Originally posted by redhilltown...if you hike/camp/adventure you know your birds and this thing was HUGE and could not be mistaken for
anything else. .../quote]
In the spring of 1965 I was fortunate to have know Dick Smith, for whom the Dick Smith Wilderness is named in the Los Padres N.F. of the central coast
of California.
I was teaching at a school that owns nearly three thousand acres contiguous to the LPNF and someone had spotted a condor over part of the school's
property. We called Dick, who was a writer at the Santa Barbara News-Press at the time and a superb naturalist.
Dick responded fast and we acquired some offal from a local meat cutter and baited an open ridge and left it for a few days. I accompanied Dick before
dawn one morning to stake out the site from a grove of oaks about a hundred meters from the bait.
While we waited we talked in low whispers. I was a recent resident of California having lived most of my early life in the southeastern states, and I
had never seen a California condor in the wild...maybe not even in a zoo.
I asked Dick, "How will I know a condor from a turkey vulture"?
He whispered, "You won't have to ask."
As the day warmed and the thermals built over those foothills, turkey vultures began to appear and a few landed to feed.
Then Dick nudged my arm and pointed to one side and much higher in the sky than the vultures.
"Holy $h!+"! I muttered. The difference is extraordinary and redhilltown, you're correct. They cannot be mistaken.
I've been fortunate to have seen several condors in the wild, even had a photo picked up by AP "back in the day", and they are truly magnificent
birds. The most recent ones we've watched are along the Colorado River near Lee's Ferry. I managed to get several photos of those, but with tags on
their wings I don't esteem the pix as much as I do those from the '60s and early '70s.
It's gratifying to see this attempt to return the birds to the Sierra de San Pedro Mŕrtir.
Allen R |