Finally, after a dark and cold winter, some color in my Winogradsky column project. The streaks of rusty red are perhaps iron oxidizers, or purple non-sulfur bacteria. And perhaps at the bottom of the column I see some blobs of purple, evidence of sulfate reducing bacteria.
Author: David Gorsline
At the park: 121
Water levels are very high in the main wetland and down Barnyard Run. Where there was once a discernible channel is now just flat water. From my e-mail report to the team and staff:
Our merganser friends continue get the jump on us: we have 14 eggs in box #7 and one egg in box #68.
Small problems: the roof is loose on #77, and the back of #7 is held on with a latch. I’ll bring a power screwdriver and we’ll see whether we can tack them back together.
Larger problems: the soil around box #4 has washed away, so we can’t access the box effectively. Stilts, maybe? New box #84 (thank you box makers!) has a roof opening, but because of the way it’s mounted, we can’t access the box interior.
Bonus observations: multiple Red-shouldered Hawks (Buteo lineatus), including a pair being mobbed by American Crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) in the main wetland and a juvenile seen at close range, feeding on perhaps an Eastern Ratsnake.
Great Backyard Bird Count 2022
I didn’t go out until the weather cleared and warmed up. I visited my usual patch along the Glade, plus I visited a new-to-me patch in Great Falls called Lexington Estates Park. This park is in my Christmas Count sector, but we did not visit it in 2021. There are no amenities, not even any signs, just a bit of shoulder to park on. Part of the property is mapped as a school site. A single unmarked trail more or less connecting two cul-de-sacs running along some bottomland; a small impounded pound that turned up two Mallard pairs, a Wood Duck pair, and an Eastern Phoebe. The space is big enough to support Red-shouldered Hawk and Pileated Woodpecker, so that’s good. On the downside, the biggest individuals of Leatherleaf Mahonia (Berberis bealei) that I’ve ever seen. Combining the two sites, I had a nice species count of 27, for 2:35 of birding time.
Yields
An excellent piece by Nick Roll on a different example of intercropping: “Farmers in Senegal learn to respect a scruffy shrub that gets no respect.” In this case, it’s Guiera senegalensis, in the Combretaceae (white myrtle) family. In a reversal of shade-grown coffee’s pattern, target crops (like millet) grow above the shrub, which brings up water into the millet’s root zone. Research indicates that Piliostigma reticulatum, a legume found in wetter parts of the Sahel, can also pull off this hydraulic redistribution trick.
This is the kind of digital-only (no audio) work that I wish we did more of. Not every bit of journalism needs to be in a podcast.
Endgame: 1
Noreen Malone captures the mood of the moment:
The act of working has been stripped bare. You don’t have little outfits to put on, and lunches to go to, and coffee breaks to linger over and clients to schmooze. The office is where it shouldn’t be — at home, in our intimate spaces — and all that’s left now is the job itself, naked and alone. And a lot of people don’t like what they see.
And even closer to home:
It wasn’t just the bad sexually harassing bosses who were fired but the toxic ones, too, and soon enough we began to question the whole way power in the office worked. What started out as a hopeful moment turned depressing fast. Power structures were interrogated but rarely dismantled, a middle ground that left everyone feeling pretty bad about the ways of the world. It became harder to trust anyone who was your boss and harder to imagine wanting to become one. Covid was an accelerant, but the match was already lit.
Upcoming: 57
WATCH assignments are out for the calendar year, and after a run of 2002-2019, I do not have a year’s worth of shows to judge. I am sitting out until the COVID-19 situation calms down, if it ever does. Hard same from two of my other judges, and my fourth has departed the metro for Albany. Fortunately, through the grapevine I’ve been able to recruit four judges for Silver Spring Stage. I remain ambivalent about all this: the last thing we should be doing is sitting in a box with a bunch of strangers projecting. Anyway, among other shows, my team will be seeing A Little Night Music (Sondheim/Wheeler) and Prelude to a Kiss (Lucas).
Mini guide
I lent a couple of my Hooded Merganser images to Chuck Gates and the East Cascades Audubon Society for their photographic compendium of nests and young birds of Central Oregon.
Kaki
Japanese tongue twisters and suchlike.
