Monday, April 1, 2019

March 14 - Theler Wetlands and Twanoh State Park

It was mostly cloudy, and 34° F when we got up this morning.  I drove up to the Theler Wetlands in Belfair, Washington to join the Tacoma Audubon bi-monthly bird walk there.
The usual walk route starts by passing through the Environmental Studies area, then out to the estuary boardwalk.
The recent heavy snows, now melted, have flattened the cattails at the edge of the estuary marsh.
The cattails are usually 4 feet tall . . .
But, there is still plenty of habitat for the Marsh Wrens.


Although the morning was cool, signs of Spring are in the air, as testified by the Pussy Willow flowers along the Tahuya River dike.
Willow Catkins
The walk goes along the river, then loops back past the Salmon Center, home of the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group.  The center maintains a small farm with llamas, chickens,
I presume that the llamas have 'educational value'

Chickens are birds, too!
and Muscovy Ducks.  While this species of duck is “countable” in Florida and Texas, the birders here can only appreciate them as domestic fowl.
Not "ABA Countable" here in Washington
We do have wild birds to watch.
Ravens are always a welcome sight
All optics are pointing skyward

The group then returns along yet another boardwalk (yes, many of the walking trails in western Washington are wet . . .)
Keeping our feet dry
This section of the trail uses “floating tire pilings” to support the walkway.
A good use for old tires?
The Theler walk ends at noon, and there is a ‘countdown’ to ensure that the eBird species count is correct.  This is a great group, and I highly recommend joining them for the guided walk, led by Faye Hands and John Riegsecker of ABC Bird Club, Tahoma Audubon Society.  The Public is welcome on the second and fourth Thursday of every month.  Meet at the Theler Community Center parking lot at 8 a.m.
Is Faye laughing at John, or just her usual cheerful self?
On the way home, I decided to drive down the Hood Canal on Highway 106 and stopped at Twanoh State Park and scope the birds there.
The Park is Open! It's just one of the parking lots that is closed in the Winter.
I looked through the flock of Surf Scoters, hoping to find a Black Scoter in the flock, but to no avail.
Surf Scoters, Greater Scaup, and Barrow's Goldeneyes
Twanoh State Park is touted as a “… picture-perfect, 188-acre park and beach in the Pacific Northwest, with pebble-filled beaches, warm, dark waters, and dense foliage all around, both it and the water are brimming with wildlife, since its dedication as a state park in 1923 …”  There are campsites, and the picnic area has 3,167 feet of saltwater shoreline on Hood Canal. The name of the park derives from the Native American Twana tribes, currently known as the Skokomish Tribe, who made their home in the area.  Hood Canal is actually a "canal" in name only:  Hood Canal is in reality a "fjord"; a long narrow body of water open to the ocean and bordered at one end by steep cliffs or hills.
A Mew Gull surveys the Canal

Some of the signage is confusing.  One sign warns that shellfish harvesting is closed on this beach, due to pollution.
Yet another sign notes that the beach is open for harvesting oysters, which I believe are still considered to be “shellfish” . . .
 
Another sign on the same sign board notes that it’s just “Clam Season” that is closed.  I think I won’t take any shellfish from here until this gets sorted out.
 
A creek comes in here, which supports a small run of fall chum salmon.
Salmon streams aren't always big rivers . . .

Old Washington Dept. of Fisheries sign
Visitors are warned to not walk in the stream to protect the redds (salmon nests).

 
Along the stream bank were a couple of Varied Thrushes.
Female "Alaska Robin"

Along with the usual crows, robins, kinglets, chickadees, and juncos,
"American/Northwestern" Crow - the taxonomy here is still in flux
"American" Robin in the Pacific Northwest
"Oregon" Junco in Washington

I heard a bird call, turned out to be from this Hermit Thrush which is not all that common a species in the Winter, and is always fun to see.
Hermit Thrush as a water bird
Theler Wetlands eBird Checklist is Here

Twanoh State Park eBird Checklist is Here

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