Friday, October 31, 2025

Dinosaur State Park, CT

   

A diorama of Dilophosaurus

   I was supposed to go hiking up in New Hampshire with my buddy Adam on Thursday, but once again Mother Nature was not kind. We knew that in the White Mountains that cold or even snow this time of year could cancel our trip. However, three days of a (warmish) rain was not on our bingo card. So we needed to come up with a plan B. The best I could come up with was visit our old boss at his new job at Cabela's. Adam had a much better idea. He suggested we go to Connecticut and look at the dinosaur tracks.

   In 1966 while bulldozing to build a foundation for a Dept of Transportation building a worker noticed strange markings on some of the stones. Scientists were called and they discovered fossilized dinosaur tracks. The governor of Connecticut immediately named the area a state park.

   The park centers around a dome to protect the dinosaur footprints. They had been buried beneath six feet of topsoil for 200 million years. Exposing them to New England weather could and would crack rocks with frost heaves, wind, and rain. So the state built a dome to keep everything dry. 

   Inside the dome there are seven hundred and fifty footprints. They are of different sizes and some are better preserved than others. They are all from the same dinosaur. No bones were found but by the footprints it was a three toed carnivore with a sharp middle claw. It stood six feet at the hip and weighed about a thousand pounds. It was roughly twenty feet long. There are bones in the United States of a dinosaur from that time period that fits that description named Dilophosaurus. If the prints are not from that dinosaur, it would be a close cousin.

   

Fossilized dinosaur footprints

   The cost to enter is six dollars and they are closed on Mondays. The dome has a few reptiles and amphibians. There are some turtles, a gecko, and some snakes. There is an auditorium where a movie is played explaining how the park is formed and what they know about the dinosaurs. It was very interesting. There are other programs also. We sat in on an animal encounter. The two animals were a  Leopard Gecko and a Ball Python. The girl that talked about the animals was very knowledgeable. It was a little awkward since we were the only two people in the room with her. 

   Next we went to the main event, the dinosaur tracks. You walk on a bridge above the tracks looking down on them. As I said some are more pronounced than others. It is speculated they were made over the span of a couple weeks and not all from the same day. If you or I walked in soft mud today, and our friend walked in the mud a week from now, our tracks would have started to fill in or wash away, while our friend's track would be fresh. It is the  same with these tracks. It seems as though this was just a place for this dinosaur to pass through. They were not a herd because the tracks do not all go in the same direction. It is much more likely random individuals walked across the mud at separate times. On the bridge there was a short talk with a state park ranger and he answered a lot of questions by Adam and myself. 

   

A well formed example

   Outside there are hiking trails and we did hike since it wasn't raining when we finished the indoor stuff. We walked below some basalt mounds through the woods. We found a Red Backed Salamander and a dead mouse. There was a bat box and to my surprise there were a few bats in it that hadn't migrated south. 

  In all we spent roughly three hours at the park before heading home and getting a pizza along the way. Dinosaur State Park is south of Hartford. From Providence it is an hour forty minute drive. There wasn't any traffic but we hit the Hartford area after the morning rush. Without a doubt seeing the dinosaur footprints was worth doing!

More photos below

The main building built to protect the fossils







There were other fossils in the museum not from the site


This Kingsnake, and most of the animals were 
surrendered pets




Red Backed Salamander


Bat box


with bats inside. Most likely Big Brown Bats


Monday, October 6, 2025

Mother Nature kicked my ass again last night

   

Very common Black Bellied Plovers
were where the Godwit should have been

   Eric Church has a song called "Jack Daniels kicked my ass again last night". I can't help change the lyrics to the title of this blog. I am on a terrible slump when it comes to accomplishing anything I've tried outdoors over the last month.

   It all started about thirty days ago when I fished for albies. I didn't get any from either of my two shore trips. I went out on my friend Dick's boat and we blanked. I hooked one on my first trip while blind casting. Other than that, from shore, I never made a cast near an albie.

  About ten days ago a Sora had been seen at the Cumberland Monastery for a few days. When I had a chance to go see it I went. While someone saw it the day I went at the crack of dawn, I along with four other birders did not see it from 8-11:30 am. Sora along with the Connecticut Warbler (below) are two of the six species I have seen in New England that I do not have a photo of. Every other of my 348 species except for those six I have at least an awful documentation photo. 

