Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Thinking about Whales


You’re wondering, “Why is he thinking about whales and putting up pictures of bears?” Simple answer. I’m thinking about whales because I’m reading Moby Dick. It was a free download on our iPod Touch and I’ve never read it before. I don’t have a convenient recent whale picture so I used a picture of the largest mammals that I have photographed recently, the shy gentle bears that somewhat regularly visit our backyard.

Moby made me think of two impressive whale experiences that predated my blogging habit. I felt they needed to be recorded since whales, along with everything else in the ocean, appear soon to be extinct if we don’t change our ways. Hopefully not, but possibly in the next generation or two, nobody will have any more first-hand whale experiences.

OK, first whale experience: We lived many years on Eld Inlet, the southern tip of Puget Sound. We saw lots of harbor seals there. That was novel to me as a Carolina boy where, growing up, I thought you had to go to Eskimo-land to see any seals. One day soon after we moved into the Eld Inlet place, my parents came to visit. I quickly got my father down to the gravelly beach that we semi-privately shared with four other property owners. I proudly pronounced that we could dig our own clams, grow our own oysters, and sometimes we even saw seals. As if right on queue, directly in front and close in to shore, a huge mass rose to the surface and blew a V-shaped spout. My father frowned and opined, “That ain’t no seal!” Clearly it was a gray whale, the only huge thing other than the distinctly-finned Orca that might venture so far south in the sound. We watched it spout several more times and it clearly was hanging around for a bit. Leaving my father there, I ran up to the house to fetch down my kayak and camera. My mother was hollering after for me not to get into the water with any whale. I chased it around the inlet racing toward each spout to get a close snapshot but each time it rose in a different location hundreds of feet away. There were no good pictures.

I got another chance for a close encounter a couple of years later. The neighbors reported that a grey whale had been hanging out all day feeding in the bottom muck in the cove across the inlet from us. Wife and I again mounted kayaks and crossed the inlet. This time the whale was working a much smaller area and it was easy to get close. More sensible kayakers were also there to observe from a sensible distance. With all the good sense of a guy who climbs wet ladders barefooted, I charged up right over the location of the last couple of spouts. Suddenly the whale rose beside me and exchanged breath with a huge, “Chug; suck” sound. Mist from the spout drifted over me. I have to say I did not smell the foul odor that some people report from close encounters with whale spouts. However, what I will never forget was the deep resonance of that sound. It sounded like someone had briefly vented a steam valve in a mine tunnel. It gave me a sense of the huge volume of the breathing tube and lungs in this gentle but mighty creature.

Second whale experience: This one concerns Orcas. Orca whales are cute, smart, and relatively small as whales go, though hellishly much bigger than about anything else that isn’t a whale. They’re the ones that, if unfortunate enough to get captured, end up doing tricks in sea aquariums until they get disgusted with the life and decide to drown their trainers. Most Orcas live in pods, don’t roam too far from home, and enjoy a good diet of fish, like salmon. However, some Orca pods are the real rouges of the sea. They are transients and roam far and wide to munch on big animals like seals and even other larger whales. Several years ago the town of Brinnon, WA on Hood Canal (not really a man-made canal but a fjord wide and deep enough for submarine traffic) was experiencing a seal problem. Normally popular and welcome, the seal population had grown way too big for their local habitat. They were gobbling up lots of fish, fouling the water with their excrement and causing commercial oyster beds to shut down. Well, one day we were driving along the canal near Brinnon and saw a crowd of cars pulled over to the side of the road. We pulled over to see the attraction. The rogues had come. The water was filled with tall Orca dorsal fins racing back and forth, singly and in groups. No boats were out. We didn’t see this ourselves, but some friends who live in Brinnon told us they had seen seals far from the water and still heading for higher ground. While walking down to witness the spectacle our friends passed a seal that looked at them curiously as if to say, “You guys are going the wrong way. Are you nuts? Get further inland.” When the rogues had left the seal population had been culled down to a fraction of its size.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Savannah River Stemmed point



I found a splendid large projectile point (arrowhead in layman terms) on the beach at Edisto Island where I have a so-called tourist rental house. I just looked down and there it was right on the surface of the sand. It's really a good one as you can see from the photos. The photo on the sand is just as it lay, before I first touched it.


