Jefferson
Active member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2012
- Messages
- 190
- Reaction score
- 28
- Points
- 28
- Location
- Southwest Missouri
- Country
- United States
Note: I will try to keep the pictures in the attachments below the post (which will require several posts of just pictures) in order and split the storyline up into multiple posts to avoid confusion. Also, the story below has video companions available on both my youtube channel "Elder Herper-Statesman" and Bethany's channel "theherpinglizard." Just type in our channel names to see all our US herping content, new and old. Enjoy!
Two weeks ago now, I boarded an airplane for the first time in twenty years, westbound for California with Bethany, now my fiancé. The flight attendants ran us through the safety lecture as we prepared for takeoff, and I couldn't help but chuckle as I recalled how George Carlin lampooned this part of flying--"A water landing? Is that the same as crashing into the ocean?!" After cruising above the lights of North America's towns and cities and crossing the gleaming, snow-capped Sierra Nevada under a full moon, the endless expanse of lights surrounding San Francisco bay came into view and we landed amongst the bustling mass of humanity.
The next morning, we rode down to meet Bethany's family in the Santa Clara Valley and spent some time visiting and marveling at the grassy, green hills, interspersed with live oaks, sycamores, and palm trees and alive after so much rain. That evening, we drove out of the valley and into the hills to a remote redwood preserve, replete with a rushing stream canyon. The air was misty and fresh with the smell of new and different foliage. We first flipped a pair of California Slender Salamanders, the most ubiquitous salamander of the trip (we saw well over 100). Then, while Bethany filmed a fragrant forest-floor millipede, I flipped a large black Plethodon. Santa Cruz Black Salamander!!! For my fellow Eastern US herpers who may have never herped California (as I hadn't--this was my first time on the West Coast), the black salamanders look like a slightly thinner, smaller version of our Slimy salamanders, or like a slightly chunkier version of the ravine salamander. Our specimen was jet black and proved to be a docile specimen to photograph. Nearer the stream, as we flipped myriad rocks and happened upon endless slender salamanders, Bethany shouted "Ensatina," from a few yards behind me! It was a Yellow-eyed Ensatina, unique to the region below SF Bay, and one of Bethany's most wanted species for the trip. It was so beautiful! It had a pinkish-purple upper body and bright orange legs, with, as advertised, a yellow tint in its eyes. A few more minutes of herping failed to turn up any Giant Salamanders, and so we turned in for the night and visited with family after a picturesque drive back into the valley.
The next day we had a big extended family get-together at the grandparents' house, which was an absolute blast on many fronts, and we even got a bonus herp at the day's end--a Pacific Chorus Frog calling from the neighbors' backyard fountain at twilight.
On Monday morning, we got up bright and early to hit a redwood park along the coast south of San Francisco. Along the way, we saw a big marine mammal, one I'd seen on the Discovery channel but never really expected to see in person: elephant seals. On a sandy beach where a large stream met the ocean, we observed a group of outcast males doing a mixture of glum lounging and fighting with each other. What unattractive animals they are!!! They look like something out of a Star Wars movie, and when they move, all one can see is blubber undulating, but they can move, and despite their clumsy appearance, approaching any closer than we did during breeding season is a bad idea, as they are quite territorial. When we entered the redwoods from the surrounding oak-chaparral habitat, it seemed the day disappeared and dusk descended. The temperature dropped at least ten degrees, and the giants surrounded us imposingly. I can see how some find the redwood forests not enchanting but a little terrifying. One gets the sense that you're no longer the top of the food chain in a place that primordial. We found numerous slender salamanders and Ensatinas in the rich habitat, but we started to lose hope that we'd find a California Giant Salamander as the morning wore on. But under a small log beside a stream, where the ferns grew lust and vibrant, we flipped a sub-adult California Giant! What gorgeous critters! The euphoria that pervaded the next couple hours of the trip is hard to exaggerate, and was surpassed only a few days later on the Oregon/CA border.
Story continued in next post on this thread....
Two weeks ago now, I boarded an airplane for the first time in twenty years, westbound for California with Bethany, now my fiancé. The flight attendants ran us through the safety lecture as we prepared for takeoff, and I couldn't help but chuckle as I recalled how George Carlin lampooned this part of flying--"A water landing? Is that the same as crashing into the ocean?!" After cruising above the lights of North America's towns and cities and crossing the gleaming, snow-capped Sierra Nevada under a full moon, the endless expanse of lights surrounding San Francisco bay came into view and we landed amongst the bustling mass of humanity.
The next morning, we rode down to meet Bethany's family in the Santa Clara Valley and spent some time visiting and marveling at the grassy, green hills, interspersed with live oaks, sycamores, and palm trees and alive after so much rain. That evening, we drove out of the valley and into the hills to a remote redwood preserve, replete with a rushing stream canyon. The air was misty and fresh with the smell of new and different foliage. We first flipped a pair of California Slender Salamanders, the most ubiquitous salamander of the trip (we saw well over 100). Then, while Bethany filmed a fragrant forest-floor millipede, I flipped a large black Plethodon. Santa Cruz Black Salamander!!! For my fellow Eastern US herpers who may have never herped California (as I hadn't--this was my first time on the West Coast), the black salamanders look like a slightly thinner, smaller version of our Slimy salamanders, or like a slightly chunkier version of the ravine salamander. Our specimen was jet black and proved to be a docile specimen to photograph. Nearer the stream, as we flipped myriad rocks and happened upon endless slender salamanders, Bethany shouted "Ensatina," from a few yards behind me! It was a Yellow-eyed Ensatina, unique to the region below SF Bay, and one of Bethany's most wanted species for the trip. It was so beautiful! It had a pinkish-purple upper body and bright orange legs, with, as advertised, a yellow tint in its eyes. A few more minutes of herping failed to turn up any Giant Salamanders, and so we turned in for the night and visited with family after a picturesque drive back into the valley.
The next day we had a big extended family get-together at the grandparents' house, which was an absolute blast on many fronts, and we even got a bonus herp at the day's end--a Pacific Chorus Frog calling from the neighbors' backyard fountain at twilight.
On Monday morning, we got up bright and early to hit a redwood park along the coast south of San Francisco. Along the way, we saw a big marine mammal, one I'd seen on the Discovery channel but never really expected to see in person: elephant seals. On a sandy beach where a large stream met the ocean, we observed a group of outcast males doing a mixture of glum lounging and fighting with each other. What unattractive animals they are!!! They look like something out of a Star Wars movie, and when they move, all one can see is blubber undulating, but they can move, and despite their clumsy appearance, approaching any closer than we did during breeding season is a bad idea, as they are quite territorial. When we entered the redwoods from the surrounding oak-chaparral habitat, it seemed the day disappeared and dusk descended. The temperature dropped at least ten degrees, and the giants surrounded us imposingly. I can see how some find the redwood forests not enchanting but a little terrifying. One gets the sense that you're no longer the top of the food chain in a place that primordial. We found numerous slender salamanders and Ensatinas in the rich habitat, but we started to lose hope that we'd find a California Giant Salamander as the morning wore on. But under a small log beside a stream, where the ferns grew lust and vibrant, we flipped a sub-adult California Giant! What gorgeous critters! The euphoria that pervaded the next couple hours of the trip is hard to exaggerate, and was surpassed only a few days later on the Oregon/CA border.
Story continued in next post on this thread....
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