Birding on the Bike Path

It’s been a dreary, drizzly winter in southern Oregon, and there have been few chances to get out on the trail. A consequence of that, for this blog, is a lack of anything substantial to write about. No trips; no hikes; no story. All our driving has been routine and mundane. In a sense, this is a good thing: it demonstrates perfectly that an electric car is just a car – like any other car, except that you fuel it up in your own garage, and you don’t have to take it in for oil changes. The Bolt is a perfectly competent vehicle for all the normal purposes any car would be used for – but, of course, that is the problem. There is nothing more boring than competence.

So I am happy to announce that we did actually get out of town and take a hike on Friday. Well, a little way out of town, and a sort of a hike. It was a mostly gray day, but there was a bit of blue sky and, though rain was expected, it wasn’t yet falling: so at about 2 PM we jumped in the car and headed for the Bear Creek Greenway, the bike path that runs from the north end of Ashland to just beyond the Jackson County Fairgrounds in Central Point. Someday it is expected to stretch all the way from the county park at Emigrant Lake to the banks of the Rogue River, but those plans have been on hold for a while. But the 25 miles that have been completed are already a pleasant place for an afternoon spur-of-the-moment outing.

We began at the Pine Street trailhead, at the edge of the fairgrounds and just off the main Central Point exit from I-5, and strolled south. It was gray where we were, but if we looked east, we could see snowy Mt McLoughlin shining brightly under an almost-blue sky. Occasional bikers and other walkers passed. The temperature was a comfortable 50ºF.

A small pond tucked between the paved path and the freeway held interesting reflections.

A mile or so south of Pine Street there is a large pond east of the path, and a small wildlife-viewing pavilion has been built there. We made that our goal for the day. It didn’t disappoint: the pond was busy with birds. Large flocks of canvasbacks and Canada geese; a few mallards; a scattering of other species. I spotted a small brown duck I couldn’t identify, and eventually realized that it wasn’t a duck at all; its shape and behavior were ducklike, but its beak was narrow and sharp. A bit of research later determined that it was a pied-billed grebe, a species I had not knowingly seen before. Not a red-letter day by birdwatching standards, perhaps, but a great relief from staying indoors. And the rain held off till we got home. Enjoy the pictures.

Pied-billed grebe.
Male canvasback.
Male (top) and female (bottom) canvasbacks, and a scaup.
Canada geese.

Tin Pan Mountain

A few pictures from our hike at the Mountain of the Rogue BLM recreation area near Rogue River last week. This is a new trail system, built in 2015; it’s primarily designed for mountain bikes, but hikers can use a few of the trails. The main trail goes all the way to the summit of Tin Pan Peak – a 1300′ elevation gain from the trailhead in a little under four miles. We’re saving that for another day. Today we were just checking out the area, so we stopped at about 850′ above the trailhead, at the intersection of the Rat Pack and Breakdown trails, about 2.5 miles in. No flowers (I understand there are plenty in the spring). There was some nice color from some of the young oaks, and we saw several woodrat nests.  Nothing much else to say: enjoy the pics (and scroll to the bottom for a link to something else new).

New Entry in Galleries: Oh the Places I’ve Been!

Canada’s Pukaskwa National Park, on the north shore of Lake Superior, is one of the most spectacular waterscapes in North America. Check it out by clicking on the image below.

Farewell to the High Country

November on McDonald Peak

McDonald Peak from the knoll.

Snow has not yet come to the high country of the Siskiyous. This is worrisome for the winter we are about to have, but it is also an opportunity. On November 6 we took advantage of that opportunity, with a ramble along the Split Rock Trail from Road 20 to the summit of McDonald Peak.

The Bolt at the Split Rock trailhead.


The Split Rock Trail begins at a tiny parking area just west of the ridge that forms the west wall of Grouse Gap, the large basin west of Mt Ashland. It ends at the summit of Wagner Butte, five miles to the north along the same ridge. A “use trail” for many years, maintained by hikers’ feet, it has recently been adopted into the Rogue River-Siskiou National Forest trail system, and now rates a trailhead sign and occasional maintenance. McDonald Peak is roughly a mile in. It is 7226 feet high, but that is less impressive than it may sound; the trail goes almost directly over its summit, and the entire route from trailhead to summit stays above 7000 feet.

I suffer from Reynaud’s Syndrome, which cuts off the circulation to the tips of my fingers if I get too cold, so we didn’t leave the house until after noon. The drive up was uneventful (although I do wish Road 20 would get some proper maintenance for what are developing into some pretty bad potholes), and we were on the trail by 1:30. There was haze in the valleys, but we were above most of that, and the views were glorious, stretching from Mt Shasta to the Crater Lake rim and almost everything in between. A flock of bluebirds swirled past as we climbed the south slope of the small knob we call “Little McDonald Peak” near the trailhead: they flew in 15s and 20s, fifteen or twenty feet in the air and then fifteen or twenty seconds on a convenient rock or red-fir limb. Near the same spot we found a few sulphur flowers still partially in bloom.

Western bluebird.
Sulphur flower

The actual summit of McDonald Peak is a rock outcrop about fifteen feet high, which the Split Rock Trail bypasses on the west side. It’s an easy scramble, so of course we summited. This was the site of the “geezer climb” my old friend and former climbing companion Cliff Olin and I made together in August 2017, roughly 50 years after our last previous climb together (and a lot easier than that one was!). Being there brought back pleasant memories of that trip.

The summit of McDonald Peak.
One lone phlox in bloom just below the summit.

Right: Cliff Olin and me summiting two different mountains. The top photo was taken on Sacajawea Peak in the Wallowa Mountains in 1966; the bottom photo is from our “geezer climb” in 2017.
Looking west from the summit.
Above and below: two views of McDonald Peak from the Split Rock trail.

It was still early when we got back to the car, so we added the half-mile round trip to the top of the gentle, nameless knoll west of McDonald Peak along the main crest of the Siskiyous. The electric propulsion system of the Bolt performed its magic on the way home, actually adding fuel to the battery instead of using it up as we came down the Mt Ashland Ski Road and the stretch of I-5 between Siskiyou Summit and Ashland, so we reached our garage with about the same charge showing on the range indicator as it had shown at the trailhead (just try to do that in a gas-powered vehicle). What I hope is the first of our winter storms is expected to come through at the end of this week, so this was probably our farewell trip to the high country for 2019.

Mt Shasta from the knoll.