Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Memoir, part 3

(Back to Part 2)

We were awarded Best Bird of the Century, Possibly Ever.
        The rest of the banding day was fairly uneventful. On our last net run, as soon as we ascertained that nobody had any birds, we turned right back around and closed down the nets. That done, we drew sticks on who got to stay behind and start tallying the banding data and recording end-of-day weather data. The rest of us headed back out to take down the poles, pull out the supporting rebar, wind up all the rope, and carry it all back to the banding station. This process was hot and tiring, especially since we were well into the afternoon at this point. We lugged everything back to the station and documented any broken connectors and frayed rope that would need to be replaced the next year. Once we had hauled everything back to the car (this took several trips, even with seven of us), we were all very ready for naps, showers, and food. And beer.
        To our very great and grumbling dismay, we were not allowed to nap. We were told, however, that if we were good little kiddies and paid attention to the lecture that afternoon, the biologists would buy the beer to go with dinner. This perked us up a bit… who says no to free beer?
        The lecture was about how to use the Pyle Guide. It’s an excellent resource for banders, but only if you know the language. We went over the various codes used in the charts, as well as the fact that seemingly-vague modifiers like ‘sometimes’, ‘rarely’, and ‘usually’ actually have percentages behind them. Also, ‘ish’ was used frequently. ‘White-ish, gray-ish, or black-ish.’ What? Doesn’t that pretty much cover everything? Why yes. Yes it does. Welcome to bird banding. We decided that the Pyle Guide could also be used for stargazing, palm-reading, and yoga.
        After the lecture, we looked over the information about the various locations: weather, terrain, common species, banding counts from previous years, etc. Two of the sites were coastal and hilly and full of old-growth forests, three were tucked in valleys in the Cascades and the sites themselves were mostly flat, but high elevation pushed the breeding season back and they tended to be slower, and one was just east of the Cascade crest and was flat-ish, more scrub-y, and tended to be pretty busy. After careful consideration (i.e. “Ooo that one looks pretty!”), we turned in first, second, and third choices to Ted and Tim, a.k.a. the Masters of Destiny. They deliberated for an hour, through dinner, and then for another hour after that. Pete (one of the larger of the boys) was tasked with guarding a 30-foot radius around their table and given permission to maim if necessary. He found a rather substantial stick, so we all stayed out of range.
        Once they’d finished, they gathered us all together and started handing out assignments without ceremony. They must have known that the peasants were on the verge of revolt. Anna and I were assigned to Wenatchee National Forest, the busy site east of the Cascades. This might not actually have been a compliment to my skills, but I decided to take it as such. Beer was distributed, a fire was made, and we began to plan for the mass exodus the following morning. I had a beer (actually a Mike’s Hard Lemonade because I still thought beer tasted like urine) and spent an hour being mildly successful at socializing. They say alcohol is ‘liquid courage’… for me, it’s ‘liquid social skills’. It helps me talk and laugh and make eye contact and all those other little things that normal humans do when in each other’s company. The ‘I’m going to college in Alaska’ always helps… instant conversation topic and source of amusing anecdotes. Like that time my roommates dragged me out of the shower because there was a yearling moose licking salt off of our front porch. That one’s always fun. Or that time that Chaia and I stood in the river for an hour in chest-waders, t-shirts, and temperature sensors. In November (it was 5 below outside and there was ice floating by). For science. And we got an ‘A’ on the paper, damnit.
        We all dispersed to our sleeping bags when the evening started to get cold and breezy. We would have a lazy breakfast around 9 and then pack the various vehicles with gear and belongings and then go our separate ways after lunch.

