Journal Oyster Creek Estuary

Thursday 09/29/21

Oyster Creek Environmental Park at 10:30AM
I spent a couple of hours earlier this morning across the highway at Cedar Point Environmental Park where the manager, Gerald Thompson, and I hung up the “eagle chains” to block trail access in the vicinity of the park’s only eagle nest. One large adult was in the nest and flew to a nearby tree to perch while we worked.
Also, learned about volunteer needs for the upcoming four Saturday night haunted woods hikes for children.
At Oyster Creek I walked upstream to an overlook on the water. A pleasant northeasterly breeze. Tide is coming gently in. I’d esrtimate we are about 400 yards from the creek’s mouth in Lemon Bay. The creek runs basically east to west, and at this point is about 200’ wide, with numerous small mangrove islands.
On the far bank, the southern bank, there are houses with docks and seawalls. On the park bank there is a solid wall of mostly red mangroves. They cover about 12’ of shallow creek water before the bank is solid. The substrate in these shallows looks very rich in leaves and sediment.
The creek itself is somewhere between brown and tea, and I’m sure it’s rich in nutrients, sediments, leaves, etc.
Out in the creek a profusion of jumping mullet. An osprey soars overhead. As do about a dozen buzzards in the distance.
There are birds on the mangrove islands which I’m guessing may be grackles. Black mangrove pistoles come floating by, so there are black mangrove trees nearby that I’m not seeing. The creek is full of schools of bait-sized fish, and in a tributary stream a school of about ten grown-up mullet circles about. Also leather fern along the stream.
Along the interior edge of the mangrove wall there is a sudden shift to cabbage palms and tall slash pines. The understory is dense: saw palmetto, poison ivy, muscadine vines, rosary pea, and a couple of Brazilian Pepper. Since I worked with a county and volunteer crew last winter slaying every pepper around this area, this new growth illustrates the tenacity of peppers.
I hike a ways upstream. Nutsedge borders the trail. As do macho and wood ferns. The area out of sight of the trail was “mulched” by the county as couple of years ago, so there are interesting things to see right behind the mangroves. There is some buttonwood which have lost almost all of their flowers. A squad of bees, with tiny red bands, is enjoying what’s left. Crocuses are loud.
A big insect with four shiny bronze wings is zipping around the whole area (Amberwing?) White butterflies dance in the air about 30’ up in the pines. There’s a yellow butterfly in the mangroves.
There are a lot of small shrubs, and I think I can identify Darrow’s Blueberry and immature wax myrtle.

Posted on 02 de outubro de 2021, 06:50 PM by apdunbar apdunbar

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