Friday, 21 April 2017
Near the Mouth of the Connecticut
We put in on the back channel of the Connecticut River, not more than a half mile from the sea. This spot is known for the number of osprey that one can see and from the launch there are twenty-some nests in sight. But, the osprey are gone for the season.
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Near Great Island |
K lives not far up the Blackhall River, which comes in just a hundred yards or so from here. She is an artist friend of mine and this is one of those bonding canoe trips that I take my art buddies out on.
I steer us upriver into some waters that she's not been in. The tide is out, but it is not a particularly low low tide, so there is enough water all along the route. We pass the Watch Rocks without seeing too many birds...a few great blue herons and a docile pair of yellow legs that let us pass close.
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In the Lieutenant River |
It is a fairly spectacular fall day.
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At the top of the paddling in the Lieutenant River |
This time of the year is quiet when it comes to birds. It is in the top of the Lieutenant that we find the most birds, a family of seven mute swans, a flock of Canada geese, a few golden eye ducks, some kingfishers and some common mergansers.
We return with the wind in our face and a gentle flood current against us. But that just makes the trip last a bit longer...
Labels:
Connecticut,
Mouth,
Near,
of,
the
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