16 May: Grants Pass, OR; Blue River, OR
        Waking up the next morning to sunshine and the smell of bacon was glorious. I don’t care what kind of health nut you think you are, bacon makes everything better. So does waking up after sunrise.
        We made a fire to stave off the morning chill and drank our respective caffeinated beverages while the bacon and toast finished cooking. We sent Jeff to rouse the two boys who’d overindulged the previous night and into whose tents the smell of bacon and coffee hadn’t yet penetrated. There were grunts and then a smack and several yells and then some ominous rustling. This was followed by a very un-masculine scream as poor Jeff was pulled into the tent and possibly sat upon, if the muffled “Get. Off!” was anything to go by. “And put some goddamned pants on!” quickly followed in a less muffled but much more annoyed voice. When the bleary-eyed and slightly hung-over boys were finally extricated from their tents (drug by a highly irritated Jeff), the bacon and a second round of coffee was served up.
        Our bacon was of the pepper-crusted, thick-cut, bought from the local organic market variety. It came from a pig who most likely died within a 50-mile radius and probably had a name and a Twitter feed. It was some amazing bacon.
        As said amazing bacon was consumed, the conversation deteriorated quickly into bird species one-up-manship and wish lists… because we were huge flaming nerds. Laura really wanted to catch a Pileated Woodpecker (which were gigantic and gorgeous) and was lamenting that her location was unlikely to cough one up. Siuslaw National forest was a bit too wet, and dead trees in coastal forests tent not to stay upright long enough for large woodpeckers to make use of them. The Pileated Woodpeckers were there, just not in the numbers you’d find in a drier, more inland forest. Anna and Leslie both agreed that they wanted a Northern Saw-Whet Owl, and then waxed poetical about its ridiculous level of cuteness. Sara hadn’t been in the bird business long enough to know what the besotted idiots were talking about, but as soon as someone produced a field guide, she was all for getting’ some of that. Hearing the tiny Canadian girl try to imitate a large southern black woman was amusing to say the least. The fact that she mostly succeeded was nothing short of impressive.
        After we’d finished and cleaned up breakfast, we all set about breaking camp. I had only to stuff a few things back in my bag and take my tent down, since I’d only been there two days. Everyone else had more to do since they’d spread out a bit during their two-week residence. Once I was finished, I made myself useful folding tents (my OCD was much appreciated… miraculously, tents stuff into their sacks easier if you fold then neatly first) and pulling up stakes. It took another hour or so before all the personal gear was packed up, and then we divided up and began loading the banding gear into the various cars that were headed to the different sites.
        Half of us were going south and the other half north (one group with each biologist). The southern group consisted of Siuslaw, Winema, and Fremont National Forests, and the northern group (mine) would hit Willamette, Mount Baker, and Wenatchee National Forests, in general order of start date and effort required. Some of the higher-elevation locations would be snowed in for a few more weeks yet and could wait to be set up, and some of them would require more hiking and carrying of equipment and thus needed more people. We’d start at one site, set things up, leave the two interns responsible for it, and move on to the next site… repeat until you run out of interns. Our northern route would take us first to Willamette National Forest, in central Oregon, which was first just because it was closest. We’d then go all the way up to north-central Washington for Mount Baker National Forest and last, south to my location in Wenatchee National forest in central Washington. Wenatchee was last because most of the sites were close to the road and wouldn’t require much effort to set up. This whole process would take about a week and a half, and then the biologist would travel between the three sets of interns for the rest of the three-month season, helping and guiding where they could.
        We ate a quick lunch, loaded the final things into the cars, said our goodbyes and headed out. Our little caravan headed north on the I-5 until we hit Eugene, where we stopped for groceries, and then headed west into the mountains. Willamette National Forest is situated right in the middle of the Oregon Cascades and is home to the Three Sisters, the spires of Mt. Washington and Three-Fingered Jack, and Mt. Jefferson. All of the Cascades are volcanic, but South Sister is the only one of Willamette’s peaks that is still active.
Mt. Washington, Mt. Jefferson, and the Three Sisters
Detail of the Three Sisters
        The Forest Service bunk house that would be home to Jeff and Sergio for the summer was located forty-five minutes outside of the town of Blue River, right behind the ranger station, at an altitude of about 1500 feet. If you walked down the highway just a bit, the trees cleared out and you could see South Sister and Broken Top poking up, and the swiftly-flowing McKenzie River was just on the other side of the road. The entire area was covered with picturesque evergreen forests and was pretty much taken straight from a sappy Pacific Northwest postcard. It was mid-May, so the dogwoods were blooming and the giant white flowers ensured that the yard was full of honey bees and hummingbirds.
Google Maps image of the immediate area, bunkhouse circled in red.
        The two beds went to the boys who’d be living there, and then as soon as we got inside, there was a mad rush to claim the two couches. The rest of us staked out comfy-looking spots of carpeted floor. Sergio had gotten the makings for curry at the store in Eugene so while he started dinner, the rest of us gathered around the kitchen table and Ted started explaining how this would go.
        Willamette National Forest, as a whole, was fairly high in elevation and a few of the sites were as high as five or six thousand feet. Ted explained that there was a good possibility that five of the six sites would be snowed in and impossible to access. We’d give it a try and, if that was the case, we’d take the boys with us to Mount Baker to help us set up there while they waited for the snow to melt. “You’re not being paid to sit on your butts, boys,” Ted told them with a laugh when Jeff grumbled.
        “We’re not really being paid at all,” Jeff groused under his breath. “And you just want us to carry stuff.”
                All four females gave him wide-eyed innocent looks. “We have no idea what you mean,” Sara said with a bat of her eyelashes. Jeff just gave an exasperated snort and went back to his unpacking.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

