Louisiana
Louisiana birdwatchers learn how quickly life changes
One in all my favourite childhood books was “Robinson Crusoe,” the well-known castaway story by Daniel Defoe that first appeared in 1719. What first bought my consideration was the story’s locale, a tropical island that appeared very very like my south Louisiana summers.
I used to be additionally thrilled by Defoe’s sense of how rapidly life can change. Inside hours, his Crusoe goes from the home drudgery of a creaky ship to unique exile in a jungle wilderness — all due to a shift within the climate.
Defoe’s genius for drama got here from residing via turbulent instances in his native England, I feel, however he may need additionally grasped the vagaries of existence by watching birds. I developed that idea through the pandemic lockdowns, when many people tackled new sorts of studying to go the time. That’s how I got here throughout Defoe’s “A Tour By way of the Complete Island of Nice Britain,” an enormous travelogue he wrote not lengthy after “Crusoe.” Defoe wrote at a time when many individuals spent lifetimes with out going past their dwelling villages. His reference to “the entire island of Nice Britain” tells readers they’re in for an odyssey.
A vivid passage unfolds when Defoe stops by the coastal village of Southwold, the place he spots a large number of swallows, “such an infinite quantity that they coated the entire roof of the church, and of a number of homes close to, and maybe … of extra homes which I didn’t see.”
A neighborhood tells Defoe that the birds will likely be on their means, although it appears onerous to imagine that such a horde goes wherever rapidly. However by the following morning, as Defoe tells it, each swallow is gone.
For me, the departure of goldfinches from this nook of Louisiana every spring feels simply as abrupt. I first spot them in my yard round Christmas, they usually normally go away shortly after Mardi Gras. They’re principally olive once they arrive however get yellower because the climate warms. This 12 months’s goldfinches had been particularly welcome at our place as a result of they arrived through the vacation freeze final December, when every little thing else in our yard was brown and boring. At one level, they had been so plentiful that the garden appeared to roil with them.
When my spouse and I left for a brief street journey proper after Mardi Gras, I assumed we’d return to search out the goldfinches gone. Positive sufficient, they’d vanished throughout our absence, like tenants skipping the hire.
I believed I’d noticed a laggard final week, however it turned out to be a yellow-rumped warbler — a bit chicken, principally brown and grey, that will get its title from the splotch on its tail that appears like a dollop of mustard. I perceive that these warblers will quickly go away for different locations, too.
All of the extra motive to concentrate, I suppose. I watch the window these spring days as I as soon as learn “Crusoe,” wanting to study what’s going to occur subsequent.
E-mail Danny Heitman at danny@dannyheitman.com.
Louisiana
Normal is unremarkable in and of itself: 2024 Inspirit winners are 'doing something bigger'
The Inspirit Award winners seem to have found ways to thrive in the work they do that is bigger than themselves.
Louisiana
Merry Christmas: good luck with right gift
Ho, Ho, Ho oh no, it’s time to get that last-minute gift for your favorite hunter and fisher.
It’s a challenge, if only because most of these folks are particular about the things they use to pursue game and fish — “persnickety” was the way old folks described this trait decades ago.
What it means is unless you know — and really know — your outdoors recipient then don’t presume the guy or gal at the local or big-box store will know anything more about them than you do.
What it means is don’t buy fishing line, or lures, or shotgun shells, or bullets, or rods, or reels, or firearms cases, or those silly T-shirts with a stunned-looking bass and “Fish Fear Me” written underneath.
That T-shirt thing only makes your favorite angler the target for his sharp-tongued fishing buddies, who will tell him the thing he feared most was being afraid to tell his gift-giver that the T-shirt was going to be a target for barbed comments. Oh, he’d wear it for you, but not around his buddies.
So, what’s left?
Size matters, and it’s important when trying to make a gift of the just-right hunting jacket, warm boots, cooling fishing shirts and shorts, warm gloves and hats.
And don’t buy that tackle box because it “looks big,” unless you were with your fishing-frenzied, Christmas-present target and he or she admired it with piscatorial lust in their eye.
That leaves us with gift cards. Sure you can go shopping and make a reasonably good guess about hunting things and fishing things, and here’s where you find prices and buy a gift card for that amount.
It’ll send them to a store where they can get the just-right fit, the just-right style, the just-right camo pattern, the perfect handle, weight and length for a fishing rod, and things like the fishing line, lures and boxes they want.
What’s best is you’ll send them to a Christmas-night rest with all kinds of sugared thoughts that will turn into dreams of that hopefully marked-down shopping spree.
Merry Christmas!
Under the tree
An important bill awaits President Biden’s signature to take hold for our country’s anglers, and another is moving forward after passing a committee vote.
ACE — America’s Conservation Enhancement Reauthorization Act — passed a U.S. Senate vote last week and sits on the president’s desk.
This act continues the National Fish Habitat Partnership, a voluntary, non-regulatory, and locally driven program that has funded more than 1,300 on-the-ground aquatic habitat improvement projects throughout the country.
“The $230 billion sportfishing industry and America’s 57.7 million recreational anglers applaud Congress’ efforts to advance fish habitat restoration and conservation,” American Sportfishing Association spokesman Mike Leonard said.
Included in its many pages is reauthorization of the North American Wetlands Conservation Act and a provision that traditional tackle will not be banned by the Environmental Protection Agency for five years.
The second bill, EXPLORE — Expanding Public Lands Outdoor Recreation Experiences — had the backing of more than a dozen hunting and recreational organizations. This new bill is designed to expand recreation opportunities, improving infrastructure and removing barriers to allow more access to federal lands for hiking, camping, fishing and hunting.
Striped bass
Yes, Louisiana waters, mostly from the Mississippi River east into the Pontchartrain Basin and to the Pearl River, has an annual fall-winter run of sea-run striped bass.
Now, Wildlife and Fisheries wants fishermen taking to those waters to help collect striped bass samples.
More than 20 years ago, a mid-fall trip to the Mississippi River produced three striped bass among the largemouth, spotted and white bass and redfish caught near Fort Jackson.
This project is one of four main items currently listed on the agency’s website.
To get details, description of this species and instructions, go to the LDWF website: wlf.louisiana.gov
Expertise needed
The Committee on National Statistics has a call-out for nominations for “experts” to review the standards and evaluate the survey and data standards of the Marine Recreational Information Program, the long-debated federal fisheries data collections and reporting plan.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine has formed the committee and has a Dec. 31 deadline for nominations. Google this organization for details.
Louisiana
Louisiana Tech transfer DT David Blay commits to Miami
Miami received a commitment from its first defensive lineman of the winter transfer portal window. Louisiana Tech transfer David Blay pledged to Miami Saturday afternoon.
He chose Miami over Illinois, Oklahoma, Penn State, and USC.
In three seasons, the 6’4″, 300-plus pounder recorded 101 tackles, 23 tackles for loss, and 11.5 sacks. He played 443 snaps in 2024.
According to Pro Football Focus, Blay has a 76.9 run defense grade, an 80.2 tackling grade, and a 64.7 pass rush grade.
Blay is a Philadelphia (PA) native and played for D-2 school West Chester University before transferring to Louisiana Tech.
According to Rivals.com Blay was an unrated player coming out of Truman High School in Levittown, PA.
Blay will join an interior defensive line group in Miami that includes Ahmad Moten and Justin Scott.
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