Date: 4/27/26 3:02 pm
From: Peter Pyle via groups.io <ppyle...>
Subject: [Mendobirds] Pelagic trip report, 19 and 26 April
Greetings Mendobirders -

Twenty-five to 30 enthusiastic folks joined captain Richard Thornton and
Anchor Charters each for a half-day trip to Noyo Canyon on April 19th
and full day trip to the canyon and beyond on the 26th.

The trip of the 19th was attended by 15 Pacific Union College students
and their teachers, and we added 10-15 locals which made for a great
mix. The ocean was flat and winds were south at 10 knots or so,
increasing as the trip went on and a slow-moving frontal system
approached, but we avoided the rain that had been forecast a few days
prior. Out of the gate we got a great lesson in distinguishing Steller's
from California Sea Lions on the outermost "red-and-white" channel
marker. Steller's are larger and stockier, with a bear-like profile and
blunt nose, whereas Californias have a longer sloped nose, more
dog-like. Usually Steller's are paler, more "blond" than Californias,
but there was an unusually blond California next to a Steller's (both
adult females) so we all got lessons in identification caveats as well.
Vocalizations also differ and we heard both, the circus-familiar arfs of
the Californias and the deep-throated roar of the Steller's, the latter
how "sea lion" got it's name (along with the thick neck of adult males),
from the early Russian explorers (possibly including Steller himself) in
Alaska.

The rest of the day was quite active. We followed a group of Humpbacks
around for an hour or so, making sure we got photos of the fluke
undersides for individual ID. While we were doing this, 1000s of Pacific
Loons and 100s of Surf Scoters were headed north overhead, in long lines
and scattered clumps. Spurred by the south winds before the front, it
gave us satisfaction to see this avian migration spectacle so healthy.
Over the canyon, an 8' Salmon Shark was a highlight for many of the
students, and shearwaters, gulls, alcids, and some Black-footed
Albatrosses were everywhere. But we failed to find any deeper-water
species, despite 'friendly' wind speeds that should have brought birds
our way (see our April 4th report here
<https://noyopelagics.com/trip-report-noyo-pelagics-4-april-2026/>). We
surmised that northwest winds would be better for this than south winds.

Our rather constant, multivariate strategizing about routes and
locations in the context of date, weather conditions, and recent bird
reports, continued on the 26th. I've heard thispelagic-trip process
described, rather accurately, as "chasing mirages," but it is fun to do
none-the less! On the 22nd, one or more "reposition trips" working up
the coast reported dozens of /Pterodroma/ petrels of three species,
including Cook's and Murphy's Petrels 20-30 miles off the Mendocino
coast. These are trips in which large cruise ships reposition from the
Baja winter cruising season to the Inside Passage and Alaskan seasons in
summer, and they allow birders aboard to set up scopes 100 feet or so
above the water surface, spotting distant seabirds over a large ocean
expanse surrounding the ships.For our trip, weather on the 26th seemed
ideal for observing these, with 10-15 knot winds and fairly flat seas,
as we've been going on about. So, we headed out with great anticipation
that we'd be graced with great looks of multiple /Pterodorma/ sallying
off the stern, as happened with several of our trips last spring and
summer. As we left the harbor mouth, sea-surface temperatures were
slightly above-average, 56° F, and, quite remarkably, stayed at 56°for
the entire trip! Usually there is mixing of water temperatures and/or
what we really hope for, a temperature break with warmer ("albacore")
water 15-20 miles off shore, but captain Richard's Terrafin app showed
no such breaks as far offshore as it could record.

Before we even reached the aforementioned outer buoy, inside the harbor
channel, a Scripps's Murrelet flushed from the side of the boat and
landed on the water for most to see. This is the third spring SCMU we've
seen out here, the others being one in this exact same spot exactly a
year ago, on 26 Apr 2025 (see our report here
<https://noyopelagics.com/pelagic_calendar/saturday-4-26-25-half-day-noyo-canyon-mammals-and-birds/>),
and one a mile or two out from here on 1 March 2026 (here
<https://noyopelagics.com/trip-report-noyo-pelagics-1-march-2026/>), the
first March record for Northern California prior to the 27th. What's up
with that? This species breeds only as far north as the Channel Islands,
as far as known. So is this a wayward individual or might they be
breeding on our offshore rocks?

Soon we started seeing scores of Sooty Shearwaters and this would be a
theme of the trip. The horizon was dotted with them all day, all the way
out to 25 miles from shore, and we also hit sitting flocks of 4000 and
1500 individuals, >15 miles from shore. We have become quite skilled at
distinguishing SOSH dots from /Pterodroma/ dots (it's all about the
ascending and descending angles, not the height above water) and we did
not even sniff any of the latter. Even 3-4 Laysan Albatrosses and a nice
second-cycle Cocos Booby that visited our chum flocks did not seem to
suppress a little disappointment in the lack of /Pterodroma/, given
location, date, weather, and the repo-trip reports. We did finally get
one each of Cook's and Murphy's petrel on our way back in, 11 miles from
shore, perhaps a close-to-shore distance record for the Cook's off
California (excepting beach-watch carcasses and true vagrants in the
Salton Sea), but they were quick passes, seen well by only a few and
missed by many.

Our musings of the day centered around the constant 56° F SST. This is
California Current water and everything we saw was typical of this water
mass, which can extend, variably, out to 20 miles or more depending on
conditions. We surmised that the pelagic water mass needed for more
/Pterodorma/ petrels had been pushed offshore by the strong NW winds and
upwelling that occurred from the 23rd to the 25th. Always something! So
for today, the mirages we were chasing were skies full of wheeling
/Pterodroma/ out at our maximum distance, 25-30 miles from shore.

As always, however, there were other trip highlights. The highlight of
the day for the writer came when we were some 15 miles out. We spotted a
fishing boat traversing north, which we thought could be a trawler, but
it was in transit. Richard pulled it up on his navigational app and it
was the Western Flyer, transiting from Baja California to Oregon. The
Western Flyer! I have been a huge Ed Ricketts fan since reading
Steinbeck's "Log from the Sea of Cortez" in my early 20s, and we have
visited his lab a couple of times on Cannery Row, during infrequent
tours, as well as paying homage to "The Great Tidepool" and his former
residence in Pacific Grove. I couldn't believe my eyes! The history of
the Western Flyer can be found here
<https://www.westernflyer.org/steinbeck-and-ricketts/history/>.

Before leaving the dock I asked how many would like to see birds and how
many would like to see mammals. All but one raised their hand for birds,
the inverse of that for mammals. I told the lone participant not to
worry, that we'd stop for whales, but perhaps not for too long. He (and
it turns out several others) got their wish when we encountered some
"friendly" Humpbacks about 20 miles out. These are Humpbacks that, for
whatever reason, have come to enjoy whale watching boats, surfacing
within meters, looking participants in the eye, and sometimes saluting
us with their odoriferous blows, which I'm sure they think we enjoy. So
clear was the water out there that we could watch them go right under
the boat! We also photographed an unidentified whale and a few fur seals
(Northern or Guadalupe?) that we'll need to work on as far as ID.

Finally, even way out to sea, we spotted some logs covered with
barnacles that have been floating around for a while. Another item
covered with barnacles was a plastic fishing buoy, which we retrieved,
to do our teeny weeny part eliminating plastics from the ocean. We
discovered an entire ecosystem of barnacle denizens, which we put into a
bucket of seawater, including a pelagic nudibranch that only lives on
these barnacles, and which iNat quickly identified for us, even 25 miles
from shore! Such is technology these days. Stay tuned for photos and
identifications of these inverts on our Trip Reports page
<https://noyopelagics.com/trip-reports/>, which will also include IDs
(or maybe not) of some weird or intriguing shearwaters photographed in
the SOSH flocks, and the whale and fur seals mentioned above.

We have more full-day trips scheduled for spring and summer 2026, the
next one for May 9th (see the 2026 calendar at
https://noyopelagics.com/). There is always something for all on these
trips; we never know what until we head out and over the deep blue to
see what's up on any given day.

Peter



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