I first discovered Brown's Bay in 2016, over 7 years ago, and I've been back many times since then. I drove down again this Monday, and the old familiar sights were all somehow different. I'd never been there in late fall, I realized. I came home and checked all my old photos; I've been visiting from January to September, never later in the year.
It was quiet. The restaurant had closed for the season the night before. A door was open, but there was no sign of people; chairs still sat on the deck, but the umbrellas were closed. The baskets of flowers were gone; so were all but two of the old swallows' nests, empty now. Most of the moorings along the docks were vacant. Up on the hill, a couple of people were packing up their RVs, ready to head south.
Empty boat moorings, rusty pilings. |
Oh, but there were gulls, flocks of them, mostly out on the bouncy water beyond the docks. And a big sea lion that came to look me over until I'd unlimbered the camera. Out in the channel, a chilly wind ruffled the water; in the distance, along the further shore, I could see the whitecaps racing south as they headed towards Seymour Narrows. But in the shelter of the docks, the water was silky smooth.
Gull and the reflection of red chairs and a wrapped green umbrella. |
The light was too low to see the creatures growing on the floats beneath the wharf, but the camera's eye is always better than mine. On one float, where I just saw the black shape that I recognized as a tubeworm, the camera saw a whole community.
Vancouver feather-duster worm (Eudistylia vancouveri), plumose anemones (Metridium senile), sponges and/or tunicates, mussels, and more. |
View of the north end of the bay and the light marking the tip of the rocks. |
I always stop at the rocks at the south end of the bay. This time, the tide was high and the wind was brisk. Here, away from the shelter of the north hill, the waves were more pronounced. I leaned over the railing to watch them break on the rocks below until the cold drove me back to the car.
Warring waves; the incoming one meets the one bouncing back from the rock face. |
Oh, and we're still in Arachtober, and I'm short of spider photos, so I scanned everything there; buildings and railings and rocks, looking for spiders. I found one (1) abandoned spider web:
In the shelter of a roof over a bench and carving. Out of the rain, protected from the wind. |
#4: Vista del extremo del norte de la bahía, con el lucero que marca las rocas.
Siempre me detengo en las rocas al punto más al sur de la bahía. Esta vez, la marea estaba bien alta, y el viento, frio, estaba fuerte. Aquí, lejos del cerro que encierra la bahía al norte, las olas estaban un poco más abultadas. Me quedé un rato mirando como se quebraban contra las rocas, hasta que el frio me hizo buscar el calorcito del coche.
#5: Olas bajo las rocas.
Y seguimos en el mes de Arachtober (Arañoctubre) y me faltan fotos de arañas para esta última semana, así que buscaba en todas partes, alrededor de los edificios, los pasamanos, en las rocas y troncos de árboles, sin encontrar ni una sola arañita. Hubo una telaraña abandonada, con eso me tuve que encontentar.
#6: La telaraña.
y #7: Otra gaviota.
Mañana; más gaviotas.
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