Friday, December 31, 2021

Fishing

 

Fishing, I imagine, has a close-to-nature appeal for sportsmen similar to birdwatching for those who like a purposeful fresh-air outing in scenic elements.

Catching something for dinner may not always be the first objective of fishing, but this woman caught a keeper.

For some it's an immersion swim into the submarine environment where fish are pursued by all manner of birds and mammals and the scenery is other-worldly.

Some folks stay high and dry, pursuing trophies for Facebook as well as the cooking grill.

Some team up commercially to make a living at sea,

while others are drawn to solitary rhythms and harvests.

Every one of these shoreline adventurers recognizes the conditions and contests that Ernest Hemingway depicted so vividly.




Thursday, December 23, 2021

The Solstice Tree


Red Oak tree, Winter Solstice

During Christmas week trees are on my mind. Part of the general holiday centers on bringing a perfectly shorn  evergreen indoors to decorate, a tradition with both pagan and Christian roots that symbolizes everlasting life in dark times. The tree itself is a sacrifice and will be discarded.

Two days ago on the Winter Solstice I stopped in front of a particularly well-formed oak tree at Halibut Point. As a solitary specimen it had room and light to develop its crown into broad symmetry. I admired its grandeur and the details of its achievement made visible during its naked hibernation. In contrast to the Christmas message of man's salvation, this tree spoke to me of inherent harmony in all things.

Musculature, symmetry, armor

Of course wood has many properties that are useful to man. Those properties came into being as useful to the tree itself. Imagine being strong enough to hold upright such great mass and density, yet allowing sap to flow up and down within its structure, pliant enough to withstand and sway with windstorms, protectively encased but with the ability to expand in size annually. I know the challenge of trying to pick up and carry even a small chunk of this wood.

Lichen

The tree hosts all manner of cycles, events, and ecologies over the course of the year. Most prominent of these is the foliage that converts solar energy to growth. Buds and seeds come and go. Birds, insects, mammals, myriad organisms depend on it for sustenance, shelter or anchorage. 

Knot

The tree's method of dealing with injury is different from ours. It attempts to seal over stubs, wounds and cavities to keep out weather, pathogens, and other invasions. It's method involves encasing problematic tissue rather than healing it in the sense of restoration. So long as a dead or damaged branch protrudes from the trunk the bark cannot callous over that vulnerable point. Recovery becomes a race with time.

Standing before this tree on the winter solstice marks the beginning both of lengthening days and of astronomical winter, of more cold and more light, of  'the return of the sun.' The sun has reached its lowest point of noontime elevation and its longest arc on the horizon between rising and setting. Its low angle gives us thinnest warmth. Today, as its celestial  course reverses, it seems to stand still in the sky. This has been noted since ancient times, giving us solstice  from the Latin words sol “sun” and sistere, “to stand still.”



Thursday, December 9, 2021

Pivoting to the Shoreline

This first-of-the-year dusting of snow this week calls for a mental as well as a physical re-orientation to enjoying Halibut Point.

Winter shoreline

Animated life has quieted in the Park uplands. My seasonal compass points toward the shoreline.

Snow Bunting

At the tip of the grout pile this Snow Bunting foraged for seeds in weedy patches. It's a fancy sparrow-like bird with feather-tufted leggings.

Harlequin Duck

Down below came the annual pleasure of returning Harlequin Ducks, and renewed astonishment at their chosen habit in the rocky surf.

Semipalmated Plover

One day I was favored by the sight of a tiny stone-colored plover.

Peregrine Falcon

It pays to turn around occasionally, where a formidable falcon  might make a brief perch.

A fish-spotting Northern Gannet

On windy days gannets go rocketing past the Point on their six-foot wingspans.

Red-breasted Mergansers and Greater Scaup

Sea birds have been on the move during the fall migration, sorting themselves into local niches or moving further south. Luckily for lovers of the outdoors, shoreline wildlife will be much more varied and active than in summertime. Bundle up.



Thursday, December 2, 2021

Ribbon Cutting

After four years of renovation to the Visitors Center and landscape of Halibut Point State Park by the Department of Recreation and Conservation (DCR), tranquility has returned to our local sanctuary. The Park staff is particularly relieved to be quietly back at the helm of the impressively rehabilitated facilities and new exhibits.


DCR engaged top-notch contractors to carry out repairs to the old coastal watch tower battered by shoreline elements and decades of less than perfect attention.

The landscape, roadways and parking lot received a massive overhaul. The State devoted $4.6 million to the project.

State Senator Bruce Tarr at the podium,
Rep. Ann-Margaret Ferrante to his left

On the beautiful crisp last day of November dignitaries and the project team celebrated the completion of the work.

