Northern kingfish

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Big Trip to Tennessee- the Countries’ Fish Mecca


Big Trip to Tennessee- the Countries’ Fish Mecca

 Who knew, but Tennessee has more species of fish than any state in the Union-over 300. That is almost as many fish as Rhode Island has birds, and Tennessee doesn’t even have any saltwater coast.

So when Casper Cox of Chattanooga, a fellow and regional representative of the North American Native Fish Association, sent out a general invitation for fellow Fish Heads to join him for a long weekend of camaraderie and fish-related outings on June 8-11, I RSVP’d that I would like to attend. After some planning, I made it and have since returned. Although the adventure now nearly seems like a distant memory, seeing some of those fish swimming in those Tennessee waters was similar to looking at the reef fish I have spent time with in the Caribbean- as glittering jewels. I am only sorry that my photography in the following write-up won’t adequately translate their beauty.

  Because I had a little time on my hands before opening up the aquarium, I travelled to and fro from Newport to Chattanooga using buses, specifically on a new upstart and successful bus lines called Megabus that are double-deckers and whose advertising billed itself as “Ride for as Low as $1.” This requires naturally booking well in advance, and while I didn’t score the $1-fares, I did travel for three of my six legs for $8, and paid in total about $80- and that is a cheap fare.  My itinerary was Newport-Providence-New York-Washington-Knoxville from where I continued to Chattanooga by rental car. On my last day I did cross over the border to Alabama via Georgia to do a little bird watching and just to be able to say I actually went to Alabama.

Despite the super cheap fares, not sure I would do this again, as much of America also has discovered Megabus and the buses are packed. I was wedged into small seats for hours at a time.
Megabus in rainy Manhatten
Capitol from Union Station

             When I arrived in Knoxville, before picking up my car rental, I went bird watching to Sharp’s Ridge just north of downtown. From here, there was a lovely view of downtown and the distant Smoky Mountains.
Sharp's Ridge seen from downtown Knoxville
Not sure i was supposed to climb this tower...

...but the view was terrific. (Sorry, not my photo)

Then I was off to Chattanooga where I rendezvoused with the Fish Heads for a behind-the-scenes look at the breeding facilities of the Tennessee Aquarium.


Of interest was the collaborative efforts of a number of organizations for the restoration of lake sturgeon into Tennessee waterways.
Lake Sturgeon awaiting release
Towards sunset, we ate at a BBQ spot overlooking downtown Chattanooga.

The following morning, I was up at dawn and immediately descending a slope behind Casper’s house to watch life wake up on the South Chickamauga Creek. Here I watched large gars and either massive carp or buffalofish hunt directly in front of me. While watching the fish, I listened to the birds, familiar ones like wren, phoebes, and even a kingfisher, similar to the local humans, sang with a different accent.
After breakfast, we mounted up and crossed over the Georgia line (about a mile south of Casper’s house) to seine further upstream on South Chick Creek.

South Chickamauga Creek behind Casper's house
                 

                 
Here we spent the day seining and observing a rich fish fauna. Then we had a picnic.
Sunday broke with dodgy weather, but not bad enough to keep us from driving an hour east into the Cherokee National Forest and  a new watershed- the Conasauga River that flows into the Mobile River that empties into the Gulf of Mexico. Here was an incredibly beautiful snorkeling hole and the result was one of the most beautiful experiences using mask and fin that I have ever experienced.


This sign is devoted exclusivily to describing the fish at the snorkeling hole.
              Later we drove further upstream and continued to enjoy observing fish in the crystal-clear waters of the Conasauga.

Casper and Rolf snorkeling
               After nearly nine-hours of snorkeling, we called it quits and drove to a Mexican Restaurant where we hungrily devoured food sweet food.

 Driving rain prevented me from any further exploration. I made my good-byes to my new friends, explored Chattanooga for a bit, then drove for about a half-hour into Alabama where I went bird watching. Then I drove to Knoxville, where I returned the rental car and spent the rest of the day along the banks of the Tennessee River, before boarding the Megabus for the long trip home.
The Chattanooga Choo Choo Hotel


               During my layover in Knoxville, one more fishy encounter. Along the Knoxville waterfront, at a moored riverboat, the "Star of Knoxville., I saw some more carp and bluegill. Later a young fisherman hopped the onboard the empty boat a caught a large carp.
In all, an amazing trip. In all I saw 44-species of fish, which is more than I have seen all year combined. Tennessee is truly the fish Mecca of America.
             My next entry will focus on the actual fish encountered during the adventure.


