Thursday, July 11, 2019

June 10-16 Southern Pines, No. Carolina


Yes, Yes, Yes.  I am aware that this narrative is a month behind.  I've spent the week in the Southern Pines area, where Marty and I are visiting her sister, Ellen.

My birding slowed down the second week of June, as I was ‘volunteered’ to assist my Sister-In-Law in getting some yard and house chores done.  She had not torched her burn pile for at least two, maybe three, years, so that was a priority.

Also, her window frames needed scraping and re-painting.
I'm not the one who's afraid of heights . . .
But, the women can get the lower trim.
The only complication was that there were rain showers every day, and trying to get the burn pile dry enough to burn, or the windows dry enough to prime and paint took a bit of waiting.

One of the chores that was pretty minor was replenishing one of the water troughs for her horses.  It merely needed tipping the stale water out and refilling the tank.
Should be a simple task?
I was surprised to find snakes underneath, and was much more careful after this, as I’m not certain which pit vipers might live in this country.
This is one of two snakes under the trough
The Coral Snake also lives in the region, and being a West Coast boy, I never memorized the ‘Snake Rhyme’:
Red Touch Yellow - Kills a Fellow
Red Touch Black - Venom Lack
Yellow Touches Red - Soon You'll Be Dead
Red Touches Black - Friend of Jack
If the snake has a black nose, it's a Coral Snake. That's a good hint.  These are Scarlet Kingsnakes, Lampropeltis triangulum elapsoides, which are fairly common in the pine forests of the Coastal Plain.  Kingsnakes have the red-and-yellow color bands separated by black, and also have a red nose.  Cute li’l things.

In the interim between rain showers and waiting for the side of the house to dry out enough to paint, I took a couple of walks through the Walthour-Moss Foundation lands past Forest Lake and up to Moor Meadows.

The Foundation was established through gifts of land from ‘Pappy’ and Virginia Walthour-Moss, and now totals more than 4,000 acres of prime longleaf pine habitat.  This land is managed to restore and preserve the native pine ecosystem, and is some nice country.  The main use seems to be from the equestrian community; we were the only pedestrians that I saw using the miles of trails.

Among the bird species to be found here is the Red-cockaded Woodpecker, which has been on the Endangered Species list since 1970.  This woodpecker is dependent upon mature, open longleaf pine forest.
Nearly all of the RCWs I saw were banded
This type of forest was a result of fire ecology, and covered millions of acres in the pristine southern landscape.  There is not much 'topsoil' above the sandy subsoil.

Unfortunately, stands managed for timber tend to be too young to provide the necessary older trees (80+ years of age, with red heart fungus “disease”) for nesting, and the preclusion of fire from the woods has resulted in the oak understory growing up, rendering the forest unusable for these habitat specialists.

Fortunately, however, the Foundation, and many other private, local, State and Federal land managers are managing their forest lands to benefit this little gem, using prescribed fire and thinning to maintain the open pine forest that the woodpeckers and other pinelands species require.
The longleaf pines (Pinus palustris) sprouting in the understory start out looking a lot like a tuft of grass.
This is a tree!
But as they grow, they begin to look a lot more like trees.

The longleaf pine, when used as a nest tree of a pair of Red-cockaded Woodpeckers, develops a distinctive look.  The woodpeckers drill holes below the nest hole, which drips pine resin.  The pitch supposedly keeps climbing predators at bay.
Red-cockaded Woodpecker nest tree
I also made a trip over to the nearby Weymouth Woods Sandhills Nature Preserve one morning, walking over 5 miles of their trails and fire lanes.  The preserve is part of the consortium of agencies and groups managing the longleaf pines, and provides interpretive signing for their prescribed burning program.


This area burned last year already shows considerable regrowth.

An area burnt this spring will hopefully provide good nesting for Bachman's Sparrow when the understory grasses flourish next year.

The oak trees re-sprout following a fire, and will take over the pine forests if not burned regularly

The understory also includes the southern poison oak.  I didn't handle it to see whether I'm sensitive to it.
And there is a prickly-pear cactus, which is pretty distinctive.

Besides the woodpeckers, there are other feathered friends in these woods.
Some of the Eastern Towhees here have white eyes, rather than red ones
Summer Tanager carrying food back to his brood
Male Orchard Oriole
And neat invertebrates that we don't have Back West.
I'll need to look up this stunning damselfly, when I get a chance
 . . . as well as this horned spider spinning her web.
I got Marty off to the airport at Raleigh-Durham, as she needed to return home and go back to work.  I finished up with the chores at Ellen’s, and finally packed and left on Monday the 17th.

Walthour-Moss Foundation 16 June eBird Checklist is here
Weymouth Woods State Park eBird Checklist is here
Walthour-Moss Foundation 11 June eBird Checklist is here

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