Saturday, August 2, 2014

FROM PIER to BAY

 Sundown at the Pier. Sundown at Oyster Bay, Campbell River.  Quick. Grab a camera. Grab your friends, and family, and toddle down to the ocean. But hurry, the sun sets a little  faster every day. 
                                    Beautiful down at the Pier. In perfect light .............

 This week we got to go from the Pier to Oyster Bay with visiting friends, Ruth and Ian.We were so loaded down with camera gear, it was hard to  walk. So Ruth offered to  pack it along for us.
 
       Way to go, Ruth!                                       

         Ian and Ruth had earlier been sharing with us  their inspiring travel photography, from the Phillipines, Quangxi, Quinghai Province, China, Bali, Vijayanagan, Cambodia, to name a few. ( I'm sure I missed a few places, or have mispelled them).I learned  so much  from Ian's photography lessons, that we visited a local camera shop so I could pick up  a couple of  circular polarizing filters for my camera lenses. What a difference. Glare on water is  cut down, sky is vibrantly transformed......

The polarizing filter looks a lot like a lens from a sunglass, and when you rotate it, you can see changes in light. As a result the polarizing filter cuts out certain light to the camera, so you have to use longer shutter speeds, and try to keep the sun to your side and not at your back or shoot into the sun. But even if you do, the effects are surprising. And the night we went to the Pier, and Oyster Bay, the sunset did not disappoint.
  
At Salmon Point we were treated to something unique. The fishing boats were out in droves. And so were the leaping salmon. Hard to catch , and really odd to see:  hordes of sockeye on their run, throwing themselves out of the water.The only pic I could get was this one, with the leaping salmon in the centre ,  water ruffled beneath, as it flew intothe air.
      That old saying that the "fishing was so good they were  leaping into the boat", is  true. You could hear the slap on the water as the salmon smacked back into the ocean.
 We finally made it to Oyster Bay. Beautiful shoreline park between Courteany and Campbell River. A small area, about 4 and half acres, that takes about 15 minutes to toodle around.

About 158 species of birds have been found in the park. Winter birding at its best. It is along what is called the Pacific Flyway, a route for millions of birds that migrate. Mallard, American Wigeon, Ducks, Teals, and Northern Pintail,Glaucous-winged Gull, Mew Gull and Thayer's Gull. Ducks include Surf Scoter, Harlequin , Bufflehead, Goldeneye, plus Cormorants. I have also seen Swallows roosting in the pylons along the shore.And eagles, of course, sitting high up . Watching.

 
The mud flats give way to rocky beach, to sand bars and huge sky. This area was a relief camp at one time for out of work iron workers, and was built up with houses, back in the 30's. The camp was closed in the 1950's, and in the 1980's the area escaped several developers.  By 1989 Oyster Bay Park Association decided to set it up as a wildlife refuge.
                                   
And to think this bay was once considered for a coal port..................

     Kayaks drift up and down the passage, against a backdrop of mountains from the coast.
  
And the area is quiet , pristine, beautiful, and clean. With nothing but big sky and a few happy humans exploring its shores.
                                    
(Get more information about Winter Birding from http://islandnature.ca/)

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