Saturday, June 27, 2015

Hood Canal and Putvin Trail - 6/24

Tiger Lily
I had run around for 17-18 hours on the previous day, ending it in Gig Harbor in a camper provided by Cara Borre.  Maybe I was just really tired, but the mattress was so comfortable, I almost just stole it.  It wouldn't fit in my car, however, so nobody has to know about that plan per se.

I was up by six something, and effectively talked Cara and her partner Asta out of joining me on the next day of birding.  I had a hike planned that I knew would not be good for cameras (Asta is the photographer) or for bad knees, which Cara had hinted at.  We worked through it all over some coffee, and decided that I'd head out solo to tackle the Putvin Trail near Hamma Hamma. 


Lake of the Angels - from exotichikes.com


In my head... I really wanted to tackle this trail - like all of it.  It climbs up to Olympic National Park, where one has the option of summiting Mount Stone - the county high point - or the Lake of the Angels a place with flowery meadowy goodness.  Other points like Pond of the False Prophet, the Valley of Heaven and Saint Peter's Gate are all speckled around the top.  Spoiler alert - I didn't get up that far.  I'll have a lot of reasons by the end of the post, but if it's funnier to say I turned back because of thimbleberry, go for it.  It's partly true.



As high as it gets in Mason County -  Mount Stone (image from SummitPost.org).  This shot is from Mount Ellinor.
The range map for Golden Eagle extends south to that peak, and perhaps down to Mount Skokomish - I would love to
make it up to the saddle between the two of them next time - I wasn't all that far from it, but was turned back by rain.

Hood Canal morning

On the way up to the hike, I reached a wide pull out along Hood Canal, just south of Hamma Hamma oysters,  and thought I'd do a quick scan for alcids.  Bingo!  I found an Alcid swimming nearly half-way out in the canal and got kind of excited.  After looking at so many Pigeon Guillemots, I looked at this bird and simply compared it to them.  It was backlit, so I was worried that the absence of the white slash across the side might have been just bad lighting.  It seemed to be persistently not there, so I looked at the bill - comparing it to a Pigeon Guillemot, and the bill was not long and slender like the more common birds.  

Marbled Murrelet - Cara's picture of a bird from later in the
day.  The bird I had was even more backlit, and had its
head held more erect.  Is that because it was on stiller
water?  Not a clue!  This picture looked a lot like the MAMU
that I saw later in the day, and not different enough
from the Rhinoceros Auklet I though I saw.
So... my brain said "all dark alcid with a bill like that... Rhinoceros Auklet!"  Marbled Murrelets, which I have rarely seen in breeding plumage, had not even come across my radar, so it didn't bug me at the time that I saw no yellow on the bill... no horn on the bill... no white stripes on the face...The bird had its head held up pretty high as well, and I may have seen more of them on rough waters with their head tucked a bit lower. 

Was that a good bit of excuse making?  I'm sure that at least some other people could have screwed up this call, right?  You can feel better now!  Ha. 

The important thing is that I sent a text to Cara, who set out to chase it from Gig Harbor right about the time I turned off my phone and started up the trail.

Putvin Trail
Hamma Hamma River

The Putvin trail starts a little ways up past the Lena Lake Trail on Hamma Hamma Road.  There may be other destinations farther down the road, but I don't know what they are.  I arrived around ten o'clock after the stop above... and Safeway... and Starbucks...so my start was a little later than I had intended! 

The first excitement as I got out of the car was the view of wildflowers growing alongside the road.  Tiger Swallowtails quite appropriately were pollinating tiger lilies.  I snapped a picture before even getting my pack together.  I packed way more food and water than I used in the end.  I packed my binoculars and didn't end up needing them, and thankfully, I didn't need any of the ten essentials I brought along (well... may have needed, but didn't use, and was just fine in the end.)

