Saturday, July 4, 2015

Monday, June 29, 2015

Another Sea Turtle Trackers encounter this morning!  I spotted their jeep pulled up in front of the Don CeSar.


This time Turtle Joe was checking out a new Loggerhead Turtle nest right next to a catamaran which had been left on the beach.


It turned out that this was a "false crawl," where the turtle comes up on the beach, starts to make a nest, and then for some reason abandons the attempt.  Turtle Joe said that obstacles on the beach (such as beach chairs, large holes left by sand castle builders, or, as in this case, catamarans) will often frustrate female turtles, causing them to turn around and return to the sea without laying any eggs.

Fortunately, probably the same turtle returned to the beach just yards away to make another nest.  This time there were no obstacles.

You can see the turtle's tracks to and from the nest...

I also found out from Joe that the turtle nest mentioned in my last blog was actually also a "false crawl," probably because of the four beach chairs which were in the turtle's way!  Beach chairs are really not supposed to be left on the beach overnight for this very reason.  Turtle Joe said the city plans to remove all these obstacles in the near future.

Further down the beach, five turtle nests in a row!



Saturday, June 27, 2015

This morning there was a team from Sea Turtle Trackers on the beach again.  I was in time to watch Joe Widlansky, also known as "Turtle Joe," pound in the stakes around a fresh Loggerhead Sea Turtle nest.

Turtle Joe takes a break from staking out a turtle nest to answer a question.

The mother turtle made her nest right next to a group of beach chairs.



Turtle track close-up.

Sadly, not far from the nest was a dead female loggerhead turtle which had washed up on shore.  Turtle Joe said this was not the turtle who had made the nest; this turtle had been dead in the water for some time.


Joe filled out a report on the dead turtle after finishing with the nest.  Later, he said, someone else would come and bury the dead turtle on the beach.




Monday, June 22, 2015

This afternoon I finally walked up the beach to the Black Skimmer nesting area.  On the way there I saw a Cormorant standing on a buoy drying out his wings.


The Cormorant's feathers are less water-repellent than other birds, which enables him to dive deep under water to catch fish.  But this means his feathers get wetter, so every now and then he has to dry them out a bit.

The Black Skimmer nesting area had been cordoned off, to keep people from disturbing the nesting birds.  There were also some little open boxes at one end of the enclosure, which I did not notice being there last year.  They are, I am guessing, for providing shade for the young skimmers, and perhaps shelter from the rain as well.


These baby skimmers are enjoying the shade provided by this shelter.

The adult skimmers periodically arrive with offerings of fish, which the baby skimmers seem very eager to receive, though sometimes the fish seems almost as big as the chick.


Where's my fish?

This pair has a nest-full!

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Thought I would go down to the beach early this morning, to see what I could see.  The one day I didn't bring my nice camera (and couldn't get any close-up shots), and there was a Ghost Crab who had wandered up the path, away from the beach!  I surprised him, and he surprised me.  I took his picture with my phone.  I advanced slowly, and he raised his claws in the air and retreated, until he reached his burrow, and I reached the beach.


It was a beautiful morning.


On the way to the Don CeSar there was a new turtle nest, and the mama turtle's tracks were still visible heading to the nest, and then leading back to the sea.


A close-up of the turtle tracks.


Friday, June 19, 2015

There was a double wedding down at the south end of Pass-a-Grille.  The happy couples, each pair with its own photographer, were sharing space with a loggerhead turtle nest, staked out with yellow tape.


The Don CeSar was peeking over the dunes.


The Black Skimmers were wending their way south along the shore, skimming for fish...


And then heading back north to the nesting area with their catch.


This weekend I really must walk down to the nesting site to see if the baby skimmers have made an appearance.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Yesterday evening there were a lot of Florida Fighting Conches littering the sandbar, stranded by the ebbing tide.


Many of them were struggling to move themselves to a better location.

This conch has come far out of its shell, attempting to right itself...

This picture shows the original hollow where the conch was left stranded.  The little marks in the sand around the conch show where it "kicked" against the sand with its operculum, the spiked end which serves as a door when the snail is fully retracted, and which it uses to flip itself over or move around.