One day of sightseeing in the Seto
Inland Sea, to the northwest of Matsuyama. With visits to Nobutsuna and
Nakajima Island.
Ferry departure from Takahama Port.
Fishing activity near
Muzuki Island.
A dark morph Pacific
Reef Egret Egretta sacra, near Muzuki Island.
Nobutsuna Island.
Arrival at Nobutsuna Island.
Slaty-backed Gull Larus
schistisagus in the Nobutsuna harbour.
Finally, a presentable example of
an adult Temminck’s Cormorant Phalacrocorax
capillatus? Note the extensive white facial disk. I can assume now that the
cormorant from the previous post is a Great Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo(?).
Black-eared Kite Milvus lineatus, eating a fish in the
Nobutsuna harbour. A few minutes earlier another kite pirated a fish there from
a Slaty-backed Gull.
Ceramic Octopus traps in the
Nobutsuna harbour, more environmental friendly than the plastic ones we find
washed up on Portuguese beaches by the thousands.
There were a lot of flowers on
Nobutsuna, even though we’re well into December.
Persimmons, or kaki
in Japanese, one of my favourite fruits back in Portugal. It originates
from this part of the world.
Many of the houses and fields we saw
were abandoned. Later generations don’t see the point in making a living on
these remote islands. Inhabitants are abandoning the smaller islands on a large
scale and move to the larger cities. We tried to follow a trail in order to
make a walk around the island, though it had not been maintained for a while
and had been taken over by the jungle again.
Most of the Mikan or Citrus unshiu
fields are still maintained and their plantations cover large surfaces of the
islands. These islands are known to produce some of the finest Japanese Mikan,
a sort of mix between a mandarin and an orange.
Meadow bunting Embrezia cioides. In some locations we noticed
that the Mikan plantations were full with passerines. Most fled and remained
unidentified.
Unidentified Mantis on the sea wall.
A representative of the Shinto religion.
Arrival at Nakajima Island.
On Nakajima the most precious Mikan
trees were protected from birds with netting. The Mikans on the trees on the
right all carry a ‘sock’ to protect them from insects. Elsewhere on the island
birds are expelled from plantations with explosive devises.
Eastern Buzzard Buteo japonicus, a common bird of the
forested parts of the islands.
Nakajima Island is the only island
that has an extensive road system, which includes this tunnel. We were quite
surprised to find one on such a small and remote island. The Japanese love
their tunnels.
We were hoping to be able to comb at
least some length of beaches on this trip, in the hopes of finding a glass
float. Unfortunately, most of the islands coast lines were marked by heavy
concrete walls or other types of protection, leaving no space for a tide line.
On the few locations where sandy beaches and tide lines do occur the amount of
waste was incredible, but these all got regularly cleaned by the islands
inhabitants, who obviously had the first picking.
Common Sandpipers Actitis hypoleucos, the only shorebird we observed.
The artificial sea walls attract
different types of birds. On these Japanese Wagtails Motacilla grandis and Blue Rock Thrush’s Monticola solitariusare common.
The only tea
plantation we noticed, on Nakajima Island.
Just before our arrival back in Nakajimaoura
harbour… We underestimated the over 12 kilometer long hike around half of the
island, but we made it just in time to catch the last ferry to Matsuyama.