Roadkill at Marsh Trail

Dead white morph at Marsh copy 300x225 Roadkill at Marsh TrailWhile on a birding trip on Marsh Trail today I found a roadkill bird. I think this is the same Great Blue Heron white morph that I saw last month. I have only seen these birds six times in the wild. What a tragedy.

The Florida Everglades is a Dynamic Ecosystem

Alligator Tracks copy 300x225 The Florida Everglades is a Dynamic Ecosystem

Alligator Tracks

The Florida Everglades are always changing. The water levels a lowering now as we go into our dry season and the animals are responding. The fish are concentrating in the puddles and the birds are feasting. The alligators are looking for water. The rains will start again and give life back to the Everglades.

A Special Occasion

Fly by 1 copy1 150x150 A Special Occasion The cutest couple copy 150x150 A Special Occasion Champayne glasses copy 150x150 A Special Occasion
Congrulations to John and Hiedi on thier engagement. I had the honor to help John plan a surprise to ask Hiedi to marry him. It took a few kayak trips(see ‘Diamonds Dancing on the Water’) to put it all together. We had champagne on ice and the dolphins celebrated with us.Thank you to Christina at www.WorldWideSkyAdvertising.com for the timing on the fly-by. Thank you for letting Eco-Quest Nature Tours be a part of this. By the way; she said YES!

Perhaps this requires further Investigation/Exotic Plants and Animals

IMG 2306 copy 300x225 Perhaps this requires further Investigation/Exotic Plants and Animals

8 1/2 ft. Burmise Python

Florida has its problems with exotic plants and animals. The problem is that they displace the natives altering the balances of the ecosystems. I found this python in Rookery Bay Preserve about two years ago. We now have breeding populations in The Florida Everglades from Miami to Naples and farther north. We also have certain plants that are taking over large areas of natural lands without providing habitat for our natives. Please be a responsible pet owner with your un-native animals and always use native plants in your yards. They’re easy to start and need no maintenance.

Diamonds Dancing on the Water

I took a recon kayak trip in Naples Bay today. I was out about two miles and the rain came pouring down. The water was like glass and the rain like diamonds dancing on top. I reflected on a conversation I had with my son Charles as he kayaked down The Mississippi River. “Dad when its raining you have two choices. Pull over and sit in the rain or keep paddling”. I felt alive.

More Dead Dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico

Dolphin with kayaks 300x224 More Dead Dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico

This photo was taken last month in Rookery Bay. According to NBC News sixty-five dolphins have washed up on the beaches of the Gulf Coast since Jan.1. Thats a ten-fold increase in the last two years. Thirty-five were either still born or born just before the BP Oilspill. It will be along time before this is over.

Exploring The Picayune Strand State Forest

Picayune Strand tour copy 300x225 Exploring The Picayune Strand State Forest

Today was another fantastic day in paradise. Temperatures in lower 80’s, humidity low and sunshine abundant. I took a group from Naples Preserve to Picayune Strand State Forest today to see the Everglades Restoration in progress. We stopped to see the biggest Cypress Tree in the forest. It was sparred being cut because it was hollow in the center. Is’s about 80ft. tall and very old. It was great being back in Picayune Strand. I retired here as a Senior Forest Ranger in 2006. Thank you to the great staff for showing us around.

The Oil Slick Did Not Go Away!

It’s amazing that we were told that ALL that oil just went away.
This according to Yahoo News……. WASHINGTON – Oil from the BP spill remains stuck on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, according to a top scientist’s video and slides that she says demonstrate the oil isn’t degrading as hoped and has decimated life on parts of the sea floor.

That report is at odds with a recent report by the BP spill compensation czar that said nearly all will be well by 2012.

At a science conference in Washington Saturday, marine scientist Samantha Joye of the University of Georgia aired early results of her December submarine dives around the BP spill site. She went to places she had visited in the summer and expected the oil and residue from oil-munching microbes would be gone by then. It wasn’t.

“There’s some sort of a bottleneck we have yet to identify for why this stuff doesn’t seem to be degrading,” Joye told the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual conference in Washington. Her research and those of her colleagues contrasts with other studies that show a more optimistic outlook about the health of the gulf, saying microbes did great work munching the oil.