Not so twisty, but this one might cause a stumble:
Tonari no kyaku wa yoku kaki kuu kyaku da
The nextdoor guest is a guest who eats a lot of persimmons.
Awesome!
What Will Art Look Like in the Metaverse?, by Dean Kissick.
In late-19th and early-20th century Paris, Rousseau and his contemporaries (Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat, Pablo Picasso, etc.) were busy inventing bohemian modernity, creating new ways of living and of seeing the world. In our century, that visionary role appears to have passed from the artists to the engineers, to Zuckerberg and his ilk. Who else tries to invent new universes? Who dares spin grand utopian fantasies? Artists don’t anymore. It’s Silicon Valley’s Promethean founders who try — and routinely fall short.
My year in hikes and field trips, 2021
I earned my next pin for Virginia’s Trail Quest project, so there’s that.
- A couple-three visits to Walker Nature Center, Reston, Va. (and)
- Great Backyard Bird Count at The Glade, Reston, Va.
- Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Prince George’s County, Md., led by Jeanninne Dorothy
- Blandy Experimental Farm/State Arboretum of Virginia, Clarke County; Red Rock Wilderness Overlook Regional Park, Loudoun County; Fraser Preserve, Fairfax County (roundup)
- Odonates count (led by Larry Meade) and a few other walks and work days at the Clifton Institute, Fauquier County, Va.
- Poor Mountain Natural Area Preserve; Buffalo Mountain Natural Area Preserve, Floyd County; Fairy Stone State Park, Patrick County; and Smith Mountain Lake State Park; all Virginia (roundup)
- Crescent Rock and Limberlost Trails, Shenandoah National Park
- Neabsco Boardwalk, Prince William County, Va., led by Barbara Saffir
- Meadow View Trail (again!), Mason Neck State Park, Fairfax County, Va.
- Suitland Bog, Prince George’s County, Md., led by Lynn Rust
- I worked on my skills leading trips with the Seneca Maryland-Virginia CBC, scouting and leading sector 14.
We did get in a full season of nest box monitoring at Huntley Meadows Park, Fairfax County, Va.
For another year, the Mason and Bailey Club did not meet, alas. I scouted Potomac Overlook Regional Park, Arlington County, Va.; Turkey Run Park, Fairfax County, Va.; Carderock, C&O Canal National Historic Park, Montgomery County, Md.; the Boundary Bridge area of Rock Creek Park, Washington, D.C. Maybe next year we can do Boundary Bridge, and I really want to show off Huntley Meadows.
I followed the phenology of a patch of Aralia spinosa near my house, down by the Ridge Heights Pool; we liberated a Honey Locust (Gleditsia triacanthos) from an overgrowth of non-native invasives at Idylwood Park; and all of us chased cicadas.
The year in review, 2021
Some months are a little skimpy this year, for the expected reasons. The first sentence (more or less) of the first post for the last twelve months:
- 2 January: Staying close to home, I walked over to Reston’s Walker Nature Center, past the high school and the mini-mall with the Domino’s and 7-Eleven.
- 15 February: Waiting out the ice storm until Monday, I got some time to walk the Glade today, just before the rain came back.
- 7 March: We have resumed nest box monitoring at Huntley Meadows Park (following precautions and adhering to protocol, of course).
- 6 April: Sean Wyer unpacks a word that has always puzzled me: naff.
- 1 May: Box #68 hatched out — Hooded Merganser (Lophodytes cucullatus).
- 3 June: I’m Washingtonian-famous, for the month at least, recommending Mucca Pazza’s Tiny Desk Concert.
- 5 July: After my annual scuffling with the Google chart API, I can post the summary graph of nesting activity for 2021.
- 1 August: この ちかくに コンビニが あります。
- 6 September: Labor Day means a hike in Shenandoah National Park.
- 5 October: Best use of inset text, Snark Division.
- 6 November: Phase 2 has hit the “substantially complete” milestone.
- 5 December: Oh, dear.
The year in review:
My year in contributions, 2021
There are a few hours left in the giving year.
(Who will win the dubious prize of last begging e-mail of the year? Judges are monitoring my inbox hourly.)
What organizations are worthy of support? Consider this list as some recommendations from me.