More of the Memoir (part 2)!

Woooaaaah it's November! And that means NaNoWriMo! Why did nobody remind me??

In that spirit, here's another tidbit of the Memoir of Doom. Here's the beginning bit: Memoir, Part 1
___________
A few net runs later, Anna, Laura, and I were trudging our way to one of the farther-flung nets. It was mid-morning, which meant that the morning caffeine dose had worn off, the birds were taking their 8am nap, and it wasn’t lunch time yet. This was our last net before looping back around to the tarp and we weren’t expecting our current state of empty-handedness to change. As we came up to the net, a three-fold “What the hell?” went out to the universe. The net was moving. It looked like a blanket thrown over an angry cat. Whatever was making it twitch and seize like that was obscured by the two large trees near the net.
        Anna’s exclamation of “Holy lord Jesus!” pretty much summed it up. In the bottom pocket, resting against the ground, was a medium-sized, upside-down, highly pissed off brownish hawk. Some birds scream and yell when they get caught (like robins and woodpeckers), but raptors just hiss at you and glare. And, let me tell you, it’s terrifying. “What the hell do we do with that thing?” Anna said after inching closer and tilting her head a few funny directions. “Should I go back and get Ted?”
        “No no, we’ve totally got this,” assured Laura. “I interned at a raptor sanctuary last summer, and it doesn’t look that tangled.” She moved closer and bent down. “Yeah, it’s really just its feet. Its body and feathers are too big to fit through the mesh… it’s just sitting there.” She pulled open the pocket to stare down at the hawk, who was hissing louder now and staring up at her as if contemplating how best to serve up her intestines (Dill? Sage? Paprika?). “This is gonna be a two-person job, for sure. She’s big and she’s Hulk-level pissed.”
        “She?” I asked stupidly.
        “Yeah, I’m pretty sure it’s a Red-Shoulder female.”
        “Do we even own a bag big enough for her?” asked Anna, digging in her various pockets for bird bags.
        Let me interject here for some Red-Shouldered Hawk stats, so you can have some idea of the lethal and predatory ball of feathered rage we were dealing with. Red-Shoulders are considered medium-sized hawks and, like in all raptors, the females are significantly larger than the males. Males are 17-20 inches from head to tail, and females are 20-24 inches long. Wingspan ranges from 36-40 inches in males and 40-44 inches in females. So, we’re talking about a body the size of a small baby, with a foot-long striped tail, and a wingspan longer than my arm. All that, with razor-sharp talons on one end and a wickedly hooked beak on the other end. And pissed.
        “No bag for her, can you imagine reaching in there blind to pull her out? You wouldn’t have any fingers left!” Laura shuddered. “Ok, I’m going to try to untangle her feet. Anna, could you hold onto her upper body and keep her from flapping? Sarah, you should hold the pocket open until we can lift her out.”
        “Hold on a second, I’m not touching that thing! It’ll bite me!” Anna looked a little green.
        “Hawks aren’t bitey. She won’t bite you. Probably.”
        “How very reassuring. Still not touching it.”
        “Sarah, how about—”
        “It’ll bite me too!” I wasn’t looking to donate any fingers either.
        “She won’t bite you! Jeez, you’re both such chicken shits!”
        “Ok, fine. But you’re responsible for sewing my fingers back on!” Not chicken shit. Not at all.
        “Finally. And seriously, hawks kill things with their feet, and I’ll keep those under control.” She took a deep breath. “Ok, Sarah. Reach in—slowly!—and grab her around the middle… pin her wings in, thumbs on her back, fingers on her chest, got it?”
        “Heh… sure, no problem… just grab the angry carnivore, no worries…” But I reached into the net anyway. To my very great surprise, she didn’t even try to bite me, just turned toward me, tried to flap out of my reach, and hissed some more. I was able to get my hands around her partially extended wings and pin them to her sides, gripping her body securely. She flailed her legs a bit and drew attention to her seriously scary-looking talons. They were a puncture wound waiting to happen. Laura had been right: her feathers were too large to have gotten caught in the 30mm mesh, so she was just lying in the pocket, caught by her feet and her beak. Laura brushed the net off of the hawk’s shoulders and examined her beak. It was open in the constant hiss and there were a few strands of net wrapped around her tongue.
