred to as quawks….

One after another they flew over our heads, circling around the marsh and creeks looking for a good place to land. We watched several dozen arrive and land before we had to head off. As the sky darkened it was harder and harder to see them through binoculars but we are pretty sure there was at least one yellow crowned among them…

Anyway, if you’re in the area around sundown….take a few moments to catch the night heron show before they begin to migrate….it’s a sight you won’t soon forget…

My pictures of the birds didn’t really come out–but here’s one of my sad attempts–between the low light and the movement my camera wasn’t up to catching them….

but it did catch this…

and this…

Stormy Days

The Nor’easter of the last few days has been very intense with strong winds and deluges of rain. Branches and trees are down everywhere but nowhere is the damage felt as strongly as along our beaches. Although the outer Cape beaches have probably felt the impact the strongest, many bay side and even south facing beaches have taken big hits as well.

On the outer Cape the erosion has been so severe that most of the stairs leading down to the beaches have been washed away and the dunes so undercut that no one is allowed down on the actual beaches. At high tide, there is no beach. Only what’s left of the cliffs and the raging water…this first picture is from Marconi Beach in Wellfleet.
This second shot is from Nauset Light Beach, where the only stairs remaining are the top few that are still hanging on to the platform…
This view from Fort Hill doesn’t look very threatening….until you realize there is no marsh and no barrier beach to be seen….all under water!!! Very shocking….
Here’s foggy view of what is left of the barrier beach in the distance. You can see the water washing over it and over the marsh (or what used to be the marsh) behind it.
This white water was already past the dunes that used to be there at Coast Guard Beach and slamming against the bushes that are supposed to be upland, not wetland plants….
Storms have always caused upheavals and rearrangements of beach area on the Cape but in my lifetime this seems like one of the most severe ones. We will have to wait until the tides recede and the waves calm down to truly assess the damage….

Fort Hill in Eastham

I have always loved Fort Hill and I know I am not alone. These photos are from earlier this month….much of what I photographed has now passed on but why not have a last moment of lovely autumn while we can?The poison ivy was turning….Rosa rugosa hips were still red but getting soft….

The milkweed seeds were just setting forth on their journeys across the meadows and beyond…
And even the invasive phragmites were looking rather poetic against the early October sky…
The seed baskets of Queen Anne’s lace were still standing strong, keeping guard on the edge of the great marsh….
And the clouds were moving across the sky just ahead of the wind leaving wonderful shadows in their wake…

I’ve been away from this blog working in classrooms for the last few weeks and will be posting some pictures from my programs as well as other areas very soon.