[rec.travel] Subsea Birding

phipps@garth.UUCP (Clay Phipps) (06/05/90)

In article <May.28.14.43.18.1990.779@paul.rutgers.edu>,
pratt@paul.rutgers.edu (Lorien Y. Pratt) writes:
>
>Trip report to the Everglades and Florida Keys
>==or-- how to see 165 species in 8 days.
>
>We did lots of both bird- and fish-watching 
>and did our first scuba diving since we were certified (NAUI) last fall.
>This information should be of interest to birders and fishers (?) alike
                                                       ^^^^^^^ ^^^
Whereas a "birder" is a watcher of birds, 
a "fisher" is a catcher of fish.
Although there is a weasel-relative whose common name is "fisher",
the term is increasingly used as a less verbose replacement for
"fisherperson".

>who are interested in doing the same kind of trip that we did.

>We wanted to extend our bird-watching to underwater, 
                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^    ^^^^^^^^^^
>so last fall, we both took scuba certification. 

Divers out here in California sometimes observe cormorants zooming past 
at surprising depths--on the order of 30 (maybe 60?) feet.

I grew up around anhingas (fresh-water cormorants, more or less),
which (as your posting later acknowledged) also inhabit the Glades, 
but the lake at which I lived had water so murky that 
I never saw an anhinga underwater, although they do spend lots of time 
below the surface.

>[Saturday 4/21[?]
>We arrive at the Flamingo Lodge, still amazed at the lack of mosquitoes.  
                                                      ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Shhhh!
Actually, it's late in the spring, so the absence of mosquitos 
may be explained more readily by periodic malathion spraying
(if not prohibited in the national park) than by the season.

>All over Florida are these little brown lizards, about 4 inches long,
                            ^^^^^^       ^^^^^^^
>and with a very distinctive semi-circular throat patch, which is red 
>with yellow on the edges.  They extend this in a breathing motion. 

Those are locally called chameleons (but more properly "anoles"),
for their ability to change to any color you want--as long as it's
brown or lime green.

>The water level seems much lower than it was a year ago
>when we were here, and there are fewer birds as well.  

Another consecutive year of drought in the extensively modified
South Florida ecosystem.
-- 
[The foregoing may or may not represent the position, if any, of my employer, ]
[ who is identified solely to allow the reader to account for personal biases.]
[This article was written and posted before normal business hours around here.]
                                              
Clay Phipps 
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