Friday, June 29, 2012

Six Month Check-in and Thank You


In a couple of days, I will be at the half-way point of this “2012 Fish Big Year” adventure. My goal was to see 100-species of fish within a calendar year- similar to what the birders do.  With the completion of my recent Tennessee trip and opening up the Minnow Aquarium on Third Beach, I am now  at over 80-species, so I am well on my way to achieving this goal.

Meanwhile, my friends told me I should write a blog about this undertaking, and I have. What is fascinating is that through today, my blog has had about 400-page views, and while that number certainly is unremarkable, what is amazing is where the readers have come from; in addition to the United States, I have had readers from Russia, England, Canada, Germany, Austrailia, Turkey, South Korea, Norway, and Latvia.  Wow, readers from four continents-a small readership acculminated in six-months for such an obscure subject (Me-not the fish).  That is some power of the web.

So, based on these numbers, this particular blog entry is really a thank you to all the people who have read these entries these past six months. Thank you for taking time out to read them.
Next entry recounts my trip to America's Fish Mecca- Tennessee.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Newport Interlude


Upon returning to Newport, my friend James invited me to a cocktail party on the boat he is First Mate on, the “Sloop Providence”, a replica of John Paul Jones warship from the Revolutionary War that captured some 40-odd British vessels.  After the party, I noticed some green underwater lights emanating from the end of the Aquidneck Lobster Company dock. They are newly installed and here I saw many  striped bass (#39) in the eerie lights. They were actively hunting sand lances (#40). I didn’t have my camera, however returned the following night and alas, this was the sole sand lance left.
 The striped bass naturally didn’t pose for me.
                                                                            Sloop Providence

Activity at the Third Beach aquarium is heating up. I met Norman Bird Sanctuary Education Director Kim Botelho at the compound and we have a of work to do before opening in a couple of weeks. We have had a setback because the recently donated fish stands have been deemed unsuitable a now we must hire a carpenter to build new ones. So the aquarium is on hold.
                  
  Afterwards,  I went exploring around “Crab Town” at the very northern end of the Beach. Here I found and photographs this inconspicuous beauty, one I have long wanted to see- a naked goby (#41).


"Crab Town" looking out to Sachuest Point and open ocea.  Note the Puddingstone Rock.
 Next and final adventure before my duties at the aquarium being in earnest is a long trip to Chattanooga, Tennesse to meet with other fish heads for a mini-regional gathering. Who knew, but Tennesse has the most diversity of fish species of any state in the county- over 300 species Tennessee almost has as many fish species as Rhode Island has bird species. 

Friday, June 15, 2012

River Herring in Maine


Upon the completion of work for the year at school, I went to Maine for five days over the Memorial Day weekend.

I had made arrangement with the town of Benton’s (next town over from Clinton) Alewife Warden to help out counting fish as they came up the advanced fish lift at the Benton Dam on the Sebasticook River. The warden put me in touch with N. from the Department of Marine Resources.  We made arrangement to meet on Saturday.

When we met, N. gave me a tour of the amazing structure, a model facility that other outfits nationally are emulating.  As of the weekend, 1.6-million have been pushed through for the season. Benton is so proud of the re-establishment  of river herrings that the weekend before, the first Benton Alewife Festival was organized and conducted.

Here are some pictures.
Benton Dam
Every ten minutes, a bucketful of fish gets hoisted up the lift...
...and down this chute.

The river herring squeeze through the barriers...
...and are visable through this viewing chamber.
If a shad is observed, like this one with the tail sticking out to the right, they are personally given the up-and-over.  To date only 26-of these mysterious fish have been observed.
                           
                             The town awards one alewife concession, and this is their operation.

At the far end of the dam is an eel lift. In the small pools are writhing masses of eels awaiting transport up river.

The following morning, I set off for actual surveying, not in the form I had expected. Instead N. wanted me to check whether alewives were pushing through at various fish ladders upstream.

First stop Plymouth in Penobscot County. Plenty of alewives here.

