Mid-April. A warm day, sunny and almost windless. I should have been in the garden, getting the bean patch ready for planting. Instead, I went to Little Bear Bay. Glad I did.
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The southernmost end of Johnstone Strait, coming down from the northern tip of the island. Just around the point at the right, it joins the Discovery Passage, which goes on down to Campbell River, where it becomes the Georgia Strait. A good spot to watch for orcas.
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| The mouth of Pye Creek; on the far shore, there's a fish hatchery. |
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| The beach is rocky in the upper intertidal zone. Here, three limpets and a periwinkle snail wait for the water to rise again. Most of these rocks have limpets on the underside. |
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| A very colourful rock. The red stuff is an alga. I knocked the snail off by mistake; here I've replaced him, but upside-down; he's now lifting his operculum, preparing to flip himself over. |
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| Rockweed. And rocks, to go with. |
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The shady side of this stone was crowded, the rest bare. A limpet, umpteen periwinkles (Litttorina sitkana), barnacles, stubby isopods, and a gelatinous mass; the snails' eggs.
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| More rockweed, on a small sandy area. |
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| Another periwinkle, feeding on red alga. |
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| Canada geese in the creek. |
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| It was so quiet that I heard this little boat long before it came around the rocky point. |
I'll be back. At low tide, I hope.
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Un dia asoleado a mediados de abril. Aproveché el calorcito para visitar la Bahía de los Ositos, Little Bear Bay.
- Este es el punto donde el Estrecho Johnstone, que viene bajando desde el extremo norteño de la isla, se une al Pasaje Discovery (Descubrimiento). Y el Pasaje baja hasta Campbell River; desde allí se llama el Estrecho Georgia, llegando hasta Victoria al sur. Es un buen sitio para observar las orcas.
- Donde desemboca el Riachuelo Pye. Hay un criadero de peces en el bosque.
- Lapas y un caracol Littorina sitkana en una piedra. Aquí debajo de casi todas las piedras hay lapas escondidas.
- Una piedra con muchos colores. La masa roja es un alga. Al tocar el caracolito, le hice caer; aquí lo he vuelto a acomodar en su piedra, pero boca arriba. Ahora está alzando su opérculo, preparándose para volverse concha arriba.
- Alga marina, Fucus sp. En inglés la llamamos hierba de rocas. Aquí con rocas verdaderas.
- Donde había sombra en esta piedra, estaba llena de animalitos. Hay una lapa, mucos caracolitos Littorina sitkana, bálanos, isópodos Gnorimosphaeroma oregonensis, y una masa gelatinosa de los huevos de los caracoles.
- Más alga parda.
- Otro caracolito comiendo algas rojas.
- Gansos canadá, en la boca del riachuelo.
- Había tal silencio, que oía este barquito por un buen rato antes de que entrara al estrecho.
Y regresaré. Si es posible, con la marea baja.
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