SYMBIOS

CONDOR TALES

Book Details

CHAPTER 18
THE FIRST TIME

From my field notes - "11 December 1969-1100: with John Borneman, hiked up Sisar Canyon area to base of Topatopa Bluffs.
"1400: adult condor appeared over west end of Topatopa Bluffs; drifted south toward Sulfur Mountain, then west; circled up canyon and eventually (1445) roosted in lowest part of east wall of westernmost Topa cliff canyon.
"1500: we left area; condor still on roost."

* * *

On our return to California, Sally, the kids, and I saw the Ojai Valley the way it should be seen, from the top of Dennison Grade on the road from Santa Paula. To the east of us were the Topatopa Bluffs, a rugged escarpment that we would learn was the collector of uncommon Southern California snows and the focal point of a fantastic "pink moment," as the setting sun created its own lowland version of alpenglow. Ahead was the chaparral-covered wall of the Ojai Front, stretching west and seeming to merge unbrokenly with White Ledge Peak and the Santa Ynez Mountains beyond. Behind us was the lower bulk of Sulfur Mountain, dipping west toward the ocean. Below was Shan-gri-La itself, the Ojai Valley: half town, half orange grove, all beautiful and, from this elevation, a little other-worldly. Easy to see why it was picked as the idyllic paradise in the film version of James Hilton's "Lost Horizon." Easy to imagine California condors circling the rugged Topatopa Bluffs.
Much of November and December 1969 was taken up with the necessities involved in moving to a new place and taking on a new job. We stayed for awhile in an expensive motel, then a cheaper motel, and finally our own home (which seemed impossibly expensive then, but the price seems laughable now). I began to get adjusted to my new office, one room conveniently located in the Ojai Ranger Station, and started to familiarize myself with the files left by Fred Sibley. I renewed acquaintance with my college friend, Dean Carrier, the Forest Service condor biologist; was introduced to the other local Forest Service folks; and re-met John Borneman, the National Audubon Society "condor warden" (now more appropriately called condor "naturalist") who I had first met during the 1965 condor survey.

About two weeks after arrival in Ojai, Dean suggested that we begin my orientation to "condor country" by checking out the nesting habitat up in San Luis Obispo County. One pair of condors there had been nesting every year for a number of years in succession, a very unusual circumstance. (Because of the long reproductive cycle, condors usually were unable to breed in consecutive years.) I was game - at least I was for the first half of the trip. I thought I was in pretty good physical shape, but I soon learned otherwise. Cruel joke: we had to hike downhill to get to the condor observation area, meaning that we had to climb uphill to get back to the car. Even downhill wasn't easy: it was hot and dry, the terrain was very steep, and the "hike" was really a mile or so of crashing through and crawling under dense, clothes-ripping, tick-infested chaparral. We checked the nest cliff from a distance, and saw fresh "whitewash" (condor excrement), but there was no sign of the condors, themselves. That was disappointing to me, but nowhere near as disappointing as having to face the climb back up the hill that we had just slid down. It was still just as hot and dry as it had been, the brush was just as dense, and up was so much harder than down. Before we reached the top, I could barely put one foot ahead of the other, and was likely pretty close to heat prostration. We made it without having to call out the rescue team for me, but it felt like a near thing. What an embarrassing introduction to condor research. And still no condor for my "life list."

A couple weeks later, John Borneman found me in my office going through old condor files, and suggested we spend the afternoon in the field. I was ready. (I didn't even ask him if we were going to have an uphill climb at the end of the day.) We drove up Dennison Grade, across the Upper Ojai Valley, and up Sisar Canyon. From there, we hiked up a bulldozed fire break to the base of the Topatopa Bluffs. As we sat in the bright sunlight gazing out over the Ojai Valley to the Pacific Ocean beyond, an adult California condor soared into view from the Nordhoff Peak area. Just like in the books: orange head, white triangles under the wings, massive wingspread, flight as effortless and steady as could be. It glided back and forth in the air space between the Bluffs and Sulfur Mountain, sometimes near and sometimes far away, until some 45 minutes later it landed on a brown-banded pinnacle at the west end of the Bluffs. We watched for another 15 minutes or so, but it seemed to have settled for the night, so we walked back to the car and drove back to Ojai. I had seen my first condor - and only about five miles from home.

The condor drought ended in earnest, as the next day John and I hiked up Santa Paula Canyon into an historic condor nesting area. We immediately saw two condors, and watched them for two hours as they went through what I was to learn was a typical winter morning condor ritual.
0935 - 1 condor (unclassified) roosting in a snag on ridge between Santa Paula Canyon and the Bear Heaven area. 1016 - 1 adult condor circling above Jackson Camp, went out of sight quickly; reappeared 1030, soared around, landed at 1037 on rock outcrop in side canyon east of Jackson Camp; sat sunning 1039-1049.
1043 - discovered second adult condor roosting on cliff below Bird A. 1055 - golden eagle passed near condors, no obvious reaction. 1058 - airplane in distance; lower condor (Bird B) turned head from side to side, but continued head tilting after I couldn't hear the plane anymore, so maybe not cause and effect. 1108 - Bird B left shadowy perch, took short soar and landed a short distance away in the sun; immediately started sunning. 1112 - Bird A left perch, soared down Santa Paula Canyon in a flex glide, out of sight 1114.
1115 - Bird B quit sunning. 1116 - took off, soared to the shady wall again, landed with its face to the wall in a grassy cup. 1117 - raised and spread wings, turned around, then turned back to the wall a minute later. 1127 - has just been sitting for 10 minutes, occasionally turning head; raised wings (balancing?) and walked a few steps. 1136 - took off, glided directly to edge of rockpile just right of the original perch. 1138 - took off, long glide (one or two double dips) down canyon and out of sight 1139.

In that two-hour period, the descriptions in Koford's monograph began to become real to me. I had seen the condors react to the morning sun by moving to exposed perches and spreading their wings to take advantage of the warming rays ("sunning"). I had observed a typical "flex glide," the condor's way of streamlining its wings so that it can lose altitude at steady, increasing speed. The diagnostic "double dip," which condor survey participants were told was a sure sign they were seeing a condor, was straight out of the book: the wings flexing quickly downward to almost touch under the condor's belly, before just as quickly returning to the flat, steady, typical glide position.
I was getting to like this new job.

 

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