        Laura indicated that we should all kneel down. Bending over would get tiring pretty quick. Anna held the pocket open and Laura gingerly reached for its legs, which were still sporadically kicking and grabbing. After a close swipe to her thumb, she got its feet under control and gestured with her chin at Anna. “Can you get her tongue untangled, Madame Chicken? Use a stick or something, don’t stick your hand in there.”
        Anna glared and reached for her pocket knife and the nail file it contained. “I still think it’s gonna bite my fingers off,” she muttered. But, she still reached toward the hawk’s beak, muttering “Niiiice birdie…” under her breath. The hawk eyed her as she gripped her upper mandible and reached inside with the nail file. The hissing got louder and the kicking got more intense, but Anna was able to slide the net strands off of the bird’s tongue, freeing it. She exhaled in a huff and put her pocket knife away.
        “Ok, now we should be able to lift her out of the pocket… it’s just her feet left!” Laura said. “Hold the pocket open… Sarah, one… two… three… uuuup and over!” The hawk was now resting on her back on my lap, her feet still attached to the net, the pocket turned inside-out. We had a much better angle and view now, and the bulk of the net was out of the way.
        “Need me to hold its legs? It looks like you’ll need both hands for those feet,” Anna offered, as if she hadn’t been about to run away a minute ago. Laura raised an eyebrow at her and smirked. Anna shrugged. “It didn’t bite me.”
        “That would be lovely, thank you,” Laura replied sweetly and, still smirking, carefully transferred the hawk’s legs into Anna’s hand. It took another five-ish minutes of careful picking at the black nylon net strands, swearing, and back-seat driving before Laura finally got the hawk’s feet completely free. “Ha! Piece of cake!” Laura said with a triumphant grin. It had only managed to claw her once, in the meaty part of her palm, which we counted as a success, all things considered.
        Anna had to help me up (my hands were a bit full and my legs had fallen asleep) and then we were speed-walking back to the tarp with our prize. Laura kept looking at the bird’s legs critically. “I don’t think we’ve got a band big enough for her...”
        Anna shrugged. “Ted’ll know what to do.”
        When we were almost out of the trees and into the clearing where the tarp was located, Leslie came jogging along the trail “What’s taking so lo— Holy shit!” Her eyes went wide and she slowed as she reached us. “They sent me to make sure you hadn’t fallen in a hole somewhere. Wow, best bird ever!” She turned and ran ahead of us back to the tarp, yelling something about ‘not in a hole’ as she went. Anna walked in front of me, blocking the view of my cargo from the people sitting on the tarp. Leslie was standing to the side, smiling gleefully and everyone else looked curious.
        “Guess what Net 3 coughed up?” said Anna, as we approached. She stepped to the side and made a sweeping bow “Ta-da!”


        Sure enough, none of the bands we carried with us were anywhere near large enough for our girl, so Ted took some measurements, enough to ascertain that she was indeed a ‘she’. A million photographs later, we released her, which was an adventure all its own. Hawks are large enough and heavy enough that they need to push off of something to get airborne. Normally this is the ground or a branch. In order to avoid having a hand clawed to pieces, hawks get ‘launched’ when released. You don’t want them to push off of you, so you give them the momentum they need by literally tossing them into the air. We let Laura do this, as nobody wanted to run the risk of having their face clawed if they didn’t toss high enough. She flapped to a tree and sat for a few minutes before flying back in the direction we’d come.

On to part 3!