I’m in California for the holidays and went to the Marin Tracking club this morning. I used to go regularly when I lived here. Then it was small and just beginning. Now the word is out and there were four times the amount of people. The tracking club meets on the last Sunday of every month, except this month’s last Sunday is Christmas. We always meet in Point Reyes at Abbott’s Lagoon. Since no dogs are allowed, the beach, which begins about a mile from the parking area, is pristine with wildlife tracks.
I’m staying at a house on at Muir Beach which is about an hour south of Point Reyes via the coast highway. The drive is exquisite. I left at around 7:30 and saw a coyote on the way there. Driving along Highway 1, near Dogtown, you’ll pass a line of Eucalyptus trees. The 1903 Earthquake was centered right along here. You can see the line of trees on one side, then the line of trees jumps several feet away; this is where the fault is.
Once you turn off towards the beaches, the landscape changes. Marin Agricultural Land Trust (MALT) is a conglomerate of the ranches in West Marin that have joined in the trust. Point Reyes National Seashore and MALT preserves this entire peninsula forever. MALT is the reason why you pass lands that have cattle on them, as well as drive through National Seashore.
I had an exquisite morning of tracking with the group. Most of the group leaders have trained with Jon Young and are very dedicated trackers and students. The sands are always shifting, the wildlife patterns regularly changing. Today we saw a lot of bobcat activity.
A faded skunk track loped up the dunes as well.
We spent some time analyzing a nice 2×2 raccoon track.
Notice in each pair there is a large foot and a smaller foot–a hind paired with a front.
My favorite track was the good ole’ coyote. We observed the tracks of mating play, but what was most instructive for me was breaking down a coyote lope track, and analyzing a transverse patten as the coyote was speeding up. While considering the track, four otters were playing in the lagoon. Scott, our leader, told us about a time he was observing some otters when they submerged, then reappeared right under a coot. The otter grabbed the coot, and on its second try, had it for a meal. The lagoon was filled with coots lazily feeding, and not too far from these otters.
Though the sign at the Parking lot entrance talks about ‘Vanishing Dunes’, the lagoon is alive with wildlife.
Filed under: Tracking | Tagged: bobcat tracks, marin tracking club, raccoon tracks, Tracking |
Nice pictures, I know that line of eucalyptus well. As a kid, we lived for a year in Bolinas, 1960, before it became the reclusive place it is today. I go back as often as possible, I went through there in October on my current walkabout. Back then there were many dairy farming families of Portuguese descent, and Bolinas was just becoming an artist haven. There were steelhead that would run up the little creek through Stinson Beach from the lagoon, and there were a few commercial fishermen with boats in Bolinas. The school on the road from 1 into Bolinas is a replica of the one I attended 8th grade, it burned in the late 60’s.
Have a good holiday, I’m on the south Texas gulf, doing a bit of fishing.
Cheers,
Mike
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Bolinas is still a neat place, and Duxbury Reef is a premier tide pooling area. I am going to do a post soon on the salmon restoration that’s going on at Muir Beach on Redwood Creek. Good fishing…
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It sounds like you had a wonderful outing! I am so glad that you are enjoying yourself. Thanks for taking the time to share, the photos were interesting to see, and I enjoyed hearing about your day.
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