The beginning of the trail brought me across a couple plants that were new to me.  The first was Peace Pipe, or Indian Pipe - it was just starting to emerge from the ground, and the pictures came out poorly, but I'm very tempted to come back in July to take a look at it!  The second was Candystick, which was different from any plant I'd seen before. 
Goat's Beard
Candystick



Tiger Lilies and Tiger Swallowtail
The trail started off easily enough.  It was steep at times, and it got me huffing and puffing a little, a normal occurrence at the start of a hike.  There were three rounds of descending to a creek bed, and rising back up - counting it out made it easier on the way back.  I was amazed at the number of Sooty Grouse along the way, and at the number of people complaining that the trail was much harder than they had expected.  "Should have been called the trail from hell..." one guy said, and I did a nice job of not suggesting purgatory instead. 

One couple I encountered got talking to me about birds, and I asked them about Ruffed Grouse.  They went on and on about all the places they had run into them in the previous day and that morning - at Lena Lake and along other gravelly forest roads - out with chicks, walking through campgrounds, kissing people on the cheek... well all but the last part, but I realized I needed to get to that habitat soon!
View from he trail - thumb included for perspective

I continued upward, and crossed into the Mount Skokomish Wilderness, where it became a bit steeper for a while.  I was happy to have poles along - something I had always laughed at in the past, but once I realized that my whole body could hurt a lot, instead of just my legs hurting injuriously, I was sold. 

I made stops... a good couple of stops on the way up, so the blister on my running shoe-clad feet didn't get too big.  The work eventually brought me to a clearing - about three hours in, and just as it started to rain.  My shirt was pretty wet here and there from sweat, so the light rain didn't really do much... but it did keep going! 

I was able to get farther up into the clearing, and I realized that this was a stretch I had hoped to get to.  It was open with scattered trees and plenty of wildflowers, and with talus slopes ringing it in parts.  In my head, I had decided that this was habitat for Townsend's Solitaires.  The rain made it difficult to do little things like walk around and look at things in binoculars, so I got situated under a tree and played for Solitaires.  I never got more than isolated calls that I thought held possibility, but I certainly was encouraged by the habitat!  There were Hermit Thrushes and Varied Thrushes, and an Orange-crowned Warbler came right up to my tree to investigate. 

Before getting to Olympic National Park - Putvin Trail
The flowers around me included more tiger lilies, Indian paintbrush, and thimbleberry.  Now... the thimbleberry is one of my favorite plants, but in this case, with it soaking wet and dangled across the trail.. Each step I took uphill was drenching me, the feet were a little sore, and I wasn't really prepared to get drenched by the water from above and below.  So I played for TOSO a little longer, then decided to head back down the hill. 

Tiger Lilies from the clearing
Drenching delivery system -
AKA Thimbleberries.




On the way down, I was passed by a man who had to be 70.  He was a mountain goat of a man who had made it all the way to Lake of the Angels.  The wildflowers were apparently in full bloom, and overwhelmingly gorgeous.  We had talked about the difference in our walking poles - he had an "old person cane" because of the ergonomics.  "I also made a few modifications."  He explained  "I have an ice axe attachment, and a bayonet attachment."  I raised an eyebrow at this, "For mountain goats... or people... I've never had to use it."

We talked about safety on the trail, and he bemoaned people that go too far - beyond their abilities.  "They don't understand... it's not the destination... it's the journey."  I accepted what felt like a stamp of approval on my year, and watched him zip down ahead of me. 
My shirt at the end of the hike.
I can't even guess on the rain/sweat ratio

Walking down the trail was manageable, I did have one time where I totally bit it, but I survived the fall just fine.  From there it was smooth sailing until the last quarter mile.  I tripped.  I got my balance.  I tripped again... I caught myself.  At one point I had a solid thirty foot stumble that stopped right in front of a small tree lying across the path.  All of this on the smoothest part of the trail - nothing but the occasional root or rock. 
This very well may be where I had my
thirty foot stumble - tree on the trail ahead









I stopped and asked God (or for readers that are so inclined... the Universe), why my life needed to end on a trail like this.  I enumerated all of the things that I was thankful for, and all that I needed to make it back to at the end of the trip.  All of this needed to be settled before I did anything hasty like... try to walk over a small tree.  Done... I looked up... waited for objections while I wiped tears from my eyes (don't judge... I was tired, and the time alone meant I had a lot of time to think... and I'm just a crier), then made my way over and finished my walk.

