WordCraft.NatureFocus

Bay-to-Beach Life Blog

Great Pacific Race 2014: Update 2018

GPR2 CMaParsonsUpdate June 2018: For news about the 2018 race (happening now) and to track the five boats & teams, visit the Great Pacific Race.

In 7 days, 1 hour, 25 minutes, 59 seconds (as of this writing) — that is, on June 7 at 10 a.m. — 13 rowing boats will launch from Monterey for a 2,400-mile (3862-km) race across the Pacific to Hawaii. The Great Pacific Race, advertised as the “biggest, baddest human endurance challenge on the planet,” has chosen Monterey Bay as its starting point this year. What’s exciting for me is that the boats are currently in a staging/prep area in front of The Wharf Marketplace, one of my favorite local-products market.

If you like boats at all, you should go take a look. They vary in size (for 1-person, 2-person and 4-person crews) and design. Some appear somewhat low-tech and others amazingly high-tech. The crews include men and women from around the world ranging in age from 20+ to 65. (Crew bios hang near each boat.) The trip will take 30 to 90 days depending on crew, boat and conditions. GPR1 CMaParsons(I overhead a group at lunch at the marketplace who assumed the boats were solar-powered, but couldn’t figure out why there were no propellers.) Several of the racers are rowing for ocean conservation (and need your help), in particular to highlight the issue of plastic pollution. It’s amazing what people can do when they put their minds (and bodies) to it! You can find many more details about the race website.

And, if you’re not busy on Saturday, June 7 (2014) at 10 a.m., watch the race start (weather permitting) and cheer on the rowers at McAbee Beach along Cannery Row. They say they’d love spectators from the shore and water (kayakers, paddleboarders, sailors – that’s you). Only 7 days, 50 minutes, 44 seconds to go.

Cormorants are expecting

See my new post on the fence blocking the view of the cormorants at Breakwater blues.
Cormorant on EggsIt’s time! The Brandt’s cormorants nesting on the Monterey Harbor breakwater are expecting. This was my morning sighting and first photo of the pale eggs under a female. She stood up briefly after the male dropped off new nesting material.CormorantsNesting

 

The cormorants have taken over the upper breakwater. Now’s a great time to watch them display, build and replenish nests, and sit and wait for their hatchlings. Visit if you can.

Caspian tern aerobatics

CaspianTern by CMaParsonsA Caspian tern (Sterna caspia) has been gracing Del Monte Beach for the past week or two. I typically see them around Monterey Bay this time of year. This is a stately bird, about the size of a gull, with a beautiful black cap, black legs and heavy orange bill.  So far I’ve seen only the single bird and she/he has spent most of the time standing on the shore, taking flight only when people and dogs approach.

CaspianTern2 by CMaParsons
Today was different. When I stepped onto the sand, the tern was already in the air. For nearly a half-hour, I watched its aerobatic maneuvers as it scanned the sea surface for fish (we’ve had shoals of anchovies in the bay lately). The tern’s performance was grand and graceful, a display of aerial mastery that I had to share with you. During your next beach walk, keep an eye on the sky (as well as on the water).

CaspianTern7 by CMaParsons

CaspianTern3 by CMaParsons

 

 

 

 

 

CaspianTern5 by CMaParsons

CaspianTern6 by CMaParsons

 

 

 

 

 

CaspianTern8 by CMaParsons

Jelly blobs

Purple-striped Jelly by CMaParsons

Purple-striped jelly

I’ve written quite a bit about beached jelly blobs (mostly jellyfishes, but also sea slugs, sea butterflies and salps). I never planned to write so much about gelatinous animals, although they’re fascinating. However, new ones keep washing ashore and the postings are popular, so here are links to all of my jellies postings from oldest to newest. I hope this makes them easier for you to find.

Enjoy.

Not all beach blobs are jellies

More jelly blobs on the beach

Latest jelly mystery

Sea butterflies

Salps on the sand

Scrippsia bell jelly