Wow. Just wow. I
fell into bed last night, a happy worn out lass. My initiation into working
with gulls was a success! I left the house, all fresh and smelling like
sunblock, and returned covered in poo and vomit and smelling like fish. And I
was in a much lighter mood than when we left!
Thursday morning
saw the entire family tying netting to 2 of the 3 freshly painted gull traps,
which we were to use on the first expedition into the Kelp Gull breeding colony
at Keurbooms Lagoon. I had my head in the clouds, or more likely under a rock,
and was little help to the process, and also managed to fail at boiling eggs!
Traps were completed 30 minutes before we left and after a hurried toast lunch
we dashed out of the house and went down to the boat launch site. Eben, a
wonderful man who has been working for Cape Nature for the past 20 years and
helped Phil Whittington with gull ringing, took us over on the Cape Nature boat
(7 adults, 2 traps and various rucksacks and bags). A 5 minute scenic boat ride
later we beached on the strip of land hosting the colony and offloaded. I
kicked into hyperdrive. I was more excited than a kid at Christmas! Wow. Just
wow.
Birds were
everywhere, the sky was full of them, they were all over the landscape, and I
just couldn’t take it all in. I whipped out the camera, straight into tourist
mode, and then Mark called me over. Eben had caught a chick that needed a ring.
Very quickly I ringed the chick (a metal SAfring ‘K’ ring on the left leg) and
then I got to hold it. First lesson when working with gulls, they bite. Hard.
Over the past few weeks I have been helping Shane, an MSc student from UKZN, ring
Crowned eagles (his blog is definitely worth checking out!). Crowned eagles,
unlike gulls, very rarely bite, and its the feet that need to be carefully controlled
and watched out for. I started off with a raptor mindset: watch the feet! I have
since had a paradigm shift, watch the bill!
Over the next 3
or so hours we moved through the colony and in total ringed 3 adult Kelp Gulls
and 27 flightless juveniles, as well as 3 African Oystercatchers of which 1
already had a ring on. The juveniles were either snuck up upon and grabbed or quickly
chased down and grabbed. Adults were caught on the nest using the recently
completed traps, as were the Oystercatchers. I was so privileged to have my
family join me for my first ringing outing, and it made me so happy to see my
boetie get in there too! Mom was the ever present photographer, Nic helped with
catching, and Dad and I ringed and caught. Both Dad and I have 2 new species to
add to our ringing lists, Kelp Gull and African Oystercatcher.
Throughout the
few hours I was poo-ed on, vomited on and bitten, but what an experience! We
celebrated a successful afternoons ringing with pizza on the beach and retired
home weary but elated! I am so very excited for the next two years! I know that
it is going to be hard work, with trials and tribulations but the rewards are
going to overpower all else! Here’s to an eventful MSc!
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Working on the traps. |
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Nic tying on netting. |
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Family manual labour! |
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Aliens have landed, over. |
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Dad surveying the scene. |
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First juvenile to be ringed, and the first to teach me to keep my face out of proximity! |
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First adult to be ringed. |
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Disgruntled volunteer walking away with it's new rings. |
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Taking a gull out of the cage while being watched. |
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Mark working like a boss! |
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Measuring my first African Oystercatcher after ringing. |
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Mark holding while I measure. |
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Mom the photographer! |
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Nic getting involved, with smiles all round! |
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It's so fluffy! |
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King of the castle. |
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Juvenile Kelp Gulls. |
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Another reminder to watch the bill! |
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