Season of the Tides
Posted by Erin on 14 May 2012 | Tagged as: home, Uncategorized, wilderness kids
Even the tides have a season. In spring, the tides switch with the tilt of the earth, bringing the lowest lows not in the middle of the night, but at a much more manageable 10AM. Punchy slushy snow still covers the high country in April and May. Plants are only beginning to unfurl. The world at the yurt is an interfingering of brown and white, mud and slush, the dry stalks of last years grass and the hopeful dirt of a too-early garden, melted and snowed on and melted again.
But the beach? Fuzzy purple sunflower stars, rose-colored anemones, bright orange sponges, and shimmering green algae… Chitons in leathery-black or mossy grey, or sporting gaudy pink stripes. The red tufts of tubeworms protruding cautiously from their curled white lairs. Nearly translucent anemones visible only in the bright white stripes that grace their delicate tentacles. Red-clawed hermit crabs tucking themselves within the hairy shells discarded by whelks. Sucker fish in hues of granite and siltsone, tails curled around their body in a perfect mimic of a pebble. Pink worms twisting themselves in knots in our white plastic bucket, beside tussling limpets and crabs.
Low tide is intricate, bizarre, with a new discovery under every rock, and a new assemblage of creatures on every stretch of beach. My 10th grade marine science class imprinted at least two things firmly in my brain: the scientific name of the green sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus drobachiensis), and an enduring love of tidepooling. My kids are merely an excuse.
5/6/12, -5.0 feet, 9:12 AM
At Outside Beach, I flitted between seaweed-covered boulders, seeing nothing but Christmas anemones, barnacles, and bidarkis (black katy chitons). But there are always Christmas anemones, and unlike most of the other Seldovians at the beach that morning, I wasn’t out collecting for a meal of bidarkis. I hurried over the slippery seaweed, looking for something different, wondering why the sandbar wasn’t out despite the -5.5 predicted tide.
Katmai was thrilled with the Christmas anemones, pointing them out in his high-pitched ear-splitting squeal, insisting I examine each discovery. I picked a ribbon of purple-brown seaweed (young dulse) from the rock and passed it to Lituya over my shoulder, then leaned down to feel the tacky surface of the anemone’s pink tentacles as they retreated away from my touch. Some were just mottled lumps of red and green, with tentacles neatly away into their cylindrical bodies. Others hung from the rocks wide open, improbably stretched, pendulous and colorful blobs melting down towards a missing ocean. And there were actually five kinds of anemones. High tidepools full of delicate rose anemones, the squat yellow cousin of the Christmas anemone, the nearly-transparent one with zebra-like stripes, and one stray soul in bright green… And a sea star missing three legs, and a purple urchin hiding in a crevice by the radiant fans of tube worms, and delicate hermit crabs with striped white and grey legs inhabiting opalescent snail shells. And then they were gone.
A few of the sand dollars were lodged upright in the sand, as if they’d failed to take their cues from gravity this day.
A few months each year, a few days each month, a few hours each day… The excitement of the tidepool world is whipped up by the briefness of the moment, by the water lapping at the ankles of my rubber boots, pulling back up to obscure the world nearly as fast as we could discover it.
A rising tide carried us – kids and life vests and camping gear and a pair of bright colored packrafts – into a muddy lagoon of periwinkle snails and washed-up algae, to explore a wind-twisted forest rising on cliffs above the ocean.
5/7/12, -6.0 feet, 10:00 AM
As the dancing shadows of sunlit spruce branches hit the edge of the grey tent, it was impossible to be annoyed at Lituya’s crack-of-dawn awakening. Eating oatmeal by the campfire, I watched the ocean slowly pulling back to reveal the rocks of the Naskowak Reef. This tide was even lower.
The sun hit a boulder as I listened to the hiss and pop of a hundred barnacles, rotating their beaks in their castle-like shells. The macro lens on our camera magnified the cells of the green algae, the translucent bodies of shrimp-like plankton, the tube feet of sea stars… The red arms of blood stars peeked out through the gaps in thick curtains of ribbon kelp. Worms and isopods and squiggling fish lurked beneath cobbles carpeted in a blanket of young dulse. With May’s long sunlight, the rocks were lush with algae of all kinds, slipping under our boots, shading a menagerie of creatures beneath their damp fronds.
The kids alternated between enchantment and frustration with the typical ping-pong rapiditity of the very young. The sunflower star is awesome! But the seaweed is too slippery! And I’m so incredibly excited to see the little fish you caught in the bucket! But I wanted to walk with daddy and now I’m going to scream and cry for 20 minutes about a decision we can’t undo!
Clam worm. The kids call these “fang worms” for the fang-like protrusions that stick out from their head.
We moved to the simpler terrain of the sand flat, where half-buried sand dollars littered the surface, impossible not to step on. A bright orange and purple sunflower star waved its many arms in the inch or two of water that remained it it’s small depression, while another one sat motionless and sad-looking on dry sand. We walked through the eelgrass, nearly kicking up fish, while the tide flowed in around us.
5/8/12, -5.3 feet, 10:50 AM
With Katmai at preschool and Hig waylaid by more productive work, Lituya was my only companion. She squawked from the wrap on my back as I bent over, nose nearly to the sand, eyes and camera lens trained on tiny crabs and fish that appeared from beneath the cobbles on the beach. In her growing catalogue of words, I picked out an excited refrain of “rock”, “water”, and “ocean”. Visiting students from other towns crowded the beach beside us, squealing at their finds, a fleet of rubber boots leaving tracks on the spit of sand and eelgrass at Inside Beach.
I set her wiggly form down, watching her run over the sand with a toddler’s bowlegged gait, beelining for the water. I turned over a few more rocks.
The water began to rise. It was all over – until next month.







































