high tide

April 17, 2004


The tide is coming in rapidly so I keep moving my chair back up the beach. It's a gorgeous day, one of those days people move here for. Once again there's a purple finch singing its head off. Goldfinches are chasing each other from shrub to shrub. A line of cormorants skims by low over the water while another line of them sails by much higher up. Both contingents are making a beeline directly north.

Two sanderlings skittering along the water line, which keeps moving inexorably toward the dunes, do their synchronization thing and move together every time the incoming tide gets too high for them. Not only are they synchronized with each other but also with the tide. They're joined by a lone piping plover walking around closer to the wrack line. It keeps a respectable distance between itself and the sanderlings. For awhile it just stands there not doing anything. They all leave at the same time, but not together.

A visitor from Boston asks me if the purple sand is the reason it's named Plum Island. The uninspired songwriter asked me that same question on my last shift. The purple sand is concentrated at the south end of the beach. It's not like the whole island is purple (that would be interesting, wouldn't it?). The name comes from the beach plums (Prunus maritima -- I like it when the books I'm reading list the plant names so I'm trying to make sure to do it in my writing -- this will last about 1 entry I'm sure :-)). In colonial times (oh, probably Federalist times too), the settlers would all come over here from Ipswich, Rowley, and Newburyport in boats in the fall and make festive time out of picking the beach plums. People still pick them, but it's not a whole big community thing anymore. Actually, not much of anything is communal anymore. It's like the early settlers were more like sanderlings and we're more like piping plovers. Anyway, you can still buy beach plum jellies and jams on the island and in the surrounding towns as a souvenir of quaint New England.

Towards the end of the morning, northern gannets start appearing, first one, then three, then a group of eight, all plunge diving with big splashes. There must be some really good fishing right off Emerson rocks. The gannets move in closer as the tide moves in closer so I get really good looks at them. I could watch the gannet show all day, but my relief arrives and I need to fetch the coffee formerly known as Fowle's from Middle Street Foods and listen to Curt Schilling mow down Yankees on the radio.

Well,actually he's mowing down The Pinstriped Ones in Fenway Park not literally on the radio -- how many Pinstripes of Evil can dance on a portable radio? I'm listening to it on the radio. English is such a weird language. Anyway, after that quintessential baseball moment last night when Tim Wakefield struck out A-Rod and made him look foolish in the process. I called Nancy on the phone seconds after that and asked "Did you see that?!?". She said she knew I would call. It's the moment Red Sox fans fantasized about all winter. OK, so I fantasize about baseball approximately as much as I fantasize about birds, maybe more.

Going two for two in seeing piping plovers during my plover warden shifts is approximately as satisfying as seeing Tim Wakefield strike out A-Rod, maybe more.

Today's Bird Sightings
Plum Island
great egret 1
great blue heron 1
American robin -- many
redwinged blackb ird --- many
purple finch 2
American goldfinch 2
piping plover 1
sanderling 2
great black back gull 1
herring gull 8
ring bill gull 2
double crested cormorant 20
American crow 2
northern gannet 11

This Year's Bird Sightings
still haven't gotten it together to compile the year list

Today's Reading
Jinriksha Days by Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Curt Schilling


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan