Just a QUICK one to remind you/tell you that it is EARTH HOUR tomorrow (19.3.16) 20.30 to 21.30. It is in its 10th year. Taken off the internet is this "Earth Hour is the world’s largest environmental event organised by WWF. It will take place at between 8.30pm and 9:30pm on Saturday 19th March, when millions of people in over 170 countries across the world switch off their lights for one hour to show they care about the future of our planet.Earth Hour is not about how much energy is saved during the hour. Rather, it’s a chance to put the spotlight on the issues facing the planet and to inspire millions across the world to live more sustainably.Switching off the lights is just the beginning. The idea is that the choices we make and actions we take past that hour can help reduce the impacts of climate change on our planet, its wildlife and future generations.Earth Hour is for everyone and is a global event which unites people all around the world who care about our planet - and it's so easy to take part." Dine telephoned with a TREMENDOUS sighting just off our road bridge FOUR/FIVE HAMERKOPS and took these photographs.(3243, 3244 &3254) Alison rushed down and found five which Dine subsequently found in 3244 - with a grey heron in the background and Little egret in front. (ED. I have only ever seen 2 birds together, but on reading in warmer climes they can nest communally with up to seven birds. Here they may have gathered together because of the HUGE food source that we have around our bays, at present). "Please check the second photograph, nr 3244 – there are 5! If you enlarge the photo, you will see him just behind the debris. Gotcha! " (Dine van Zyl - Finalist Best Cookbook in the World "I cook - sometimes even in the kitchen!") Common Sandpiper and Egyptian Goose with her nine eggs, still on The Point. I hope that you all have a wonderful long weekend and Easter hol period. ENJOY lots of sightings, observations and EVERYTHING that is around you. IF TIME, please do not forget to keep that bowl of water out for birds, tortoises etc., to gather those awful bits of plastic on our beaches and have a GOOD RELAX. The Eco Walk is all set for the 23rd and if bad weather the 26th March 2016.
0 Comments
Amazingly, we are heading towards Public hols, School, University hols and religious hols sooooooooo I have been asked to doan Easter hol Eco Walk. Please diarise Wednesday 23rd. March 2016 at 8.00 outside The Drummond Arms. If, the weather is awful then we will try again on 26.3.16 - even though a crayfish day. There will be LOTS of "flora" help and for anything that MOVES !! Also, our beaches still NEED us, so do wander along collecting any rubbish on them and in particular the "tiny" bits of plastic. This is all VERY therapeutic and perhaps that spare 30 minutes can be used on a regular basis to help our sea and bird life. Even get those children and grandchildren to help out - very educational !
Sightings : Aves. 1. a pair of Common Sandpiper at the rocks on The Point.(4633 - awful photograph but it does show the breast band !) 2. The Egyptian Geese have still got nine eggs with the female doing all the incubating and the male on guard. They ought to hatch within the next twelve days and they are precocial with the parents taking them down to the sea almost immediately which is where they become even more vulnerable. 3. If, you are missing the numbers of the Cape Sugarbird in your garden that is because the White Sugarbush - protea repens has started flowering (early). Gardeners: From Annies Annuals website " Birds & bees swoon over this spectacular, super easy, extremely reliable & long lived 8’ x 6’ shrub. Way back in the late 1600’s, European settlers in South Africa collected the abundant nectar from the flowerheads, which they boiled down into a thick red syrup used as a sugar substitute and cough medicine - thus the common name “Sugarbush”. Blooms Fall through Winter with ivory flowerheads. Cut flower rockstar! As blooms dry out and brown, seedheads bear resemblance to upside down ice cream cones. Sweet! Free draining, acidic soil is best. If you have clay soil, amend with rotted pine needles, or something else that is both nutrient poor & acidifying. Avoid feeding with anything with phosphorus, as this is a sure fire way to kill the plant. Once established, it is a drought tolerant, low care, disease free beauty – tolerant of sun & wind & impervious to deer. From South Africa, of course. Hardy to 25 degrees." (4636 & 4637) 4. From Alastair :- There was frenetic activity in front of us this morning.(12.3.16) A shoal of maasbankers came in close and into the long pool. No gannets, but hundreds of cormorants and a flock of hardworking terns of all the usual kinds being harassed by those layabout gulls (although one gull made a clever catch of a falling fish dropped by a tern). One immature gull was so gorged that he/she took several minutes to get a fish down the throat. The fish were so plentiful that all except the terns needed to have a pause to digest. Of course, the cormorants had to hang themselves out to dry now and again. Further out were seals and a whale. In the bushes was a flock of bulbuls, a pair of fiscal flycatchers and (I think) a few canaries. Wonderful crowd to watch. We eventually came in for breakfast at 10.30! 5. Look out for the early Cape Gannets which have probably come from the West Coast looking for fish gorging on the red bloom, ours is NOT toxic but on the West Coast it is toxic. Shells 1. A fisherman showed us these on the main beach - he had never seen the like before. I checked them out and they are a member of the Janthinidae Family and this one is Janthina janthina - the common violet sea snail. From Shells of Southern Africa by Deidre Richards "these delicate molluscs live a drifting life on the surface of the warm water oceans, suspended by a float of bubbles. they feed on plankton and are often washed ashore after stormy weather in the summer months, particularly on the Muizenberg beaches of False Bay." Ed: it had been stormy weather with wind from the north west. (4632) Mammals 1. Cape Clawless Otter - they are still with us although I have had no reports of any sightings since November 2015 (4632 - taken at the bottom of Bonny Banks steps) Flora 1. This wonderful Amaryllis belladonna (4631) - the March Lily, photographed at 147, Rocklands Road. Gosh, this was meant to be a quick report mentioning the ECO WALK and the therapeutic participation of collecting beach and sea rubbish !! Enjoy, enjoy, enjoy, there is just sooooooooooooooooooooo much to see, hear, find and observe here. Keep all the sightings coming. Definitely time for a Sunday lunch glass of wine ! Hope to see you on the 23rd. Tweet **PLEASE put water out for the tortoise in this drought, they are in GREAT need of it. ** Purple Heron taken yesterday opposite Hanna and Nick ** 9 Goose eggs ** Spot the Goose ** ........ and here it is defending the eggs RED TIDE **Oh dear it is EVERYWHERE - after extensive research done by Alison, thank you - difficult to get anyone to acknowledge that there really IS a problem with the best person locally being Annette at Kleinmond Fisheries Dept and they were helpful at Hermanus Ops Room. So , eventually from Alistair Bushby of DAFF (Dept. Agriculture, Fisheries & Forestry) but head of Marine Aquaculture Research and Development said "The West Coast has been closed for ALL shellfishing but because we are having phosphorescence (seen wonderfully here last night) it is NOT toxic, but it is inadvisable to collect shellfish here until further notice. Swimming and diving is alright but do not ingest a lot of water. What is required now is a good storm to break up the water and therefore disperse the bloom" Click here to download a recent article on Red Tide or from the MARD website :- Harmful Algal Bloom Research Harmful algal blooms (HABs) cause harm by producing toxins that accumulate in shellfish or fish, or through the accumulation of biomass that may impact marine life, food webs and the environment in negative ways. The number of harmful blooms, the economic losses from them, the resources affected, and the number of toxins and toxic species are all considered to have increased dramatically in recent years. HABs have particularly adverse effects on aquaculture ranging from reduced growth and reproduction to mass mortalities, which lead to significant losses in harvestable resources, and to spoiled or contaminated products. The needs for research and monitoring are many. New tools and approaches are required to detect, analyze, predict, and manage HAB outbreaks and the associated problems they may cause. The major priorities and needs for additional capability and understanding fall into three thematic areas: Blooms, Toxins and their Impacts; BloomEcology, Dynamics and Prediction; and Seafood Safety, Monitoring and Public Health. Enjoy your swim!
Tweet |
Community Sightings are co-ordinated by Helen JonesLong time resident, twitcher and nature lover. Archives
March 2016
Categories |