Sunday, November 22, 2015

Mt. Tumutumu

The rain, which had been gently commingling with sweat in my damp t-shirt all day, suddenly obliterated sight and hearing in heavy sheets. We were taking a break at the top of Tumutumu, Ofu's pinnacle, and this was the signal to start heading back down the slippery jungle two-track. I decided to finally pull out my thrift-store rain jacket, which stuck to my wet arms as I tried to drag it around my already sopping body. Day three of our so-far unsuccessful recon mission to find the elusive Shy Ground Dove was coming up short. This small brown dove is declining across its Polynesian range, and, amongst the main islands of American Samoa, has been detected incidentally only on Ofu-Olosega by biologists and locals a handful of times in the past decade. Each new fact-hazy anecdote we are told strangely adds doubt, rather than hope to our search and in turn, my suspicion takes on tall-tale proportions as well (...maybe everyone has been mistaking other species for it, maybe none of the local biologists are that great of birders after all, maybe the specimens from historical collections were mislabeled...). One of the main purposes of our banding project here is to gather much-needed natural history information about this species before it goes extinct on American Samoa, unless it already has. We are all trying not to think about that possibility.

“If they're out here,” Bobby says hopefully, “we will find them.” He's probably right. No one has made a concerted effort to be outside every morning observing birds on these twin islands in many years. There is still hope. A flash of wings darts past my peripheral vision – could it be? Excitedly pulling foggy binos to my eyes, I see not a dove, but Pacific Golden Plover uncharacteristically riding the wind like the White-rumped Swiftlets cruising openings in the canopy above our heads. Seems weird to see a shorebird at 500m, but I've stopped having expectations about anything in this place. I wipe rain out of my eyes and continue after our field party, two Samoan naturalists and a bat biologist who are probably halfway down and already making plans for tonight's barbecue.

The hike, besides painfully reminding me of the existence of my glutius maximus, was illuminating in other ways. Bobby and I saw two new species – plump, sweet-singing Polynesian Starling in the canopy, and a pair of of courting Samoan Shrikebills chattering like wrens in the undergrowth. We scouted promising locations for a banding station, and took in breathtaking views of the coastline and Ofu's famous canine-teeth cliffs from a windy overlook. The footpath to the overlook was flanked by orchids, epiphites, gigantic ferns towering above our heads like relics from the Jurassic era, and a rocky cave with a geo-cachers bucket of treasure hidden inside.

I was leading the lagging half of our party that consisted of birders – me, Bobby and Kim – when suddenly I heard the soft trill of wings erupt near my right ear. Looking up, I saw a vase-shaped clump of organic matter covered in moss and perched on the crown of a scraggly sapling. I tried in vain to peer in the top of the clump, mumbling excitedly about a possible nest. Bobby, deft and practical, pulled out his phone and reached up to take a picture – revealing two speckled eggs! We backed up the trail to wait and see what expectant parent would return. The moment we settled into a crouch behind some dripping branches we heard the voices of our companions coming back down the trail from the overlook, threatening to thwart our patience. Kim ran ahead to intercept them, and only a few moments later, two chattering birds chased each other past the sapling, and one snuck up to the nest and settled down, its head and tail poking out the top of the mossy vase – a Samoan Shrikebill! It seemed endearingly naive to our presence, even as Bobby crept closer to take a photo. It sat still long enough for the others to approach and for me to make a decent little field sketch in my rite-in-the-rain. Kim said it was the first Shrikebill nest she'd seen in her two years here.

Not suspecting to top this moment of the hike, we continued to the overlook. After peeking into the cave and using a rope to scale the last slick slope, we popped out of the jungle onto a small grassy platform that seemed to perch impossibly on the edge of a drop straight down to the shore. White-tailed Tropicbirds floated above the glimmering turquoise coral reef and an ominous gray cloud perched on the peak of Olosega like a Russian fur hat. The wind nearly blew us all to our deaths and we basked in the surreal beauty of the twin emerald islands before us, made all the more sublime by curtains of sooty fog and approaching rain.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Sili



Eight hours. Lurching into the dark, a rusting mini-tanker called M.V.Sili carries passengers and cargo to Ofu. Consciousness comes and goes like the waves crashing over the railing, soaking Bobby and me, then sloshing across the floor, boxes and shoes swirling around underneath the steel bench where I attempt to sleep, cushioned by a few chipping layers of paint. Everything saran-wrapped or else. Large palettes hydroplaning. Unlatched metal gates swinging open and clanging shut. Deafening chug and choking odor of diesel engine. I get up to have a look, stumbling to my feet, slipping on wet and gyroscoping floor. Grasp for the railing, look out into blackness pierced only a few meters by floodlight. Through stinging raindrops I see swells so big they seem almost to swallow the boat and spit it back out with each pass. I bumble back to my bench, curl up as tight as I can, and wait. Am I asleep? How did Polynesians do it in canoes?



