It is the finest day in so many that I can't remember the last day like this. It is not a day to waste.
I put in under the high bridge on the far side of town, not wanting to spend time on the road as well as the fact that most of my favorite inland locations will be iced over. The temperature is still under 40F, but with calm air and a clear sky of nothing but sun, it feels fifty-ish. The high tide just peaked about a half hour ago and the downstream current is barely perceptible. I think about things that I might include in my journal for this day. None of those ideas are relevant by the end of the trip.
It is an easy paddle down to the marsh and whether it is true or not, with a glass smooth surface, the canoe seems to move faster.
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| The Maze enterance |
I hear a few distant shotgun blasts. They sound far enough away that they might not be in the marsh. I head into the Maze via the upstream entrance. I flush a dozen Black Ducks and a couple dozen Canada Geese, that flush before we see each other - not an unusual action. There are at least two Harriers hunting the marsh. There might be four or more, but I do see two at one time. Harriers cruise back and forth across the marsh, so seeing the same one several times is normal. I find the alternate route through the Maze on my second try.
With the water still high, I take the long roundabout around the marsh, following the shore. This will keep me out of the way of any hunters. Soon enough, I figure out that no one else is in the marsh and the hunters are somewhere out on the Sound.
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| The Maze exit, unless you're going the other way. |
There are a good many wintering birds in the marsh and by the time I get over to the east shore, I have seen a couple hundred Canada Geese and probably as many Ducks - mostly Black Ducks with some Buffleheads thrown in for good measure. I stop at the Central Phragmites Patch. Nothing there except a large sheet of rotten ice.
At this point, I am thinking up ways to make this canoe trip last longer. I head into Beaver Brook, which always holds wintering Ducks. But, at the first sharp bend to the north, I spot a Bittern standing still with its head tipped up. I stop to photograph this rare sighting. It is only the fourth Bittern that I have seen although it is within fifty yards of where I spotted one a couple years back. I'd rather not disturb the Bittern, so I turn back and head out.
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| American Bittern |
I pass my put-in, still needing more time on the water, and cut across the river to Cating Island. If I hurry, I should have enough water to round Carting and Peacock Island.
I have more than a foot of water at the shallow spot behind Peacock Island. I flush another 75 Canada Geese. I suspect that there are more by the sound of the honking, but the tall phragmites reeds block the view.
I recross the river and take out, a 3 hour cruise.























