We took the coastal route through Washington pausing at Olympic National Park long enough to ogle the sea stacks at Ruby Beach and measure ourselves against some of the ancient and now rarer giant redcedars that were commonplace long ago. Years ago pal George Perry passed along Ralph Widrig’s advice that Leadbetter Point at the north end of Long Beach Peninsula is one of the most golden of the west coast’s premier birding hot spots. It took me decades but I finally got there and soon discovered that Ralph knew what he was talking about. We arrived early enough March 23 to have the place entirely to ourselves. Thousands of shorebirds –- sanderling, black-bellied plover and especially dunlin –- flocked in the mudflats among gangs of gulls.
At Astoria which bills itself ‘Little San Francisco’ we indulged a whim to stay downtown in a grand old hotel. The Elliot fit the bill to a T and provided easy access to historical attractions along Astoria’s Columbia River waterfront. From Astoria we made an 850 km beeline for the wildlife refuges.
Twenty-nine years have passed –- how is it possible? –- since I last laid eyes on Lower Klamath and Tule Lake NWRs. I was impressed then and no less so in the return engagement. I promised Jan hordes of ducks and geese and Klamath-Tule Lake made me no liar. A broad white band stretching half a kilometre across a gravel road into a big farm field turned out not to be snow but a flock –- 20,000, 30,000, who knew -– of Ross’s geese. The Ross’s were supplemented by many others: snow and white-fronted geese, and 15 species of ducks in their unnumbered thousands. The day before our arrival the NWR folks had carried out their latest survey, counting a million and a quarter waterfowl in the refuges.
We spent a few hours among geological wonders and Modoc ghosts at Lava Beds National Monument. Here the first people lived for centuries until evicted about 1870. When the Modoc objected to their forced removal a war broke out the Modoc couldn’t win. Outnumbered 20 to 1 the Modoc warriors lasted for months but finally surrendered in the fall of 1873. More casualties ensued after the fighting ended: four leaders of the insurrection were hanged and the Modoc removed forever.
We followed the North Umpqua past its junction with the South Umpqua to my cousin Terri’s Shangri-la on a lower reach of the river at a place called Indian Bend. Terri’s talented Ed has built a brand new edifice here -– some would call it a house but I consider mansion, castle or palace better labels. Our hosts treated as regally as palace-dwellers might. We walked among tall conifers above the river, photographed a ‘lifer’ flower here and there. Lulled to sleep by a chorus of frogs we awoke to the gabbering of wild turkeys. Kid sister Kathleen and bro-in-law joined the fray ; we had the first dinner feast in the palace before the first real fire in the splendid new beach-stone fireplace.Now we are back in Victoria, happy both with the aftertaste of a good trip and with the changes nine days of spring hath wrought to our little backyard. A pair of robins tend to their eggs in the nest they have built on a joist of our deck. Just 10’ away a pair of bushtits have also taken up child-rearing in their beautifully woven pouch nest hanging from a branch of our willow. How lucky can we get?
Alan