I didn't have any idea of it's origin but I had visions of it being real old, like made during cowboy times or maybe even pre-colonial times. My sister recently met an eminent archaeologist whose specialty is Native American archaeology. I sent him the two photos here and he identified it as a "Savanna River Stemmed point". He said it was chert, likely quarried near Allendale, SC and stained dark by a long rest in the marsh mud for about 4000 years. That puts it in the transition from the Middle Archaic to the Late Archaic cultural period of Native American prehistory. Dang! 4000 years! Here I sit holding this thing in my hand looking at all the little edges chipped away by some guy around the same time the biblical Abraham was about to cut his son's throat in a sacrifice commanded by God. (For those without a religious background, at the last minute God said, "Just kiddin'; I was just pullin' your chain to test your loyalty.")


Anyhow, holding this thing sends chills up my spine. It's like a voice from the past. I wish it could really tell me its whole story. Did it have a short useful life before it was lost? Or maybe it was lost and found for several cycles of life. Did it ever stick in a deer, a bison, a man? Wow!

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Dream Vacation on a Budget!



Have you ever been to historic Charleston, SC? Do you like white sand beaches with warm water? Golf, nature walks, safe bike trails, eating? Do you like luxurious accommodations? Are you on a tight budget? Have I ever got a deal for you! Come stay at The Dragonfly on Edisto Island. The Dragonfly is our beach house occupied sporadically by my family but most of the time available to YOU for a vacation accommodation. This is not your moldy old run of the mill beach cabin. The Dragonfly is a modern four year old house with plenty of conveniences and luxuries, four bedrooms, two bathrooms plus a private outdoor bath house (for those frequent beach swims), three televisions, three porches, modern kitchen with dishwasher, big fridge…the works. There are enough beds for ten people plus a baby crib, ceiling fans in all the rooms, and of course four-season climate conditioning. It's all in a setting of beautiful Palmetto, Magnolia, and moss draped Live oak trees.

But, the house is nothing compared to the location. Location location location! It is a one block barefoot & swimsuit walk to public access ocean beach, 600 feet to be exact. If you tire of the quiet relaxing beach bum life, there is plenty of other stuff to do on this 55 square mile historic sea island. You can rent fat tired bicycles and cruise the island. Play golf. Go fishing. There is a huge state park in two parts. One part has a long undeveloped beach for walking and swimming. The other part occupies maritime forest and pristine salt marshes. There's a modern interpretive center in the middle of it in case you are into wildlife and botany. The beaches are a prime nesting ground for Loggerhead sea turtles. In the summer you can sometimes see them hatch. Do you like to kayak? No problemo. Rent one at the small local marina and take a marsh creek tour sometimes accompanied by playful bottlenose dolphins. Do you like to eat? Of course you do. Edisto has several tasty and affordable restaurants, four with bars. Excepting the Sub shop in the BP, none are chains.

Did I mention windsurfing? Winds are often sporty. The water is warm enough for no-wetsuit windsurfing May through September. Here's an April 3 picture.

The island is oozing with natural and human history too. Pleistocene fossils of sharks teeth, and fossilized mammal and reptile bone fragments can be found on the beach. The first humans were Native Americans and their shell mounds and pottery shards are still about. In the heyday of antebellum times it was one of the richest places in the country with magnificent plantations passing through the eras of indigo, rice, and king cotton. Several plantation houses are still standing. You can get a historic tour and learn about the pirate raids, duels, and the civil war upheaval.

So, you're still not convinced. You get claustrophobic on even a large island and you want a city experience. Maybe you're from New York or Caracas and you get spooked by quiet. Not a problem; you're connected to the mainland by a bridge. By Mapquest it's only 46.4 miles to historic Charleston, an easy one hour trip. Drink up the history, wallow in the art galleries, and eat yourself to death in restaurants of this four century old city. Want to take in a bigger chunk of the low-country culture and history. It's an easy day trip to beautiful historic Beaufort and Savannah. Consulting Mapquest again, it's 1 hour 26 minutes to Beaufort and 2 hours exactly to Savannah.

So back to the Dragonfly. How much is it gonna cost to stay there? Check out the rates and you can book it at the property manager's Atwood Vacations site. Be sure to take the virtual tour there. If you are really on a super tight budget, avoid the high rent season of June through mid-August when school is out. If you're flexible about when you can go, you can really get a great deal. For example if you choose a time when school is in session and pick a 5-day stretch of Monday to Friday in a week that already has the weekend booked, just enter a comment after this post. I will make you a really good deal of less than half the listed full week rent. If you're a retired Canuck you might want to chill out (Oops; bad metaphor) warm up there for a couple of mid-winter months when we go away XC skiing in the northwest. Another chance to negotiate a good deal.

I leave you with this scene of a little before dinner volleyball match with our other geezer friends.