Hood Canal again

Once I got in cell range, I toggled the phone back out of airplane mode, and my phone lit up once again with texts. 

I called, and got the skinny.  The first order of business was to get a po' boy and a beer at Hamma Hamma.  I'd been thinking about them for months since my last visit here in the winter.  I found California Gulls roosting behind the store on the shores of Hood Canal (162!), a code 1 bird, but a little earlier than expected. 

View of Hood Canal through the oyster saloon at Hamma Hamma

Crab cake Po Boy - something they kind of just threw
together, and one of the tastiest sandwiches I've ever had!
The food required a small change in plans, as the oysters that were fried up for sandwiches in the morning were declared unsafe by the health department later in the day - not long before I got there.  Apparently, the lack of snowpack in the Olympics meant that very little cold water had been running down to feed the oysters.  Toxin levels had gotten too high, so for those particular oysters, we had just entered the bad months.

There were two pieces of good news - oysters from up in Jefferson County, and down in South Puget Sound (Hammersley, actually - the place I'd been just the day before) were safe for shooters.  I got a Fish Tale Pale, three shooters with a delicious mignonette, and a crab cake po boy.  The last item was an impromptu recipe that the fellows in the kitchen were pretty excited about, and it was delicious!


Jorsted Creek - Purple Martins nesting here, and
this was just south of where I had the Marbled Murrelet
I paid up, and started an hour long search for a Marbled Murrelet.  The birds had moved a bit, and.. for me, it felt like chasing.  I know... birders chase... but it just didn't sit well with me.  I rarely chase, and when I do... I end up standing there.. for hours... waiting for the bird to show up.  "It was just here." makes me so itchy, I can barely stand it.  Figuring out where birds should be makes it more exciting when I find them, and less frustrating when I don't. 

Nonetheless, after an hour of searching,  I located the bird.  It was slowly sinking in at this point that this bird looked an awful lot like the one that I had seen earlier in the day.  I saw the bird, and my mind started asking questions that finally had me scratch out the rhino from earlier in the morning.  Nonetheless, the tally was up to a solid 163 with the Murrelet.

It was also satisfying to find the birds where I did.  They are birds that nest in the Olympics in old growth stands.  Seeing them here in breeding season showed that there were some nesting not impossibly far away - maybe in Mason County, but likely not. 

I zipped back to Gig Harbor, enjoyed beer from the growler in a frosty mug, and made it home by nine.  I was encouraged by Cara to pass on Mason in July, given the even smaller number of possible birds for me out there.

HA!


The little penciled line at the very top of the county shows my route for the hike. 
With July coming, there is so much of the county that is open and hikable.
I'll be back next month - no worries.

Friday, June 26, 2015

June 23rd - An unusual day of birding

The pinkish-lavender color running up Forest Road 23 and down through the southern part
of the county is the route from the day.  It overlaps with some other days, so I tried to run it wider
where necessary.  At left is the corn dog wrapper that held the official tally for the day - 78 species.


"Jim, madness may have no purpose or reason... but it may have a goal." - Mr. Spock to Captain Kirk; Star Trek - The Alternative Factor, 1967

"Persons trying to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot.  By Order of the Author." - Mark Twain


Points of clarification:
  • I am... and always will be... a Star Wars kid.  Don't read too much into the use of a Star Trek quote, ya Trekkies!
  • The day below may have some sprinkles of madness in it, but they really came from the sun and lack of sleep.  The goal of seeing as many species of birds as possible in Mason County this year is very much intact.  The reasons for setting the goal were magnified on a day where I had a low likelihood of adding many birds to my list.
  • What are my reasons for setting the goal?  What are the motives?  One of the big goals for the year was to take abstract things (lines on a map, ebird markers showing the presence of a species, descriptions of trails and towns, emails from people) and experience/explore them.  I just want to get to know the Whole Damn Place, and this trip... yeah, just read on.
Just getting out the door

Bre had found a way to free me up for two days.  She's been a blessing;  There'll be some part of the post for June 24th that will make a vague reference to that.  Getting two days meant a late meeting for her, though, so I had to pass on an early departure Monday night.  I had it in my head that I might try to run up on Monday to try for Common Nighthawks, one of the two reasonable nesting birds I was aiming for this month. 

I got to bed and messaged Cara Borre over in Gig Harbor to let her know that I'd be over the next morning, "Expect me in your driveway by four!"  That was the plan.  I swear that I never need an alarm clock.  I can tell myself to get up at nearly any hour and pull it off with ease.  I must have still been tired from a busy last week of school, Father's Day and other festivities during the weekend.  I woke up around 4:30 A.M. with my phone showing that I'd gotten a few texts.

My phone says this was around 6:30 AM
Cara and I met for the first time on the WOS Mason County trip (again - see earlier posts from April), and she has since caught a little bit of a Mason County bug.  She's less than an hour from Theler, and it's given her a chance to run into a few really good birds that I've missed this year (Pectoral Sandpiper and Lazuli Bunting), and although I have a few tough code three birds that she is still missing (Canvasback, Trumpeter Swan and Western Screech-Owl among them), I would guess that she would actually have a better chance at the big year record than I do at this point!



Around 6:30 AM
Purdy Creek near the George Adams Hatchery

Red-Eyed Vireo.  That was the first target bird of the day.  Cara and I had both seen the other three species of vireo that a person can expect to find in Mason (Warbling, Cassin's and Hutton's), but Red-eyed Vireo is a Code 4 bird, meaning that there are more than five sightings of it historically, but it's not an annual visitor.  Basically, there is a pattern of occurrence, and birders who have found them in the county said that the George Adams Hatchery on Highway 101 was as good a place as any to find them. 


We were lucky enough to arrive when a worker was out and about - she saw us with the binoculars and was happy to talk to us about our target birds for the day.  She of course asked if we were there to see American Dippers, which I have had on a few trips here.  Hearing our goals for the day, she directed us to the back of the hatchery, where a path leads one to Purdy Creek, and to a marsh where Cara and I found Virginia Rail.  We tried for Sora - another code 4 bird that we looked for throughout the day.

Already, this was a good start to a good day - Cara had a better understanding of the birds, and of habitat in general, including trees (here she refreshed me on cottonwood and alder), and I had done enough research to find good places to make attempts at these unlikely birds. 

Salmonberry
House Wrens here, and a deer!
7:30 ish

We were making our way up Skokomish Valley Road, and stopped at the Trout Hatchery on Eells Springs Road, along with a few other spots to have a listen.  We were really trying to get up to Forest Road 23, where we were hoping to find Ruffed Grouse.  A stop right before we went up the hill gave us some nice birds, including Olive-sided Flycatcher and Cassin's Vireo.  Pulling up the forest road and heading through the first clear cuts, we got talking about House Wrens.  These are listed as a Code 4 bird for Mason, but we had both found them in different places during the year.  Pulling over to get a picture of a deer, we listened for birds and found a House Wren singing along with the White-crowned Sparrows, Cedar Waxwings and Orange-crowned Warblers.

Like... 8:30 to 10:30

Ruffed Grouse are one of the handful of Code 2 birds left for me.  This code means that you aren't going to stumble onto these birds constantly and/or everywhere, but with a good effort in the right times and places, they shouldn't be too hard to find.  In conversation with Terry Sisson, who has the big year record for the county at 179, he said that Ruffed Grouse can be found "Everywhere and nowhere!"  There really are reports from a lot of different places, but my belief was that there were two ways to find them:  Drive gravel roads early in the morning (and I figured we were too late for that), or walk for a long continuous time through reasonably good habitat. 
And why wouldn't a Ruffed Grouse be here?  FR 2340

It was a nearly perfect morning for walking, so we got out and started a lovely stroll up FR 2340. 

Nearly right away as we got out of the car, we had Sooty Grouse booming from the side of the road - unseen as they have been every time this year.  We had a whole mess of birds, including Red-breasted Sapsucker, Willow, Hammond's, Pacific-slope and Olive-sided Flycatchers, Warbling Vireos, Gray and Steller's Jays, Common Raven, Brown Creeper, Pacific, Marsh, Bewick's and House Wren (House Wren coming again at Lake West), Golden-crowned Kinglet, Swainson's Thrush, American Robin, Cedar Waxwing, Common Yellowthroat, Wilson's, Orange-crowned, Black-throated Gray, Yellow, Yellow-rumped and MacGillivray's Warblers, Spotted Towhee, Dark-eyed Junco, Song Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, Western Tanager, Black-headed Grosbeak, Purple Finch and Red Crossbills.

Cara looking for a warbler on the path to Lake West
Now, nothing is more mind-numbing than lists, perhaps, but I wanted at least once in the record of the day to try to show a nearly complete list of the birds seen and heard.  Getting out and walking kept us from driving right past some of these, although it didn't take us past any Ruffed Grouse!  Lake West also had Pied-billed Grebes, and several species of swallows - the common ones throughout the trip being Violet-green, Tree and Barn.

There was a fairly easy path to the lake itself, and we were amazed at the number of bugs on the lake - thankfully at a distance.  This is the lake I would have driven to immediately if I had gotten out the door the night before.  It seemed to be close enough to clear cuts and big enough to support some bugs, so I figured it would be good for Common Nighthawk.  We made plans to return.

Lake West - Duckless, although we did hear Pied-billed Grebe and House Wren from the shore.
One of several dragonflies we enjoyed and failed to identify -
it really is starting to be a nice time to see them!
Identification was obfuscated by the fact that "Green Dragonfly Washington
State" brings up endless pages about the Green Darner, the official state
insect... which is blue.
 
Round about 11:00


Fields smelling like fresh-cut hay
Cara and I descended back down to Skokomish Valley Road, and thought it would be good to start keeping at least a running list in our head of birds seen/not seen.  "We have a few swallows, but we still need... Cliff!"  We laughed as a Cliff Swallow buzzed past the car mid-sentence.  We drove the road, stopping once to watch a Turkey Vulture cruising a freshly cut field of hay, looking much like a Northern Harrier (which I am still missing for the year!).

It was a day of eating poorly, to be sure, and I will admit that a stop at the Shell station near Sanderson Field led to the purchase of a corn dog.  It smelled... so... good.  From there, we headed off towards parts of the county that I had missed completely before.


 
 
Noonish
If nobody else names this, I'm calling it the Arcadia Peninsula

Field - Binns Swiger Loop Road
I had a couple of hunches regarding the area between Hammersley Inlet and Skookum Inlet.  It's technically a peninsula, with Totten Inlet running around part of it as well.  The very end of it, Arcadia Point, peeks out into the fingers of South Puget Sound, and it has a creek running through the middle of it - Mill Creek - that at least on the map appeared to have some wetlands where we might continue our searches for Sora and American Bittern.  I got the tingly feeling I get every time I'm driving new places. 
 
 


Marsh on Binns Swiger Road
We took Arcadia for a little while before turning onto Binns Swiger Loop Road.  I misread this on my map as Bunns Swinger Loop, which made our inner 12 year old boys laugh, and got us talking about Hurley Waldrip Road with similar results (the latter, we decided was perhaps a paint color inspired by a weak stomach at a fraternity party).  We came across a nice marshy area with enough water for a mallard and some vocal Virginia Rails.  Another tough bird became the topic of conversation - Cinnamon Teal!  It's a code 2 bird, but... we don't know anyone who has birded the county who seems to know what the spots are or times of year for finding these birds, outside of going to Theler a lot and crossing fingers.



We rejoined Arcadia and then took a turn down a road that hinted of water views.  We parked at a point that had a view of Mill Creek and got the attention of a woman who owned one of the properties.  This was one of the highlights of the trip in some ways - she invited us to the back side of her house (I... may have dropped a hint about trying to get somewhere that would let us see the water, but I think she enjoyed the company as much as we enjoyed the invitation).  Her house was sitting on a beautiful spot, with Mill Creek emptying into the salt water of Hammersley Inlet - the two bodies of water forming two sides of the triangular parcel. 
 
She was apologetic about the slightly wild yard, but we quickly moved on to discussing the trees, the birds (she gets Barred Owl, and we showed her some Pigeon Guillemots in the Inlet), the plants (roses and St. John's Wort came up), and shellfish (she gets money from a gentleman that seeds for several types of shellfish and harvests them from her little bit of shoreline - surely not the only such arrangement in the county!).