The darkness gives way ever so slightly to cloudy steel gray. I head for the bow. Seasickness, miraculously avoided until now, creeps into my belly. A hunk of land growing on the horizon. Noddies look as tiny and fragile as butterflies flitting between the swells. Boobies careening. Dolphins surfacing beneath the bow. A palm-studded cove invites us to dock. Tinny sounds of K-Ci and Jojo's All My Life beam from a teenager's pocket. Unrecognizable dawn chorus, tempered by rooster cries, wafts down from a looming slope. Home for the next 4 months.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Rain

The rain doesn't pour in American Samoa, it pummels. The roar is deafening, like an army of HVAC exhaust units, the percussion of billions of heavy raindrops hitting billions of thick, leathery leaves, not to mention rooftops, cars, roads, trash cans, piles of detritus, puddles turning into ponds, and of course, the ocean. Even indoors with the windows shut, you have to converse in decibels usually reserved for busy sports bars on game night. You can hear the deluge approaching well before feeling a single drop. Being fourteen degrees south of the Equator, there is no proper summer or winter here, only a rainy season from November to May, and a slightly less rainy season May-October. Clouds are a near-constant, amazingly unpredictable aspect to the scenery here, billowing up the steep cliffs as if birthed from salt spray, gathering in ominous bouquets then just as suddenly evaporating, marching along the horizon like celestial tankers, or reflecting a psychedelic palette with hues that mix and splatter as the sun sets into the ocean. A black cloud usually squats over each island's highest ridge, threatening though not always delivering. But when it does, it really really does. Luckily, the deluge rarely lasts long, sometimes a few minutes, sometimes a few days. Sometimes it's pouring on your house while your neighbor enjoys sunshine and rainbows. Sometimes it doesn't even rain all day. But the sheer force at which clouds can throw water on these islands is why annual rainfall for the territory can average two to three hundred inches per year.

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Welcome to American Samoa



“What's the latest gossip?” I ask my crew leader, Kim Kayano, biologist for the Department of Marine and Wildlife Resources of American Samoa. She's heard that we might be able to load supplies onto the Sili tomorrow and depart on it the next day. We've heard this rumor, or some version of it, about seven times in the past week, since arriving on Tutuila, American Samoa's main island. The Sili is a mysterious boat that brings semi-weekly supplies and travelers to the people living on the outlying Manua islands of Ta'u and Ofu-Olosega. The Sili has been in “dry dock” for repairs for over a month, and right as it was getting ready to dip its belly back into harbor, the local power company decided to charter the entire boat for their own purposes, with various promises to bring us, or our supplies, or just one truck and one human and no supplies, with them to Manua. We, meaning myself and my partner, Bobby Wilcox, are here on contract with Institute of Bird Populations to conduct a bird banding survey on Ofu-Olosega through the end of March. With the Sili's current reputation, we can't really afford to travel there without the stockpile of food we bought at Cost-U-Less that we hope will carry us through the very real potential of no resupply until we return in late March. We have learned quickly that frustration is futile; the only reasonable reaction is to laugh and say “sounds perfect.” After all, this particular Limbo offers ocean views and decent snorkeling, how can we complain? Not to mention, we are staying with a bat biologist who is currently taking care of two little orphans that enjoy papaya and belly rubs, and practice flying around their aviary (batiary?) at dusk. At least once a day, I think someone has thrown a basketball at the house, then I realize it was a falling coconut. There are certainly worse places to be indefinitely detained.



American Samoa is situated approximately halfway between Hawai'i and New Zealand, which is to say it's in the middle of effing nowhere on the big blue side of the Earth, along with a smattering of hundreds of other volcanic sneezes with high proportions of vowels in their names. The only flights to American Samoa launch from Honolulu or Apia, Samoa - what used to be called less ambiguously Western Samoa, the independent half of this 9-island archipelago, which also happens to be a significantly more important tourist destination, for infrastructural reasons that are becoming all too obvious. Heading southwest from Honolulu International Airport, I was pleasantly surprised to find myself a minority on the tin can that lofted us nearly to the date line – most people traveling to American Samoa are American Samoan. The main reason for this, and the lack of tourism, is that ninety percent of land here is communally owned by indigenous family dynasties and it is illegal to transfer ownership to anyone less than half-Samoan. How they managed to maintain this traditional system after becoming a US territory in 1900 is impressive and commendable, or close-minded and an obstacle to development, depending on who you ask. The National Park of American Samoa, part of the US National Park system, actually leases land in 50-year increments directly from its family owners, allowing subsistence agriculture and fishing within its boundaries. Bobby and I have yet to make it over to the area of the Park north of Pago Pago, partly for lack of transport but especially for fear that we may miss the fateful call that the Sili is loading for departure!