Monday, October 12, 2009

Wild Life


Mountain Lion Habitat
Originally uploaded by Takecrew
I often think about the differences between being raised on the east coast, as I was, and being raised on the west coast, as my sons are. One difference I've mulled about lately is the relationship to wild animals. Growing up in the northeast, specifically suburban Boston, in the 1960s and 70s meant that the wild animals I encountered were squirrels, raccoons, skunks, garter snakes, chipmunks and a variety of small birds. At a stretch, I could go to New Hampshire or Maine and see deer, beaver, black bear and, if lucky (and I was never this lucky), moose. The small animals that shared my environment were so non-threatening as to barely register in my consciousness. Rabies from raccoons was about the worst I could imagine.

I had been in Santa Cruz only about a month or so when I was stunned one night to hear a pack of coyotes on the hunt. A few weeks after first hearing that pack, I heard a horrible series of screams that sounded like they were coming from a nearby quarry. It sounded like someone was beating a child in an outdoor echo chamber. I would have called the police, but it sounded far enough away and too indistinctly locatable to be able to give any directions. Besides, someone else closer to the scene must have heard it. It was only a couple of days later when I learned that the screams were coming from a mountain lion that had come down to our local woods (the Pogonip). Worse yet, the lion wasn't being attacked. That was just its normal cry (really hideous)! As time went on, I encountered other exotic animals: hawks, bobcats, sea lions, elephant seals and otters. Sure, the usual small animals were about, but these new animals were big, dangerous and (holy cow!) right next door!

So I've been thinking about these animals in my new environment a lot lately, especially on the "nature walks" with my boys. A couple of weeks ago we took a walk into some serious back country in a park called The Forest of Nisene Marks. We passed one of the above signs warning us that we were entering mountain lion territory and gave it little thought. But as we hiked up into a narrow arroyo late into the afternoon, I began to think about how risky I was being with my sons. I might not have much to fear from a mountain lion attack, but I was walking along with a couple of bite-sized morsels. I spent much of that walk looking over my shoulders, scanning the ridges above us for any sign of a big cat, cursing myself for being unprepared. Two days later I read that a big cat had attacked a 5 year-old boy walking with his parents in Washington State. The cat was dragging the boy away by the head but the mother managed to drive the cat off by beating its head with her metallic water bottle. The parents then carried the badly bleeding boy (head wounds!) for one whole hour back to the car certain that the lion was stalking its wounded prey. Ack! (Good thing the lion hadn't gone for the neck, must have been a young, inexperienced one.)

Since reading that article, I've started carrying my old pilgrimage walking staff with us on our hikes, figuring that plastic water bottles might not be as effective as metal ones. I'm also planning on buying one of those fog horns in a bottle that I used to hear blown at Red Sox games. Whack 'em and blast 'em if need be, I tell myself.

But I managed to keep these east coaster's fears to myself until our last hike, yesterday, in Wilder Ranch. This time, the boys spotted the mountain lion warning sign and spent the first 10 minutes of the walk trying to figure out the risk. I assured them that Wilder Ranch was a good place for us (that's why I chose it), but I was also concerned about them getting scared of nature.

As a born and bred east coaster, it will take me a long time to get blasé about the wildlife in Santa Cruz, the way I was about the animals I grew up with in Boston. What will it mean for my sons' attitudes about animals that they are growing up in a place where wildlife is really wild?

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Trailheads


Trailhead
Originally uploaded by Takecrew
The boys and I spent much of the summer exploring the many parks and trails of the Santa Cruz mountains.I called these hikes "nature walks" to appeal to Peter's affection for science and to conceal the possibility that these walks could turn into "slogs" or "forced marches." It seems to have been a successful strategy, for while we ended some of the walks with the two of them taking turns riding on my shoulders, they never seemed to associate these nature walks with exhaustion, which was my biggest fear.

My other top strategy was to take these walks in places with running water. I stumbled on this principle on our first walk in the lower portion of Big Basin, in the area known as Waddell Creek. It was the first of our nature walks, back in the spring, and I had decided to drag the kids out for a walk because of my concern that neither was getting much exercise or had much stamina. My fears were stoked at the very beginning of the walk when the boys wilted at the trailhead. Somehow I managed to drag them through the park entrance and then winced when they chose the narrow uphill path, rather than the broad, flat path to the creek at our first fork in the road. Indeed, there was much groaning as the path continued to climb. But then we had our first lucky break when a group of three young women caught up with us. The leader of the group had worked in outdoor education and she kindly pointed out a number of interesting plants that caught Peter's attention. We learned about "miner's lettuce," the "refrigerator tree" and, most importantly, poison oak. Without it necessarily turning into a specimen hunt, the boys seemed to begin to perceive the landscape around them differently. The started naming each new stretch of the path and rushing ahead to discover new terrains. Eventually our path intersected with Waddell Creek. The boys played in the stream for about an hour whereupon they pronounced it "the best day ever!"

Since that day, we've managed a nature walk about once every three weeks. We've walked in the Fall Creek Unit of Henry Cowell Redwoods, the Forest of Nisene Marks (this is the trailhead featured in the photo above), Butano State Park, Elkhorn Slough, and the Pogonip (a set of trails skirting the edge of the UCSC campus). We've usually gone just the three of us, but we've gone with the boys' favorite friend Qun-Qun a couple times and even once with Noriko (she'll join us more once she's done writing her book). I've wanted to blog these trips, but haven't done so yet. Perhaps this can be a start.