It was already 80 F, windless and sultry when we got down to the beach this morning before 9 AM. Not a cloud in the sky.
FWIW, the Sea Nettle probability is still pegged at 100%. This enormous mass of them collects behind the jetty at Flag Harbor. The rest of the beach is bad but not quite this bad. Enough to discourage barefoot wading, though.
Fortunately for Skye, her thick fur keeps the nettles off her skin. This is about as deep as she'll go (voluntarily), and she did a lot of wading to beat the heat today. As it was, she was getting pretty miserable, and we turned back early, fearing that she was overheating. But she's fine, after a shower and a nap.
The Weed du Jour. It seems to be about the only wildflower flowering this time of year. I'm still trying to figure out what it is.
It has pretty yellow flowers, that continue to emerge from the top of the long stem. It'll probably turn out to be some horrible invasive weed; it seems like most of the stuff that does well in the cliffs is.
Fellow shark's tooth hunters. Actually, a boy with them turned out to be a fisherman of sorts, when we came back he had a Skilletfish in his bucket which I identified for him.
Only a few small sharks teeth today, and one drums tooth; nothing picture worthy.
Another fisherman (or is it a fisherwoman?) perched on the root ball of a tree deposited in shallow water by Tropical Storm Lee last year. Almost time for more storms to come and shuffle the trash around and let a few new fossils out of the cliffs. We saw lots of Ospreys, and maybe one eagle, at a distance.
Someone kayak fishing in the channel at Flag Harbor. I didn't see him catch any fish, but I did see him try, unsuccessfully, to bring in one of the boulders that make up the jetty. 10 lb test won't cut it.
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