Gail Halloran cutting the ribbon, surrounded  (L to R) by
Rockport Selectman Paul Murphy, Kathleen Theoharides, Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Senator Tarr, and Stephanie Cooper, Acting Commissioner of the DCR



Governor Ed King and State Rep. Ted Tarr
at the Park dedication November 1981
Photo from Park archives

Gail Halloran, the first Park Supervisor and currently President of the Friends of Halibut Point State Park, reminded the gathering of the blustery day forty years ago when Governor Ed King flew in by helicopter for the Park dedication.

Tour guide training session, May 1987
Walter Johnson, center, and Gail Halloran, right
Gail Halloran photo

Gail paid tribute to Rockport resident Walter Johnson, once a tool boy at the quarry, for his generosity to Park programs and for teaching her how to split granite.

Gail with kindergarten apprentice c. 2000
Gail Halloran photo

Over the years she had a chance to share this knowledge with visitors of all ages. Friends of Halibut Point hoped it would develop into a Granite Museum.

Groundbreaking ceremony for the Granite Museum, October 2000
Ted Tarr (l), Sen. Bruce Tarr (c), Gail Halloran (r)
Gail Halloran photo

That aspiration never quite came to fruition. However the newly renovated Visitors Center presents many educational displays. 

The Babson Farm Quarry in operation, 1913
Painting by Leon Kroll

Among the most interesting items in the new exhibits are facsimiles of Halibut Point quarrying operations in the painting by Leon Kroll and a large scale model of the quarry commissioned from craftsman Dominick Ciati.

 The Visitors Center will be open throughout the winter.







Thursday, November 25, 2021

Brother Snake, Sister Ivy

It's Thanksgiving, a day and a season of wishful thinking. Undoubtedly gratitude is a lubricant on emotional health and is highly recommended for channeling energy into positive achievement. Gratitude makes your day better and your life longer.

Bittersweet and cat brier berries

Thanksgiving discovers beauty in the short days and dreary light of November. Although the landscape is not animated as diversely as in summertime its aura of beauty is quietly inclusive.

Quarry edge, Halibut Point

Elemental subtleties delight the eye. They interplay on the surface of the quarry.

Milk snake

Midday sunshine warms creatures of two legs, four, six, or none at all.

That sunshine translates into the movement of a serpent  across granite,

Garter snake

or basking in a woodland glade after leaf fall.

Familiar Bluet

A damselfly rests on a cluster of poison ivy berries, long after the plant's lustrous leaves have dropped away.

Cherry-faced (or Ruby) Meadowhawk
Poison ivy berries

Harmonies of purpose make perfect tableaux on the land. Thanksgiving unfolds in the acceptance of possibilities.




Saturday, November 20, 2021

Exceptional Bugs

 

A mature aphid with entirely membranous wings

Most insects within the order Bugs (Hemiptera) are considered True Bugs because their forewings are partly thick and protective, partly membranous. A few bug families are exceptional: their wings are entirely membranous. The exceptions that you might encounter at Halibut Point are aphids, cicadas, whiteflies, and various hoppers. 

FROGHOPPERS

Aphid nymphs beside a hidden spittlebug nymph

Froghopper nymphs create a frothy mass around their bodies to keep from drying out and to shield themselves from predators.

A spittlebug nymph Aphrophoridae uncharacteristically uncovered

Spittlebugs are juvenile Froghoppers. The adult name derives in part from their jumping ability, which in some species exceeds 20 inches vertically and 100 times their own body length, a more impressive performance relative to body weight than fleas (Wikipedia). When they jump, they have the highest moving speed in the insect world making them difficult targets for predators.

Red-legged Spittlebug, Prosapia ignipectus

Most Froghoppers have a broad body about 1/8 to 1/4-inch long with faces that resemble frogs. The Red-legged Spittlebug is an exception to the usual dull-colored family coloration.

LEAFHOPPERS

Graphocephala gothica

Leafhoppers have one or more rows of small spines along the length of the hind tibia while froghoppers have but a few stout spines. Both have among the most aerodynamic-shaped bodies in the insect world. 

Red-banded Leafhopper, Graphocephala coccinea

Leafhoppers are often slender (torpedo-like) and rarely exceed 1/4 inch in length. 

PLANTHOPPERS 

Other families of jumpers in the bug order hemiptera are not such remarkable leapers but are able to mimic parts of their host plants with protective shapes and coloration.

Acanaloniid Planthopper, Acanalonia conica

Two-striped Planthopper, Acanalonia bivittata

HORNED TREEHOPPERS 

Members of the Treehopper family have an enlarged shield extending back over the abdomen between wings, giving them a bizarre looking body shape. In some species it extends forward into a horn to resemble a thorn on their host plant.

Wide-footed Treehopper, Campylenchia latipes


Buffalo Treehopper, Ceresini tribe