Well it was bound to happen eventually. While I was out on the Saddle today somebody smashed my car window and made off with some pocket change from the glove compartment - mostly pennies! Seems they also hit one of the hunters' cars. For pocket change! There is sharp glass everywhere in my car. The worst part is that I lost half of my Sunday outing dealing with the mess and making a cover for my window.
The weather forecasts for this weekend were completely wrong. Both days were supposed to be fairly rainy, but instead the weather was partly cloudy, hot and dry! Unfortunately due to the bad forecasts I couldn't make use of the stable weather to go somewhere really remote. Saturday morning I decided to return to the northern end of Kaumana Trail, North of Saddle Road. I hoped to spend some time in the koa forest listening for the endangered birds and searching for endangered plants. I had mixed results.
Point counts of birds along the way were similar to my last visit. Average counts were 8.2 'apapane, 3.4 i'iwi, 1.9 'amakihi, 1.7 'oma'o, 1.1 'elepaio, 2.5 Japanese white-eye and 1.0 red-billed leiothrix. The i'iwi/'apapane ratio is fairly high - compare to this month's average Powerline Road counts of 14.5 and 3.5. I heard yellow-fronted canaries along Powerline Road as I started along the trail. I only heard one kalij pheasant all day. I spent several hours under the tall koas, and heard a couple of elusive Hawai'i creepers - I couldn't see the up in the tall trees this time. No hint of 'akiapola'au yet.
The tall canopy forest is fairly torn up by pigs. I began exploring in a closed canopy forest over sloped ground that was extensively rooted, with much bare ground. Pigs had even climbed the bridge roots, leaning trunks and mossy deadfall to graze the epiphytes. I didn't find any interesting plants there. There was a boggy area at the base of the slope, where I found some weeds among the bog grasses. Beyond that the canopy opened up a bit and the understory was dominated by ferns - I made very slow progress through a thick sea of chest to head high diplazium ferns. Underneath and among these I started to find a lot of the uncommon native pokeberry - a healthy population, with large plants climbing over deadfall. I found a single small epiphytic 'oha wai with thick and fairly pubescent leaves that might be a rare clermontia lindseyana. It could be another decade before it gets large enough to flower, so I may never know.
A map is attached at the bottom, below the photo.
Mauna Kea looms over a grassy meadow:
The weather forecasts for this weekend were completely wrong. Both days were supposed to be fairly rainy, but instead the weather was partly cloudy, hot and dry! Unfortunately due to the bad forecasts I couldn't make use of the stable weather to go somewhere really remote. Saturday morning I decided to return to the northern end of Kaumana Trail, North of Saddle Road. I hoped to spend some time in the koa forest listening for the endangered birds and searching for endangered plants. I had mixed results.
Point counts of birds along the way were similar to my last visit. Average counts were 8.2 'apapane, 3.4 i'iwi, 1.9 'amakihi, 1.7 'oma'o, 1.1 'elepaio, 2.5 Japanese white-eye and 1.0 red-billed leiothrix. The i'iwi/'apapane ratio is fairly high - compare to this month's average Powerline Road counts of 14.5 and 3.5. I heard yellow-fronted canaries along Powerline Road as I started along the trail. I only heard one kalij pheasant all day. I spent several hours under the tall koas, and heard a couple of elusive Hawai'i creepers - I couldn't see the up in the tall trees this time. No hint of 'akiapola'au yet.
The tall canopy forest is fairly torn up by pigs. I began exploring in a closed canopy forest over sloped ground that was extensively rooted, with much bare ground. Pigs had even climbed the bridge roots, leaning trunks and mossy deadfall to graze the epiphytes. I didn't find any interesting plants there. There was a boggy area at the base of the slope, where I found some weeds among the bog grasses. Beyond that the canopy opened up a bit and the understory was dominated by ferns - I made very slow progress through a thick sea of chest to head high diplazium ferns. Underneath and among these I started to find a lot of the uncommon native pokeberry - a healthy population, with large plants climbing over deadfall. I found a single small epiphytic 'oha wai with thick and fairly pubescent leaves that might be a rare clermontia lindseyana. It could be another decade before it gets large enough to flower, so I may never know.
A map is attached at the bottom, below the photo.
Mauna Kea looms over a grassy meadow: