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Naturalist's Almanac What to Look For This Winter
January Another winter bloomer, the California hazelnut, grows in moist wooded canyons along the coast and in the Sierra Nevada from Tulare County north. Look for bright red stigmas protruding from tiny female flowers that grow at the tips of year-old twigs, and catkins dangling from the bush's naked outer branches. Though pollination occurs in January when pollen from the catkins alights on the stigmas, fertilization is delayed until May or June when the ovaries beneath the stigmas finally become receptive to sperm cells contained in the pollen. Only then do the hard-shelled nuts start to develop. Gray whales spend six months each year migrating between summer feeding grounds in the Bering Sea and calving lagoons in Baja California. In the first two weeks of January as many as 200 southward-bound grays a day may pass within a mile of Point Reyes National Seashore. The whales can also be viewed from almost any high bluff overlooking the ocean along Highway One. February Though plagued by rising salinity, agricultural and industrial pollution, and recent epidemics of bird deaths, the Salton Sea is still one of the most exciting birdwatching sites in the country. The Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge and adjacent Imperial Valley's checklist contains an astonishing 380 species. The annual Audubon Christmas bird count here often reports the nation's highest tallies for such species as burrowing owls, mountain plovers, rough-winged swallows, long-billed dowitchers, marsh wrens, and ruddy ducks. Thousands of migratory waterfowl including snow and Ross's geese overwinter at the Sea or use it as a way station before continuing south. The National Wildlife Refuge is about 25 miles north of El Centro. (760) 348-5278. March
In the Feather Falls Scenic Area in Plumas National Forest, Dutchman's pipe, shooting stars, Indian pinks, and star tulips are just coming into bloom. Look for masses of ladybird beetles where they cluster on grasses and shrubs along shady stream banks. Impressive stands of the uncommon California nutmeg tree adorn the first leg of a four-mile trail that ends at spectacular Feather Falls, the sixth highest waterfall in the continental U.S. Feather River Ranger Station, (530) 534-6500. After wintering in Baja California, least Bell's vireos return to nesting sites in dense shrubs along southern California rivers. A good place to find the birds is San Diego County's Mission Trails Regional Park. Take a walk near Old Mission Dam or Kuneyaay Lake. If you're lucky, a ruckus-raising male will dart from streamside vegetation to scold you away from his territory. Pileated woodpeckers start excavating their nest cavities this month in standing dead pine trees in the mixed conifer-deciduous forests of the Coast Ranges and Sierra Nevada in northern California. North America's largest woodpecker. . adults stand nearly a foot and a half tall. . a pileated starts its day by noisily calling through the woods to the separate tree where its mate roosts. Pileated populations seem to be on the rise. And because these birds are the forest's loudmouths, they're easy to find. Start in a mixed forest with plenty of snags, then listen for the shrill . kuk-kukking. call of the pileated in flight, the staccato tapping of nest excavation, or the booming territorial drumrolls both sexes make by rapping on favorite hollow trunks. |
Winter 2000
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