Friday, March 15, 2013

Stealthing at Charlotte Harbor



I decided to do a little camping last weekend, spur of the moment though I'd had this spot in mind for a long time. The only issue was that there is no camping allowed there ("there" being a site along the expansive Charlotte Harbor Preserve S.P.); but I had no fears. There are only two houses anywhere near the trailhead, and a convenient piece of undeveloped forested land right there, with a helpful two track trail heading in. So I just drove my truck a couple dozen yards down the track, past a bend where it'd be concealed, grabbed my pack, and hit the trail.

I walked quickly through the pine flatwoods, more eager to get to the shore than I was interested in present surroundings. Ten minutes later, almost there, I heard voices ahead, likely fishermen, and, wanting to maintain a low profile given the laws and regulations I was breaking, I jumped off-trail into the brushy meadow and proceeded via bushwhack. Now, the forest around here isn't forest like most people are used to. It's very sparse, technically savanna  which is a wooded grassland whose canopy doesn't close. 'Round here, unlike the ones in Africa, they're often flooded with the summer rains, and fires are common in the dry spring. This all contributes to the open character.


So you'd think the hiking would be easy (indeed, such excursions are usually not problematic). But it just got worse and worse. There were no pig trails like I'm used to finding and following, and the vegetation just became a horrible tangle. There were random ditches running across my line of travel, and it seemed that on the other side a wall of brush would always rise against me, forcing me ever sideways, sort of like the Withywindle. I struggled through.

The last thirty yards were brutal. The resurrection ferns were chest high and dense, while the briars and thorns meshed together as a malicious screen. I should probably also mention that I was hiking barefoot. Just before reaching the band of mangroves, I came to the last check: brush piles from windblown mangroves, impossible to climb over or through. But you know how it is, you've come this far, and damned if you're going to swallow your pride, or let your previous efforts go to waste; you will push forward. This is why lost people die in the wilderness. This is also why we are loath to abandon our doomed 75 year project of suburbia, prating on about the non-negotiable American Dream. But I digress.

After ten minutes of aborted tries forward, I finally found a gap, not much of one but enough to squeeze through. With a sigh of relief and accomplishment, I hid my pack in the mangroves and stepped out onto the shore, picking the burrs from my clothing. The sun was still pretty high, leaving me a long afternoon of excellent bird watching. Unfortunately, I forgot I had a camera until much later, and anyways without telephoto lenses, bird photography for me is often sub-par. I have yet to invest in a high quality camera.

Bobcat track, with a couple raccoon tracks at the top.
This is one of the best times for bird watching here in Florida. Many winter migrants are still here, and other birds that winter in the Caribbean and South America are starting to pass through. Not to mention our resident birds. This is really a sort of birdwatching paradise, one of the things I do love about living here. In a short space I saw willets, plovers, ruddy turnstones, osprey, ibis, three species of heron, two species of egrets, brown pelicans, and a juvenile bald eagle. I even heard a loon call in the distance; apparently they winter down here. I was amazed and very happy, though, because when I think of loons I think of Michigan's UP and Maine, two places I love.

I walked back and forth, soaking in the sun, feeling the cool wet sand under my feet, enjoying the quiet (save for the occasional boaters further out on the bay). I found tons of raccoon tracks on the sand, as well as a single bobcat heading south, which I followed for a good way. I didn't catch up with her, though; maybe someday i will find her at the end of her trail, standing in her tracks.

Finally the time came to find a campsite, so I poked around up the beach, looking for a break in the mangroves with a place to lay a sleeping bag. Finding it, I settled in, and soon had a fire going. I almost never make fires when stealth camping, but I needed it to cook, having opted to go old-school on this trip, and I felt safe enough in this rather isolated spot. If I'm being truthful, though, it's not that isolated: later that night I could hear strains of rock music drifting from the resort a bit to the north, and I really wasn't very far from the main trail to this shore.

A friend said I looked sad in this picture. I was going for "contemplative"
I slept poorly, having not brought a sleeping pad, nor any bug spray, nor a tent; the mosquitoes and especially the midges ate me alive. But the dawn was beautiful, and supernaturally calm: I've never seen big water so glassy smooth in my life, and neither have you. Long Vs of ibis flocked by, heading south from their roost near the aforementioned resort. Other shorebirds also streamed past me, heading toward the oyster bars just down the way, where the feeding is rich.

