Mile 202 Report
North Spit Alsea River
March 26, 2016
A quiet, cloudy day on the Bayshore.
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A quiet, cloudy day on the Bayshore. We saw two families, grouped in 6 and 4, respectively, out walking on the beach. We found significantly more marine debris than usual, especially fishing-related items. Odd findings included a crate, a garbage can lid, and a dummy foot for shoe making. All were covered in barnacles. We also found a Pacific loon very recently deceased entangled in a fishing net. We noted a high presence of Velella velellas in the wrack line, along with a lot of other driftwood and items washed up in the tide.
Conditions
Temperature: 52 F. Cloud Cover: Cloudy. Wind Velocity: Moderate. Tide Level: 7.2 feet.
Human Activities
Number of people: 10. Walking or running: 10. Quiet afternoon on the Bayshore. Saw two families, of 6 and 4, respectively, walking on the beach.
Concerns
Litter
Beached Birds
Total dead birds: 2. Enganglement: 1. We discovered two dead shorebirds as part of our COASST survey. We found a Pacific loon entangled in netting. We tagged it as bird #339 and removed the netting. We also tagged a Black scoter as #340.
Dead Fish or Invertebrates
Unusual concentration. Velella Velella
Driftline Content
Small rocks, Seaweeds and seagrass, Shells, Wood pieces, Land-based debris (picnics, etc.), Marine debris (plastic, styrofoam, etc. washing in from the sea), Styrofoam, Ocean-based debris (from fishing boats, ship trash, etc.). Crate, garbage can lid, foot dummy for shoe making - all covered in barnacles
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Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
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Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
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Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
A beautifully calm, sunny day, maybe the last for awhile, with a fifteen mile view from Seal Rock to Cape Perpetua and hardly anyone on the beach except for two surf fishers and a couple valiantly trying to launch a kite with no wind.
Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
As I began yesterday's mile walk and monthly COASST beached bird survey, a light rain began to fall, the first in months.
Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
As I have done before, I combined today's walk with my monthly COASST survey for dead seabirds.
Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
The beach was fairly cool today after 99 degrees two days ago.
Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
This was my second monthly beached bird survey for COASST (Coastal Observation And Seabird Survey Team) which I combined with my mile walk.
Jon French
Mile 202
North Spit Alsea River
A dead certacean was reported to the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network to be on the beach in Bayshore Oregon by Beach Entrance 67d.
JLcoasties