red tide, green crabs, eiders & gulls an all the stuff left
Posted: Sun Aug 02, 2009 2:39 pm
This summer has been unreal in the "cleaning up after the gulls" on Muskrats decks.
All the eiders have moved into coves to eats green crabs which they do when their normal diet of mussels become red tide infested. I read somewhere that was how the indians knew not to eat shellfish-see what the eiders are eating before they feasted.
A subplot to this is the gulls follow the eiders around waiting for them to get a crab. Since the ducks need to eat the crab a little bit at a time it gives the gulls a chance to fly in and grab it. The end result is a boat deck covered with crab claws and legs and what's left after the rest is eaten, digested, and discharged.
The stuff is like 5200!!!!!!! you have to scrub & scrub to get it off! As a last resort we have laced the boat with lines stretching back and forth over the boom. Also fore & aft over the booms ( it goes right through the sail cover and stains:(( ). The whole process does not look too great and takes 20 min to rig & unrig.
We're wondering about a remote that will blow a horn every time I see them- we can see the boat from the front porch. What do they do with pelicans?? God that must be brutal!
In the past we always have a few calling cards from the gulls and call it part of life on the coast. Maybe we just have to hope for the end of the red tide and call it good- any good gull diverter ideas?
Jon
All the eiders have moved into coves to eats green crabs which they do when their normal diet of mussels become red tide infested. I read somewhere that was how the indians knew not to eat shellfish-see what the eiders are eating before they feasted.
A subplot to this is the gulls follow the eiders around waiting for them to get a crab. Since the ducks need to eat the crab a little bit at a time it gives the gulls a chance to fly in and grab it. The end result is a boat deck covered with crab claws and legs and what's left after the rest is eaten, digested, and discharged.
The stuff is like 5200!!!!!!! you have to scrub & scrub to get it off! As a last resort we have laced the boat with lines stretching back and forth over the boom. Also fore & aft over the booms ( it goes right through the sail cover and stains:(( ). The whole process does not look too great and takes 20 min to rig & unrig.
We're wondering about a remote that will blow a horn every time I see them- we can see the boat from the front porch. What do they do with pelicans?? God that must be brutal!
In the past we always have a few calling cards from the gulls and call it part of life on the coast. Maybe we just have to hope for the end of the red tide and call it good- any good gull diverter ideas?
Jon