These are the groups and projects to which I gave coin (generally tax-deductible), property, and/or effort in 2021. Limited travel and in-person work this year, so my out-of-pocket expenses continue to be down.
- Against Malaria Foundation via GiveWell (special)
- American Association of Community Theatre
- American Bird Conservancy
- American Birding Association
- American Civil Liberties Union
- American Film Institute
- American Friends Service Committee (sustaining)
- American Indian College Fund
- American Visionary Art Museum
- Appalachian Trail Conservancy
- Art21 (new)
- Audubon Naturalist Society (sustaining)
- Bang on a Can (increase)
- Biodiversity Heritage Library
- Bread for the City
- CARE (sustaining)
- The Carter Center (sustaining)
- Casey Trees
- Friends of the Clifton Institute (and volunteer) (new)
- Community of Hope
- Contemporary American Theater Festival
- Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology
- Cultural Tourism DC
- DC Vote
- Earthwatch Institute (return)
- Exceptional Minds (new) (suggested by Apt. 11d)
- Fairfax Library Foundation
- Film Noir Foundation
- FINCA International
- U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Migratory Bird Hunting & Conservation Stamp and its friends organization (volunteer)
- First Book
- Flora of Virginia
- Friends of National Arboretum
- Habitat for Humanity of Northern Virginia
- Historical Society of Washington, D.C.
- Huntley Meadows Park (volunteer) as a Fairfax Master Naturalist
- IISD Experimental Lakes Area
- iNaturalist (and volunteer)
- Internet Archive
- Japan Society (new)
- jazz89 KUVO (sustaining)
- The Land Institute
- Literacy Council of Northern Virginia
- Longacre Lea
- Maine Coast Heritage Trust
- Maryland Native Plant Society
- The Metropolitan Opera Guild
- Mount St. Joseph University
- National Association for Urban Debate Leagues (new) (recommended by Jay Caspian Kang)
- Natural Resources Defense Council
- The Nature Conservancy
- Northern Virginia Bird Club (3-year renewal)
- Northwestern University
- Peregrine Fund
- Petra Mayer Memorial Fund for Internships (special)
- Politifact (new)
- Potomac Conservancy
- ProLiteracy
- ProPublica
- Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace & Justice
- Rebuilding Together DC Alexandria
- Reporters without Borders (new)
- Shenandoah National Park Trust
- The Smithsonian Associates
- Silver Spring Stage
- SOME: So Others Might Eat (sustaining)
- Southern Poverty Law Center
- The Sun magazine
- Trout Unlimited
- Union of Concerned Scientists
- Virginia Native Plant Society (and chapter board member)
- Friends of the W&OD Trail
- WAMU 88.5 FM (sustaining) (plus vehicle donation)
- Washington Area Theatre Community Honors (board member)
- Water.org
- Wikimedia Foundation
- Wikipedia (volunteer)
- Wilson Ornithological Society
- Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company
- WPFW (sustaining)
- Xerces Society
My year in iNaturalist, 2021
Bert Harris at the Clifton Institute sucked me into odonates, so my observation count is up again this year. And of course we had the cicadas to chase.
Walker Nature Center: North
Next weekend is spoken for, so my first day hike will have to be a Boxing Day walk at Walker Nature Center. It proved to be a rather birdy trip, with 15 species spotted in 75 minutes, including four Northern Flickers (Colaptes auratus) together in one tree and a Brown Creeper (Certhia americana) high in a White Oak.
The trails in the northern tract look messy on the map, but make more sense on the ground: a box around the property, and an stone dust inner loop, with some connectors between. And I found a footbridge (#37) over the Snakeden Run inlet to Lake Audubon that would make the property easily accessible from home on foot. The bridge wasn’t there the last time I looked, but it’s weathered, so perhaps it was temporarily removed while the stream was being rebuilt.
My year in books, 2021
I’ll go ahead and link to my Goodreads list now, even though I’ll probably finish A Thousand Acres before the of the year. Top marks for
- Sue Hubbell, A Country Year
- Jonathan Meiburg, A Most Remarkable Creature
- Kate Atkinson, Big Sky
- Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels
- Thomas Pynchon, V.
- David Shields, Salinger
- the final two volumes of The Familiar