Monday, March 14, 2016

The Adventures of Tracking Club and the Mysterious Scat. Also, a skeleton.



The beginning of spring is a magical time to be in the woods. As Persephone begins her journey of return to the loving arms of her mother, Demeter, she awakens the sleeping life force of the plants, and heralds the return of the many migrant species that call Oregon home for the summer. The dance of life, which never truly stops, begins to speed up from the stately waltz of winter to the staccato steps of summer's samba.

Tracking Club met again at BREC last weekend, and, while taking in the glorious sights and sounds of spring, had our most interesting day of tracking yet. Your humble narrator is happy to report that his attendance at Tracking Club has not been in vain, and over the course of the winter has progressed from casting around blindly for tracks in the sand to beginning to read the story of the land the way animals do, and to know where tracks might be, as well as follow elk and deer paths through the forest loam.

This week we decided to explore the “head waters” of the northern stream, and ventured forth to the area where it enters BREC on the eastern edge of the property, north of all the parking lots. We choose this area because we wanted to see where the coyote we have tracked across the sandy area was coming from, and we were not disappointed.

One of our discoveries was the moldy corpse of most of a Rough Skinned Newt. Your humble narrator can report with certainty that the body has been there, untouched, for the better part of a month at this point, with its severed tail nearby and a small pile of vomit in between. The story to be drawn from this evidence is an interesting one, shall be left to you, the reader.

We found many deer and and elk tracks and evidence of a well used route that curves around the human traffic areas of BREC. While on that trail we found our most exciting discovery yet! 



Most of a skeleton! Including a full skull and jaw bones, with most of the large leg bones and a lot of interesting tiny ones. June and her home school crew inspected the bones closely, and we believe that these are the bones of a domestic cat. We were surprised by the excellent condition of much of the skeleton, but June's home school crew discovered damage on several places on the right side of the animal and that most of the middle section of the skeleton was missing. This leads us to suspect that the cat may have been taken by a coyote or maybe a bobcat, which ate the middle of the animal, leaving the rest for other scavengers.

The bones are currently out at Camp Trackers and will be available for examination at the next Tracking Club meeting.

We're going to keep the skeleton for a short time and then return the bones to the land. The skull will stay in our burgeoning head museum.

After that we traveled to the archery area to see what we could see. 





We found an interesting set of deer prints that cut across the main trail on the way to the archery range.










At the archery range we found many tracks but the most interesting thing was some scat that was unlike anything we had seen before. The shape of the scat wasn't unusual, but what we could see inside perplexed us. There were dozens of similar sized delicate, white bone-like things. Quills? Feathers? Spines?


After some more scat dissecting, Kelsey found the key piece of evidence that let us figure out who the animal had eaten to produce such unusual poop.


Post your thoughts of what it was in the comments. Please also comment on what you think happened with the rough skinned newt, as well as your idea of the probable gait of the deer in the other photo. (Your humble narrator knows that it is hard to determine a gait from just 2 prints, but the Tracking Club is about puzzling out the art of tracking through experience.)


The Tracking Club meets the 1st Sunday of every month from 9-12 at BREC. Our next meeting is April 3rd. The club is open to anyone who has an interest in tracking and wants to learn more. This isn't a class, and while teaching and learning happens, this is intended as a time for people to gain experience with tracking in the field without the crutch of having an experienced tracker nearby answer all the questions.