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Taken last night, the official portrait of Summer 2006; Slick (rear), and Mystery Male.



click image to enlarge

My new camera was expensive, but as far as I'm concerned, it just paid for itself with this one picture! Worth every penny–no way my old digital camera could have taken a quality low-light image like this.

Last night, I also got close-up photos of the otters' lower teeth so you can finally see how different/individual they are.



Young Slick (left) is 4 years old, so he still has all his lower incisors, and his canine teeth are sharp. Mystery Male is a few years older; he has only one lower (right) canine tooth, and he's minus most of his lower incisors, too.

For most of this summer, the only otter I would ever see was this one with the missing canine. I also confirmed with scats that there really was only one otter in residence during that time. For weeks, sharptooth Slick simply wasn't here...

 

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On what might have been the last night of the floating dock this season, I finally got a decent picture of Slick (wary as always):


click image to enlarge (250KB)

I don't know why the pier crew hasn't removed the dock yet–it's usually gone by the 1st of October–but I hadn't yet gotten a chance to take a good up-close pic of Slick this summer, so I'm glad they've been slow this year.

 

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It's been almost two months since I had a confirmed sighting of Slick–and also almost two months since I saw both males together–but when I first arrived at Trinidad last night, I saw Slick coming up through his favorite hole in the dock. Then, immediately after him, Mystery Male came up through the hole. What a relief! And fortunately, the males weren't camera shy. I took more videos this evening than I have the rest of the summer combined. They put on a great show. Man, am I happy! It's the best ending I could imagine to the worst summer ever.

 

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I had a nice relaxing otter-watching session yesterday evening. Got to see both males together for only the second time this season. Slick has grown up to be a real handsome fellow, I must say. And Mystery Male: I know I've said I'll never be able to be absolutely certain who he is, but he really could be Complainer. He definitely has "the family resemblance," and a blunt tailtip similar to Scoots, too. Anyway, it was just nice to see the males chumming around together. Almost a normal summer's evening at Trinidad. Almost...

 

Anniversary

Jun. 6th, 2006 09:03 pm
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On June 6, 1983, I saw my first otter in Trinidad Bay. Going there today, I anticipated an unhappy 23rd anniversary, but I was in for a pleasant surprise. I saw Slick! It was unquestionably him. He came up on the dock through his hole, he was calm and collected with people around, he had a plain face, he had precisely the amount of canine tooth wear I'd expect to see on a 4-year-old, he dove under the surface using only 1 hind leg for propulsion, and he ate precisely on the same 'spot' where his mom used to eat. Yay! So the 5th generation of Old Mama's line is carrying on after all. Seeing Slick tonight made me feel happier than I've felt in weeks.

I think I know what Slick has been doing away all this time. Often, after an otter disappears, the one most closely bonded to it vanishes, too. I don't know exactly where they go, of course, but I've supposed they are "searching the world" for any sign of their lost companion. They probably travel up and down the coast searching for the slightest sniff of the one they miss. Scoots vanished for a while after Little Mama was taken away, so it wouldn't be any wonder if Slick did the same, not finding any sign of his mother's presence here anymore.

So, it appears there are 3 males in residence this summer: Slick, Spook (3 years old now), and the old brown male whose identity is uncertain but who might be Complainer. It's still quite eerie not to have a family group here, though. This is the first summer in all the years I've been coming to Trinidad that there isn't at least one female in residence. It's a palpable and somewhat haunting absence...

 

Update

Jun. 1st, 2006 10:50 am
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Trinidad pier is owned by a local indian rancheria (reservation). Yesterday, I spoke with their person in charge of environmental protection about instituting a ban on crab traps of the kind that killed Scoots. He seemed very open to the idea. He said he would put the idea before the tribal council at their next meeting.

----------

No direct sightings of any of the males recently. However, I did see one on the webcam the other day. What I saw is the best evidence yet that Complainer might indeed have returned. Here is the screenshot:



"It's so far away, what can you tell from a picture like that?", you may wonder. Well, it just so happens that every otter has their favorite "spot" where they like to hang out. For some inexplicable reason, in the last 10 years, the eldest male's favored spot has been on the 3rd floating dock near the north rail, exactly where this otter was resting. First it was Ninety's spot, then when he died, Complainer assumed Ninety's throne. This by itself is not proof positive that the old male here now is Complainer, of course, but it would be very unlikely that a total stranger would, just by chance, pick the exact spot on the dock to hang out that the eldest males did in the past. So this could be Complainer. As I said before, the wear on his teeth is consistent with what I'd expect to see on a 10-year-old otter. I may never be able to know this for sure, but it's at least a hopeful sign.

Unfortunately, I see no encouraging sign in re: Slick. Slick had a special place on the dock that he used all the time, too. You can see that spot in this photo of Slick when he was a yearling:



Even as an adult, Slick has always used this hole in the dock to come up on top. The hole is at the southeast corner of the 3rd dock, just to the immediate left of the mooring rope of the boat in the top picture. What troubles me is that, since Scoots died (she used the hole, too), I have not seen any wet areas around this hole which would indicate that an otter has come up through it. Not one drop of moisture. Either Slick has totally changed his habits, or he is simply not here.

 

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