                                                                   Look at them at my feet

Next was the ladder at Stetson, also in Penobscot County. Not nearly as many river herring here, although big water snake sunning at the dam.

See the water snake?

Finally on the day was the ladder at Newport on Sebasticook Lake. Here was a mother lode, chock full of fish. Again, what a facility. They take anadromous restoration very seriously in Maine.
    

The next day, N. had me check three spots downriver from the dam along the Pattee Pond Brook in Winslow. Two of the three spots yielded nothing, the third only one alewife. Two photos of the brook below.
                                         Pattee Pond Brook empties into the Sebasticook

Because of stormy weather that arrived I wasn’t able to do any more surveying.

Fish seen on the weekend included:
American eel
Alewife    (#34)                                                                                                                                                                 
Bluebacked herring  (#35)
American shad     (#36)                                                                                                                   
Carp
White sucker    (#37)     
Smallmouth bass   (#38)
Redbreast sunfish   (#39)  
Yellow perch                                                                                                                                                         



Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Woonasquatucket River and Great Swamp


After traveling to Ohio with the crew, I went on two trips looking for fish, both in Rhode Island.

The first was to northern Rhode Island beginning at the Audubon Society headquarters in Smithfield then working my way back to Providence via a new river system I had been previously unaware of- the Woonasquatucket River.  Although I don’t have much in the way for photographs, I did see some great fish including creek chub (#30), carp, white sucker(#31), largemouth bass, brook trout, (#32) and a massive chain pickerel (#33).
                                                                                                    
                                                        White sucker (top) and creek chub (bottom)

Two weeks later I went again to the Great Swamp Management Area in West Kingston and I didn’t have much luck for fish.  On the other hand, as always, I did encounter terrific wildlife, including a number of great birds and butterflies.

The only photographs I took were of an immature bluegill. One photo below. 
                                                                                                            

    

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Maine to Ohio


The biggest trip of the year to date started with me driving after work from Newport to Maine to pick up Eva.
                                                                                           Bridled shiner (#24)
Early Saturday, we drove back down to Newport, and on Sunday we picked up Hugo and his friend Tink, both out of school on Spring Break and we embarked on a road trip to the Northeast Ohio area. Ostensibly, the trip was to go to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, however what the other three didn’t realize was that this was really a trip to enable me to investigate the area’s wildlife and build me fish list.

En route, we took a break at the Delaware River Water Gap and this expired fish was on the riverbank:
                                                 
                                                                                         Quillback carpsucker

As soon as we arrived and checked into the Richfield Motel 6, I tucked ‘em in and drove a short distance to the Cuyahoga River, here I found:

                                                                      Western blacknosed dace (#25)



                                                                               Northern hogsucker (#26)
Then darkness, and I had to go back to the civilians..
Well before sunrise, I went back and snapped a photo of this mystery fish.

Then my camera battery ran out, so I only have this one photgraph and two other blurry shots.  The closest I can figure is that it is a creek chub, however the reality is that I am clueless.
After sunrise, we went to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, and Hugo and I also went on a tour of Cleveland Browns Stadium.
No nature afterwards.
The following morning, I arose again before daybreak and explored a power cut line behind the motel. Ohio was warmer than Rhode Island and spring further along, so I saw some first-of-year birds; swamp sparrow and rough-winged swallows.
Then we drove to Canton and visited the football museum. It was anticlimactic after the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Afterwards, we walked along the banks of Nimishillen Creek at the cities' West Park. We spied this school of fish and although the photos don't reveal much, I saw enough details that I  am fairly sure they were bluntnosed minnows.
                                                                              Bluntnosed minnows (#27)
Moments later, from a pedestrian bridge over the creek we spied this school of suckers, and again  the photos are very shaky and I didn't include any, I believe they were golden redhorses (#28).                                     

Then we had to leave. I had one more trick up my sleeve. I had written a request for information beforehand to the North American Native Fish Association about where fish might be seen in the Northeast Ohio area. I received a few suggestions and was able to check out one place that proved to be a bizarre phenomenon- carp (#29).
These photographs are from just over the Ohio border into Linesville, Pennsylvania on Pymatuning Lake.


After arriving, I unwound for a bit, and then went down to the Sebasticook River in her back yard and I was able to photograph this fish:


Finally, the author volunteered his services to the struggling Cleveland Browns