   Since it has been so nice out, I've been taking trips to the Cape Cod Canal. Most of my fishing has been half-hearted at best. Some nights Laurie and I would walk the Canal after dark looking for mammals in the woods and fish in the water. Other days I've brought my bike down and rode it. The few times I've seen fish, they have been in the middle out of range of everyone except Ron Arra. Even if my attempts were half hearted I am amazed I have not run into fish nor saw any caught with as many times as I've been there.

Last Wednesday, I was supposed to go to Block Island with my two friends Claudia and Joe. The weather forecast Monday looked good so Claudia reserved a spot on the ferry for her car. Tuesday they predicted a small craft advisory. We checked all night Tuesday and when we got up Wednesday morning to see if the ferry was cancelled. It wasn't so we all made the hour drive from different places (Norton, MA, Seekonk, MA and Coventry, RI). We met at 7:20 am for the 8:30 ferry so Claudia could get her car on the ferry. At 7:25 it was announced that ferry's were cancelled for the day. 

 

I did see a Coyote while stalking the
CT Warbler


   We made the best of it and birded all morning. I had fun with them. After we got lunch, I went back north to Lincoln where there had been a Connecticut Warbler. It had been seen that morning. Connecticut's are one of the hardest species in America to see. They are really rare and they HATE being seen. They hide in deep underbrush. When they move, they prefer to walk than to fly so they stay well hidden. I spent almost three hours looking for the bird right where it had been seen but it never came out. Luckily my buddy Tim came to look for it so we spent about half that time together.

  I had Friday Oct 3 off from work and wasn't sure what I'd do. I figured I'd probably go striper fishing. When I woke up, there were reports of a  Bar Tailed Godwit in Plymouth. This is a European bird. It almost certainly got pulled from home by the northeast winds caused by the two offshore hurricanes. A Bar Tailed Godwit would be a lifer so I went for it. I drove to Plymouth and rode my bike up the long narrow beach as far as I could and hoofed it the rest of the way. Long story short, I was the first person to miss it. It hangs around at high tide but once the tide dropped it went out to an offshore sandbar until the next high tide (which would have been at dark). People saw the Godwit on Saturday but I worked.

    I had Sunday off also. I never get weekend days off anymore so I was excited to spend the day with Laurie. I wanted the day to be epic. The weather was perfect. I wanted to drive to NH and hike Mt. Cardigan in the Lakes Region but Laurie didn't want to. So the best I could come up with was to go seining and see if we could see some tropical fish.

   We got up early just in case someone reported the Bar Tailed Godwit early. We drove by the exit to Plymouth but it wasn't reported. So we drove to the Cape Cod Canal where we took a walk while I carried my rod and made a few casts. Nothing was going on, I never saw a bird or a fish. After we left the Canal we went to Market Basket to get a couple things for a picnic. We drove all the way to Newport and had a picnic at a trout pond. We had burgers and they came out great. This pond has Western Mosquitofish. As you can probably tell by the name they are not native to the northeast. I've seen them before but when I caught one in the net, it was a lifer for Laurie (not that she cares about lifers)

   

Pompano

   After we left the trout pond we drove to Third Beach to seine. Laurie was cranky because she really didn't want to but we were there and she never came up with an alternative. We seined the beach and the rocks but found only one tropical fish species. We caught three Pompano. These were another lifer for Laurie but I'd seen them multiple times. We got some photos and let them go.  We didn't get anymore tropicals or for that matter anything but Silversides and two baby Cunner. 

   It was really nice out and after we seined the beach Laurie actually swam in the ocean for a half hour (Oct 5!). This put her in a great mood since she loves to swim and relaxes her muscles. Since it was still early and we had time to kill before the Patriots game we took a forty minute detour on our way home and went back to the Railroad Bridge at the Cape Cod Canal. No one was fishing and I never saw anything including bait. We enjoyed our last ice cream of the season and went home. 

   I had been trying to document all of the fun stuff I'd done this year. This is why when I had free time I'd sometimes write three or four blogposts in the same day. Other than this post, it should be obvious why I have only written once since Sept 17. Nothing I have done has been productive. I really need Mother Nature to stop kicking my ass!