“Magic microbes consumed maybe 10 percent of the total discharge, the rest of it we don’t know,” Joye said, later adding: “there’s a lot of it out there.”

The head of the agency in charge of the health of the Gulf said Saturday that she thought that “most of the oil is gone.” And a Department of Energy scientist, doing research with a grant from BP from before the spill, said his examination of oil plumes in the water column show that microbes have done a “fairly fast” job of eating the oil. Lawrence Berkeley National Lab scientist Terry Hazen said his research differs from Joye’s because they looked at different places at different times.

Joye’s research was more widespread, but has been slower in being published in scientific literature.

In five different expeditions, the last one in December, Joye and colleagues took 250 cores of the sea floor and travelled across 2,600 square miles. Some of the locations she had been studying before the oil spill on April 20 and said there was a noticeable change. Much of the oil she found on the sea floor — and in the water column — was chemically fingerprinted, proving it comes from the BP spill. Joye is still waiting for results to show other oil samples she tested are from BP’s Macondo well.

She also showed pictures of oil-choked bottom-dwelling creatures. They included dead crabs and brittle stars — starfish like critters that are normally bright orange and tightly wrapped around coral. These brittle stars were pale, loose and dead. She also saw tube worms so full of oil they suffocated.

“This is Macondo oil on the bottom,” Joye said as she showed slides. “This is dead organisms because of oil being deposited on their heads.”

Joye said her research shows that the burning of oil left soot on the sea floor, which still had petroleum products. And even more troublesome was the tremendous amount of methane from the BP well that mixed into the Gulf and was mostly ignored by other researchers.

Joye and three colleagues last week published a study in Nature Geoscience that said the amount of gas injected into the Gulf was the equivalent of between 1.5 and 3 million barrels of oil.

“The gas is an important part of understanding what happened,” said Ian MacDonald of Florida State University.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief Jane Lubchenco told reporters Saturday that “it’s not a contradiction to say that although most of the oil is gone, there still remains oil out there.”

Earlier this month, Kenneth Feinberg, the government’s oil compensation fund czar, said based on research he commissioned he figured the Gulf of Mexico would almost fully recover by 2012 — something Joye and Lubchenco said isn’t right.

“I’ve been to the bottom. I’ve seen what it looks like with my own eyes. It’s not going to be fine by 2012,” Joye told The Associated Press. “You see what the bottom looks like, you have a different opinion.”

NOAA chief Lubchenco said “even though the oil degraded relatively rapidly and is now mostly but not all gone, damage done to a variety of species may not become obvious for years to come.”

Lubchenco Saturday also announced the start of a Gulf restoration planning process to get the Gulf back to the condition it was on Apr. 19, the day before the spill. That program would eventually be paid for BP and other parties deemed responsible for the spill. This would be separate from an already begun restoration program that would improve all aspects of the Gulf, not just the oil spill, but has not been funded by the government yet, she said.

The new program, which is part of the Natural Resources Damage Assessment program, is part of the oil spill litigation — or out-of-court settlement — in which the polluters pay for overall damage to the ecosystem and efforts to return it to normal. This is different than paying compensation to people and businesses directly damaged by the spill.

The process will begin with public meetings all over the region.

The Birding has been fantastic.

Great Blue Heron white copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Tri colored Heron copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Green Heron 1 copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Roseate Spoonbill copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Brown Pelican immature copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Red Shoulder 1copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.Little Blue Heron copy 150x150 The Birding has been fantastic.
The birding has been fantastic lately. I’ve been taking groups to hike Marsh Trail and to kayak in Clam Pass lately and could not ask for better birds. One lady added seven birds to her life list. It’s an incredable feeling being able to give people this sense of adventure. I love what I do.

Great Birding!

Great Blue Heron white copy 300x225 Great Birding!

Great Blue Heron white morph

I’ve had the pleasure of taking two groups out to one of my favorite birding spots; The Marsh Trail. Lately the birding has been great. We saw a Great Blue Heron white morph and most people are suprised to know that they have a better chance to see a Bald Eagle. Its been great to show off this special place.