The whole place is rich. I am still amazed at how alive this place is, how productive a habitat, not to mention varied: you have the mudflats of the shore at low tide, the shallow estuary with varying salinity levels all the way down to the Gulf, the mangrove fringe, the pinewoods and prairie just inland... edge habitats often host more wildlife than the interiors of a given habitat, and here are about 5 different edges all in one place, with all kinds of microhabitats mixed in.

At least 70 ibis in just this flock alone

The hike out was pleasant as well, taking my time now through the pines. I kept seeing more and more species of birds; in the end, came to 28 species in less than 24 hrs, likely a new record, though I've never before kept track so specifically. Mourning doves, an eastern wood peewee, an eastern towhee, grey catbirds, black and turkey vultures, a hairy woodpecker, mockingbirds, and more. All in all a fantastic, if short, excursion. I'd love to go back during a full moon, to maybe spot that bobcat after all.

9 comments:

  1. That savanna forest looks amazing. Your feet must be really tough to go barefoot in that kind of vegetation.

    I almost never have a campfire, either. Where I'm at there's not a lot of surface water so you're usually dry camping and extinguishing a traditional campfire properly is a lot of trouble. Usually I just carry a canister stove with me. But lately I've been thinking an alcohol stove might be lighter, allowing me to pack another liter of drinking water.

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    1. Alcohol stoves are definitely the way to go, depending on what you like to eat. You just can't beat them for lightness, though you lose a bit of cooking speed. Not enough to matter in my opinion. Just make sure you have a good windscreen, that's critical.

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    2. Also... yeah my feet are relatively tough, but also, it's mostly sand down here, so it's not like hiking barefoot on rock (though, I've been known to do that as well. I hiked the first two weeks on the Appalachian Trail in moccasins, after my real shoes gave me horrible blisters). My only real nemesis here is the awful sand burrs, which not only stab your feet, but tend to break off their points when you pull them out.

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  2. Certainly at odds with some grander views you may have of the world, I nonetheless found your latest article and photos extremely enjoyable to read and see. I would readily describe you as a philosopher and gifted writer with a great sense of humor. You might want to consider acquiring the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS for photos. This camera allows for very good images at 1200mm from what I've seen in reviews, and is very reasonably priced. Note that you would need to purchase accessories to protect the lens glass when not in use. If you were looking upward in the fireside image, say toward the moon, you would unquestionably appear contemplative. Keep up the great work, and stay safe in the wild!

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    1. Thanks Bob, I appreciate the comment and the camera tip. Will have to wait on that, though; while reasonably priced, it's still pretty expensive from my perspective

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  3. I'm still reading, just not commenting as much, not for lack of interest, but just haven't had anything to add. Good to see you back though, I thought maybe you'd abandoned the blog permanently. 3 months is a long time. I think the most I've gone is about 3 weeks. I've found that blogging creates sort of a natural momentum for itself, that the more you do it, the easier and more habitual it becomes, but the longer you go without posting, the harder it is to get back into it, and eventually, if you let it go too long you see absolute no point in ever coming back.

    Look forward to more pictures of Florida. I've always thought about moving there, and so pictures and descriptions of the parks and wildlife are always much appreciated.

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    1. Cym, glad you're still reading too. I had, in fact, abandoned the blog. As I said, I'd sorta burned out on the whole thing. But, with a new focus, I'm back. I'll try to keep you supplied with some good photos of Florida.

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  4. By and large I detest Florida...except for the wilder parts. Some nice memories, some almost mystical, of Cedar Key, Suwannee area.

    I think we all have been in a blog stagnation...I've been speindg too much time with FB. Need to get back to solitary blogging!

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    1. Baroness, it's weird, but I'm starting to think of myself as a Floridian. Not completely, but hey, I do live here, and there are things to love, and I'm trying to get into that. Wait and see how I feel about that when the muggy heat sets in, though, haha. I know the hate will return.

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