Jean
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Elfin
Forest Activities
by Jean Wheeler
Weed
Warriors
December
6: The volunteer work party will meet from 9 am to about noon. Anyone
is welcome to join in and work on projects to restore vegetation and
reduce erosion. Wear comfortable shoes, long pants and sleeves, and
park at the north end of 15th Street in Los Osos, avoiding driveways
and mailboxes. Leader Ron Rasmussen rewards his warriors with his
delicious homemade cookies!
Third
Saturday Walk
December
20, 9:30 – Winter Solstice Walk
Follow
Dr. Jean Wheeler through the Elfin Forest on the day before Winter
Solstice, the shortest day of the year. Dr. Wheeler has taught
thousands of geography students about the relative wanderings of the
sun, moon and earth, and what they mean to us in terms of our climates,
tides, and the vegetation and animal life around us. With charts and a
globe that doubles as a beachball, she (oh, all right, I) will take us
on an imaginary circuit around the sun as we circle the Elfin Forest on
the boardwalk. I even have a theme song from the Sound of Music, as
Oscar Hammerstein's “cockeyed circle ‘round the
sun” is so appropriate for this walk!
Coming
Up in the Elfin Forest
December
is one of the most exciting months in the Elfin Forest. Bird life is
reaching peak diversity and populations. The desperately-needed inch of
rain at Halloween, lesser sprinkles in mid November, hopefully to be
followed soon by more good rains, should initiate our major flowering
season from the holidays into the New Year.
Our area is known as one of the top birding regions in our nation,
especially in these winter months. That's why the Morro Bay Winter Bird
Festival, held on Martin Luther King Weekend each year, attracts
hundreds of visitors from all over the U.S. and Canada. See the
schedule of events and field trips (which include the Elfin Forest) for
this winter's festival from January 16-19, 2015, at
Morro Bay Winter Bird Festival.
Early registration for field trips is essential.
Ceothanus |
Most migrating species of water birds and wading birds are already
present and will be at peak local populations by mid-December, as are
all our local and winter-visiting raptors, and a great many of the
passerines. I've seen a number of Canada Geese swimming in the estuary
in mid-November. Brant geese usually arrive by the hundreds or even a
few thousand on northwest winds following storms out of Alaska in late
November or early December. Groups of American White Pelicans can
usually be seen well out on the bay, and at high tide some may swim
close to the foot of the sandy cliffs below the two viewpoints.
The shrubs around the boardwalk can be alive with resident and
wintering finches, sparrows, warblers, wrens, phoebes, chickadees,
titmice, nuthatches, and many other little brown and little grey birds.
Early arrivals from the north already seen here more than a month ago
include Golden-crowned and Fox Sparrows and Say's Phoebe. Among the
larger birds of the brush are thrashers, towhees, scrub jays, quail,
blackbirds, and doves.
Pintail Duck |
By late December, some of our larger shrubs will come into bloom.
Buckbrush Ceanothus, among the many species of the California Lilac
genus Ceanothus, is one of the dominant shrubs in our maritime
chaparral, so its white to lavender flowers should nearly surround the
boardwalk by the New Year.
The Elfin Forest is nearly in the center of the limited range of Morro
Manzanita, a shrub found only along the coast between Montana de Oro
and Morro Bay State Parks. Very severely devastated by our multi-year
drought, its shrubs are covered by dried brown leaves or branches bare
from fallen dead leaves.
Gooseberry |
Already a “threatened” species because of its
limited range, small populations, and high human development within
that small range, the drought damage is very alarming. Since the
Halloween rain, some of its shrubs are showing new leaves, but many
shrubs still do not. Its tiny, bell-shaped, white-pink flowers are
normally a highpoint of our winter floral wonderland. Let's hope
continued rains will restore most of these outstandingly beautiful
shrubs.
Fuchsia-flowering Gooseberries are showing new green leaves around much
of the boardwalk since the Halloween rain. Hopefully they will have
enough strength to produce something approaching their usual abundance
of red tubular flowers, as Hummingbirds depend on them for much of the
energy it takes for their early spring clutches of youngsters.
Take a break from shopping and gift wrapping or relax after the happy
holiday turmoil. Walk in the Elfin Forest that we protect through our
generous donations and active volunteer efforts. Applaud the tenacity
and beauty of our drought-surviving plants and animals!
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