Well, Ed and I arrived from New York City late on October 29th, and we are now settled into our room (Room 108) in the Moonlight Beach Motel in Encinitas, with a fridge full of food in order to be able to make three meals a day.
I have been out iNatting numerous times already, very locally, but I have been doing great, finding all kinds of new things.
We are here later than in previous years, as we always used to arrive very shortly after Labor Day. I guess that because we are currently moving into November, this time of year counts as late fall or very early winter, as opposed to being very late Summer!
Also, this is 2023, the year in which Southern California was impacted by Hurricane/Tropical Storm Hilary in August, which meant that they got a huge amount of rain all at once, after many years/decades of severe drought. As a result of all that rain, most wild or semi-wild areas here are still quite lush and green.
Either way, whether due to all that heavy rain, or perhaps partly due to being here later in the season, I am finding a lot of organisms that I have not found here before.
But there are also a couple of species which I found multiples of during my last visit that I am not finding at all this time, like the stink bugs that were on the Orchid Tree on this block, and the Lantana Stick caterpillars which were on the Yellow Lantana bushes a block away, but those bushes have been severely trimmed recently.
I have also already found quite a few plants that were new to me, including Devil's Thorn, Saharan Mustard, and Garland Daisy.
People who regularly read the forum post where people report new Lifers will already know that I have found a Black Webspinner (a new order of insects for me!), a Western Plant Bug, a Yellow-V Moth, and one (now three) shells of the Trask's Shoulderband land snail, a critically endangered species which is endemic to the State of California.
I also found a Yellow-faced Bumblebee -- common apparently, but quite striking and pretty-looking.
On November 1st, my husband spotted a large-ish, very smooth woodlouse, on the sidewalk opposite the hotel. It was a Swift Woodlouse. That is new to me too.
Also on Nov 1st, I also saw two examples of the Grey Buckeye, which is now considered to be not just a color variety of the Common Buckeye, but a separate species, a species which only occurs west of the Rockies.
Friday Nov 3rd. Walking back from Cottonwood Creek Park, as we got level with the hotel, we suddenly saw what seemed to be a striking, noticeable narrow plume of smoke coming up the road from the direction of the beach. I wondered if it was indeed smoke, or perhaps a cloud of dust from the construction that is taking place along the creek near the beach. But the cloud increased in size, and decreased somewhat in intensity, and I could not smell or taste anything at all, so I realized it was not smoke or dust but sea fog! Then, as we sat outside in the hotel courtyard, and as the breeze blew, we could sometimes actually see the particles of moisture in the fog. I think perhaps the weather is turning colder now.
Sunday Nov 5th -- This would be Guys Fawkes Day if this was the UK. We went to Ki's for lunch with our friends Barry and Jeannie from Fallbrook, and also afterwards went to Cardiff State Beach and briefly to Swami's, but just on the clifftop. On the Cardiff Beach I saw a small clump of washed-up Ostrich-Plume Hydroids, which was new to me, as well as a broken small Green Abalone shell, which was a new iNat record for me. And I also found an intact soft coral, genus Muricea, another lifer.
On Thursday November 9th on the outside of a window of room 101, here on the ground floor of the Motel, I saw an Alfalfa Moth. That was a new lifer for me:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190535200
Friday Nov 10th I found a couple of lifer plants at the edge of the coast road opposite Swami's -- California Croton is one, Coast Morning Glory is another one.
Sunday November 12th. I got to see and capture a new-to-me Giant Western Crane Fly which had been hiding somewhere in the hotel room for two days.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190814342
Also on Sunday Nov 12th I got to photograph a West Coast Lady, new to me:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190855780
Nov 12th -- I also found a Small Melliot plant -- new to me:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190855940
Nov 13th, I found two little baby California seahares. That species was a lifer for me in the years since I first got onto iNat:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190956598
And I found several Ventura Hermit Crabs, which were new to me.
All in all, I did really great this visit, especially considering I was only here for not terribly long -- two weeks and two days. I found at least 21 lifers in 16 days!