I put in at noon. The tide has been dropping for an hour and a half, it is 60F or thereabouts, there is a 5 mph wind out of the SE and a partially sunny sky is becoming a high and thin overcast.
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| The blocking drift log in the maze |
I head into the top end of the maze, guessing that I have at least an hour to get through before the tide gets too low to pass. A couple Willets are at the entrance, a few Yellow Legs as I continue, a couple of Yellow Crowned Night Herons, and a Canada Goose sitting on its nest. I spot my first Marsh Wren, who gives away its position by singing. It is the only Marsh Wren that I see today. The water level is at the sweet spot where I can slip under the drift log that usually blocks the main, or most obvious route.
I exit at the bottom of the maze and head toward Milford Point. Then, I paddle steady across the lower marsh, which will become mud flat in about an hour. Quite a few Brandts in the marsh, usually see them closer to the point. Pass an Oyster Catcher, and when I get to the east shore, either a Red-shouldered or Red-tail Hawk in a tree near the refuge launch. It looks like a young bird, and I'm not good enough to ID with the single view of it.
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| Brandts - a beautiful Goose |
I cross the shallowest section with more than enough water, and head back up river.
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| Oyster Catcher |





