Mount Rainier from Arcadia Point - we left with only Pigeon Guillemot in the water.  Squaxin Island straight ahead.
2-4 on the Old Olympic Highway
 
Cara and I made our way back out to 101, and then to the Old Olympic Highway.  This stretch of road runs parallel to 101 on the south side, and was a spot I wanted to investigate for California Quail.  Yet another code 4 bird that we were hunting for, these little guys seem to have been largely pushed aside by Mountain Quail, but there have still been a couple of leads to follow.  The county compiler for Mason County shared that this road was a place where he had found them in recent years, so I thought it would be worth a shot. 
Find the garter snake!
 
We started by investigating the Kennedy Creek Salmon Trail, but found some pretty foreboding signage.  The coming of the fourth of July, and the dry season on the way have closed some areas to public entry.  We wandered in a little, and were treated to a Pacific Northwest Garter Snake, but limited our exploration to the area within eye-shot of the parked car. 
 
Heading up Old Olympic Highway, I was looking for two things:  Quail habitat, or people.  People know where there are quail.  I've got this idea about owls as well.  People won't notice a lot of the birds around them, but quail are active enough and look silly enough to get people's attention.  We drove without seeing much of either quail or people before we found ourselves at the tractor dealership.
 
I walked out to the field where the two gentleman were trimming the grass and adjusting signage, greeting them with the explanation that seems to have been working when I approach complete strangers.  1) Clarify that I'm a birdwatcher  2) Mention that I'm doing a Mason County big year.  3) Explain that some birds have been hard to find but this is a good spot.  4) Ask if they've seen California Quail  5) Put my finger on my forehead and wiggle it around like the thing on a quail's head.
 
We had nobody at all imply that they had seen these birds anywhere down this road ever, but... but!  The gals in the office thought that the trails up behind the dealership might be worth a look, "We could give you a golf cart..."
Easiest decision ever
We found no quail on the way up or at the top, but what an interesting bit of help!  Cara had been driving the whole day, so I had fun getting to take the cart up the hill.  It's not the simplest of things to do a steep hill with a cart that has no reverse and sloooooow brake response, but the fresh air felt great.  We got to the top and watched this clear cut for a little before giving up on this particular exploration.
Clearcut above the Old Olympic Highway
Somewhere around 4 til 5:30 or so
 
We actually left Mason County briefly *gasp* and ducked down to McCleary on Highway 108, then meandered our way over to Cloquallum Road to get back in to Mason.    It was a new way to enter the county (I think I've come in from four others so far this year!) and it got me thinking that I should be collecting these signs.
As we entered the county, we stopped at one of the earliest places we could.  I looked down at the river below and saw a steep bank, "This would be a good place for a Bank Swallow", I mused, when a brown swallow flew overhead making... well the sound was a little different than the Northern Rough-winged Swallows I'd heard recently - not as monotonous and repetitive - although in the end, we decided that's exactly what it was. This decision was not taken lightly, however, and because the birds were backlit, we actually clambered down the river bank, and hopped onto the gravel bar at a narrow part so that we could get a good look-see. 
 
The birds finally showed us that they lacked any collar across their chest, and we decided at that point that being down on the gravel bar carrying binoculars with a full view of someone's living room was a sketchy thing.  Bank Swallows are a code 5 bird, and I honestly didn't even have them on my radar for the breeding season, although I love the idea of learning the calls better and keeping a close eye out for them in the fall.  They often pass through in the fall without collars, I believe, which makes identification tricky, so the calls would be only one piece of it, but eyes and ears will be open!
 
Schafer State Park signage
We made our way up Cloquallum and made a quite forgettable stop at Star Lake - I hadn't realized that it was just a resort lake that was developed right up to the edges.  We peeked in between two houses to see an empty lake, and decided to move along!  The forests between there and Schafer State Park were frighteningly dense.  I had just finished a unit on fire ecology with my ninth graders, and the densely packed trees did not look like healthy forests at all.  With the fire danger up this summer, I could picture an awful lot of trees going in one fell swoop.
Salal
 
Thing opened up once more at Schafer, and Cara and I took a little walk.  I think we were certain that there was little to nothing new that we were expecting bird-wise, but it seemed important to spend some time at a state park in the far corner (or nearly the far corner) of the county.  Taking a little half loop, we stumbled onto Salal, and lichen.  Lots and lots of lichen.  I had read that there were poachers of a sort, people who came into the Olympic National Park and drove off with lichen to sell to floral shops around the world.  I'm not endorsing it, but it at least made sense after seeing and feeling the amazing lichens on the trees on this path.



