I mow the lawn, and then put in for a high tide trip through the Wheeler. It is cloudy with a quartering headwind coming up the river, and it is colder than I expected.
A few Willets and a flock of 15 Yellow Legs greet me at the top of the marsh. The water is very high and most of the marsh is flooded. I head out into the middle of it following any open water channel that I desire. At most water levels, even high tide, most of these channels are either too shallow to use, or they dead end.
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| Yellow Legs |
There is a large flock of Canada Geese in the lower marsh - I see them fly off from a fair distance. I can hear that there are also a bunch of Brandts - they have a distinct and unmistak, mall flocks of Yellow Legs. The one thing about being in the marsh at high tide is that the birds are "compressed". With limited dry ground to stand on, one might see a lot more birds, birds that might actually be in the marsh at lower water levels, but widely dispersed - so a high tide count might be quite a bit more than a low tide count even though the actual number is equal.
I stop at the Central Phragmites Patch and dig out my rarely used rain jacket to use as a wind breaker.
I spot a Coyote as I head up the east side of the marsh. It had to swim to get where it is, but it has been there long enough for its fur to dry. We watch each other for fifteen minutes. Eastern coyotes are a bit different than the western coyotes that I am more familiar with. This one almost looks a little like a very large fox, but it behaves like a coyote, keeping an eye on me until I leave.
The wind has shifted and I have a quartering headwind as I head upriver. This is nice on top of the 3mph ebb current. I hug the shore taking advantage of slack water and eddies.
























