I spent nine months of 2004 getting my boat ready to sail to Palmyra.
During that refit, I lived and breathed marine systems and fell into bed
each night exhausted. Once I get this boat to Palmyra, I vowed, I'm
going to slow down and enjoy it.
Click image to enlarge
Well, I'm there now, and though the boat work still beckons, I'm putting
it off for a while. I earned my prize of Palmyra, and I'm going to enjoy
it.
There's plenty here to enjoy. The place feels like a cross between
Gilligan's Island and Jurassic Park. Don't worry about me, though. The
people here are fun but not ditsy, and the dinosaurs are short.
Like Tern Island (in Hawaii's Northwest Chain), Palmyra is a biological
field station in an atoll designated a national wildlife refuge. But
Tern's atoll has desert islands; Palmyra's has jungles.
Click image to enlarge (Science Bldg)
The average rainfall here at 6 degrees North is about 175 inches a year.
As a result, fresh water is nearly unlimited, and the vegetation grows
lush.
Because people have brought a variety of plants to Palmyra over the
years, the flora varies from place to place. Coconut palms dominate most
of the atoll's 15 islands, reflecting Palmyra's copra plantation past.
In some areas, climbing plants cover nearly everything, including
ground, trees and rusty remnants of World War II. This flourishing
greenery has its appeal, but like Hawaii, the native plants suffer for
it. Biologists are working on ways to save them.
Click image to enlarge (Plane)
Beneath all the ferns, grasses and fallen coconuts, zillions of crabs
scurry around like tiny dinosaurs. Some are fist-size hermits that hide
in their turban shells when alarmed. Other land crabs grow to about 5
inches across and run sideways into holes and hollows when disturbed. If
you corner these crabs, they raise their claws in defense but don't
deliver much of a pinch.
Click to enlarge images
Coconut crabs, also called robber crabs, are another story. These
endangered crustaceans grow to 30 inches across and weigh up to 10
pounds.
Watch the video of a robber crab stealing a coconut juiced machete!
QuickTime
You will need QuickTime Player to view this video. You can
download it for free
here.
One front claw of the coconut crab crushes, the other tears. These big
pincers, which open and shred coconuts, are formidable weapons.
Fortunately for human fingers and toes, these stunning red, orange and
blue crabs are shy creatures that would rather hide than snap.
Palmyra's camp, currently in transition from canvas tents to wooden
huts, has a Gilligan kind of charm. From whimsical signs shaped like sea
turtles to astonishing gourmet meals to the cleverly painted outhouse,
the artistic workers here keep me smiling.
Sign to
Outhouse
Tent/hut
Kitchen
Eleven kinds of seabirds nest in Palmyra. They aren't always visible
because most perch in the tall trees. Still, fairy terns hover like
angels over our heads, and thousands of sooty terns, also called
wide-awakes, remind us day and night that this is indeed the site of
seabird colonies.
Palmyra is well worth the work it took to get here. I can't think of any
place in the world I'd rather start 2005 than here in the West Lagoon.
Happy New Year. Pass the screwdriver.
Marine biologist Susan Scott writes the newspaper column, "Ocean Watch", for
the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, www.starbulletin.com