Showing posts with label Waterville Plateau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waterville Plateau. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2019

May 7 - Wallace Falls State Park - then East

I was wide awake at 4:30, so got up and went to the office for breakfast of cold cereal with yogurt, a boiled egg and a banana.  Oh yeah, and coffee.

I drove on up to Wallace Falls State Park, to walk up to the lower falls to do a bit of birding.  It was sunny and warming from 55º to about 64º F by the time the walk was over.  I hadn’t known that the name "Wallace" is a corruption of the last name of Joe and Sarah Kwayaylsh, members of the Skykomish tribe, who were the first homesteaders in the area.  At the beginning of the trail, the path follows the access road to the transmission lines.

A black-tailed doe crossed the road in front of me, showing the minimum concern found in “park deer”.
She shows a bit of the "Hair Loss Disease"

Finally, the trail entered the second-growth forest.
Romantic words from Wm. Wordsworth
This property was obviously clear-cut, as the State purchased it from Weyerhaeuser in 1971.  There were signs of some "not-currently-allowed" logging practices, back in the day . . . such as cutting right up to the edge of a river.
Old-growth stump at the edge of the riparian zone
The main fork of the river was running a bit muddy, but the north fork was running clear.

I heard, then saw, a Hammond’s Flycatcher, for my ‘first-of-the-year’, but totally missed seeing a Tanager?  Ah, well, I’ll have to see one upon my return to the Pacific Northwest in July.  The trail to the lower falls is a bit uneven, but well worth the walk.  The forest was very pleasant this morning, and a walk in the woods always cheers my heart.
Large second-growth timber surrounds an old-growth stump


I didn't walk up to the Upper Falls, but had several good views of it from the lower trail.
Upper Wallace Falls

You can see the upper falls from the viewpoint for the lower falls

The Lower Falls is scenic, and apparently dangerous.
True, in many situations . . .
There were a few survey trees in the park.

The Department of Natural Resources marks trees where the roads or trails cross a section line.


I crossed Stevens Pass, which I had assumed was named for Washington Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens.  But I was wrong.  Rather, it was named for one John Frank Stevens, the first non-indigenous person to "discover" it.  He was the engineer who built the Great Northern Railway and the Panama Canal.  The local Native Americans, of course, knew all about the place.
John F Stevens - Taken from http://www.sil.si.edu/Exhibitions/Make-the-Dirt-Fly/stevens.html
I stayed on Highway 2, driving east.  As I passed through some nice sagebrush steppe on the Waterville Plateau, and tried for Grasshopper Sparrows, as I wasn’t certain whether I’d find them out in the Midwest prairies.  I found some nice views of other sparrows, but no Grasshoppers or Sagebrush Sparrows.

Back on the highway to make some miles, I continued through Spokane, making it as far as Coeur d’Alene and checked into the Budget Saver Motel for the evening.  This was an inexpensive, but pretty nice little motel & I would stay here again.
Deer Fern fiddlehead
Wallace Falls State Park eBird Checklist is Here
Stevens Pass eBird Checklist is Here
Waterville Plateau eBird Checklist is Here

Thursday, January 31, 2019

January 21 - Snow Day!


We breakfasted again at the Inn, checked out, and headed out at the crack of dawn toward Bridgeport, across the mighty Columbia, and up to the WDFW’s Wells Wildlife Area.

This has been our best chance in previous trips to find Sharp-tailed Grouse.  Back in 2016 we’d even seen a Sage Grouse flying over the West Foster Creek valley.

We got out and made a walk down through the bottom to see if we could find a Long-eared Owl sheltering in the willows and junipers.  No luck there.
Washington Fish and Wildlife manages the Area


It was a fun walk, but once again, we weren’t successful in finding an owl.  We did hear a Sharp-tailed Grouse, but of course it’s not as fun as seeing them.

We retraced our path back to Bridgeport, and drove into the State Park there, where we had been successful in previous years in finding Northern Saw-whet Owls roosting in the thick foliage of the spruce trees planted in the camping area.  I noted that there was much less snow on the ground this year than in the previous three, and that the Park staff had done some tree trimming.
Bridgeport State Park
Between the two issues, despite diligent searching we were lucky to find the one and only Saw-whet in the Park.  Scott got a quick photo, taking care not to disturb the little guy, and posted it on the eBirdReport.
We continued back up onto the Waterville Plateau, where we’d started on Friday, to continue our search for the Snowy Owl.
Lots of snowy fields to search . . .
We spent a lot of time zig-zagging back and forth on the section-line roads, including travel on farm roads that hadn’t been plowed (or much travelled) since the last snow, and we were plowing through a foot to a foot-and-a-half of snow.

We looked for perching raptors – and owls – on the rock piles built by the farmers, and on the glacial erratics.

These rocks were either deposited by the Ice Age floods or are remnants of the rocks that had been there before the ice dams broke up north.

Occasionally, we'd see a hawk or eagle perched up, surveying the fields for a tasty morsel.
Golden Eagle 'way out there . . .
Scott had a general description of an owl sighting, but there is an awful lot of open space in this part of the County.
We stopped to put the scopes on many of the rock stacks, but white snow against a dark rock sure fooled us many times into thinking we had a Snowy.

Finally, we spotted a white dot against a dark rock that somehow looked a bit different.  I radioed to Shep that we might have the bird.  We piled out of the cars and got our scopes on it

There was a big, white dot that looked owl-shaped
Are you real?  Move!  Turn your head, or something . . .
Then it turned its head and I had a Snowy Owl staring back at me!  These beautiful birds are regular in the State in the winter but this is one of only two I know about in Washington at this time.
The best kind of Snow!
We continued scouting until the end of the day,
Miles and Miles of Miles and Miles . . .

ending up in Wenatchee at dark. We stopped for supper at the Salvadoran Pupusas restaurant (wonderful food!!), and drove back to the Puget Sound after a really fun trip.