We finally made our way out of the park around 5:30 and wondered... how can we get to the farthest Southwest corner of the county... right along the Satsop River?

5:30-6:30

"Can I help you?"  

This was a sentence we had heard far more often than some goal-oriented neer-do-wells skulking around the hidden corners of the county with binoculars may have deserved.  One more time, then, we were getting this question.  

Cara and I were pulled over on the side of the road squinting at the map, when a woman asked what we needed.  I explained that we were just trying to find a way down to the river, and I explained why (see above, minus the quail thing). 

"Well... you can go up to the crest of the hill, and there is a trail that goes down to the river, or you could come up my driveway there and walk the river from my property."

!

So we accepted another gracious offer. and followed her directions behind their home, down to a dry creek bed which emptied into the Satsop.  Very early on, we played for Bullock's Oriole, the species I dreamed would show up in this tiny little area.  We were treated to a single cackle, and spent much of this time wondering if it was a Bullock's, or one of the handful of Brewer's Blackbirds that were using the fields and trees nearby.  Nothing made us sure of the presence of orioles, so we continued down the streambed, which got more and more narrow as the bushes on either side impinged on our path.

Yay!
 
Hold on a minute...
Oh, never mind
 
We actually spoke at length on a bird that she and her husband had seen regularly this summer, and only this summer.  Pictures of Grosbeaks and Orioles all looked like they were on the right track, and the varied song she described could have been any of the above, but she didn't have enough information to make us sure it was or wasn't an oriole.  (But, m'lady, if you are reading this, please use the message feature here and let me know if you've discovered more!).  All of this tromping around on her property, and she tells us... "You're free to come and look again!  It doesn't matter if we're here or not."  Cara claims that the welcome we received all day had to do with her gender, and not necessarily with my charmingly disarming smile and pleasant unthreatening disposition.  We may never know!
 
We need two things:  Food and nighthawks  (the rest of the evening)
 
We high-tailed it back to Shelton, where we found many places were closed or not serving food at 7 PM.  Nonetheless, we came out of town with a growler full of beer from Grove Street Brewery, and a warm bag of MacDonald's "food".  In town, we added a Western Scrub-Jay to the list for the 75th bird of the day.
Common Nighthawk - 161
 
Heading up towards Forest Road 23 again, we stopped in the first clear cut, and were treated to Common Nighthawks (161 for the year) nearly right away.  "Peent!" they called out to us - three of them over this first field.  I watched one dive and got puzzled by a noise.  "You heard a vroom!"  Cara told me excitedly.  I watched and for 15-20 minutes this nighthawk repeatedly rose... rose... rose... then dove quickly, only to cup its wings at the last minute and swoop back up, producing a deliciously fake "Vrooooom" noise at the bottom.  We ate our dinner, had a glass of Rye Ale from the growler, and enjoyed the show.
 
Rejuvenated by vroom and ethanol, Cara decided we needed owls.  We drove up past the High Steel Bridge, picking up at least a dozen more nighthawks on the way (including at least one calling from Lake West as expected), before stopping in a nice open area to call for owls.  We pissed off every American Robin in the neighborhood, and got a call from a distant Barred Owl. 
Figuring this was our last bird of the day, we made our way back to the Skokomish Valley when we got one more bird, and a new one for Cara for the year - a Barn Owl passing right in front of the car!  We stopped to listen for it for a while before deciding it was just time to call it a day, and I think the car was telling me it was 10:30 when I closed my eyes, and much later when we landed at Cara's place.  She may have explained how to use the water in their camper before my head hit the pillow, but I honestly can't remember. 

Tough to see, but there is a Common Nighthawk in this lovely scene