February 9th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

Finally, I’m wrapping up the posts for everything I did in January. This last post is a few of the insects I’ve seen (mostly) around our apartment. My favorite is actually the lace bug that I found near Supermarché Match in Marigot. Tiny, but ornate, it’s the kind of thing you only find when you’re waiting around for someone to do some “quick” shopping.



February 8th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

My most recent hike with SXM Trails was probably my favorite so far. Starting early in the morning from Concordia, we climbed Mont des Accords before traveling to the top of St. Peter’s Hill, Sentry Hill and a few unnamed hilltops before ending up on Arlet Peters Road between Philipsburg and Cole Bay. The views were amazing, and Jean Michel showed me several types of orchids along the way (none of which are in bloom at this time of year).



February 7th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

After taking Patrick from Uncommon Caribbean to the bat cave, I actually returned a few days later with Joe from the St. Maarten Zoo. The zoo actually has a bat house featuring one of the local species that is in the cave, so Joe wanted to see them in the wild.

After a little trouble, we were able to sort out permission to visit the cave. The security guard who wanted to make sure we weren’t camping in the cave apparently has neither seen nor smelt said cave. In addition to observing the bats, I spent a little more time trying to find invertebrates in the cave. Spiders, cockroaches, crickets and whip spiders were abundant. I can’t tell for sure, but I believe there are also many small parasites on the roof of the cave where the bats roost. They appear as small dots in a couple photos below that show bats on the white cave ceiling.

We waited until nightfall to see if the bats would all swarm out of the cave at once. They did not. Starting around dusk, they would fly out singly or in small groups. If there is a mass exodus, it must happen in complete darkness.

For more info on St. Martin and Caribbean bats, check out The Incomplete Guide and BatHead.



February 7th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

A couple Sundays ago, I left early in the morning to hike with the SXM Trails hiking association. The route was fairly long, starting at Grand Case and heading up Pic Paradis via Hope Estate. On our way back, we took the road through St. Louis before taking a trail down to Friars’ Bay and back to Grand Case. Although it was a bit tiring, there was plenty to see on the hike, and I got to travel a few places where I hadn’t been (the upper part of the track from Hope Estate, which I have always bypassed in favor of a ravine, and the route through Ft. Louis to Friars’ Bay). The group of hikers was also the biggest yet, and included some visitors from the US.

Some highlights included a beautiful, fat skipper caterpillar, a young dwarf gecko wandering out and about during the day and a fiery skipper, my first sighting of this butterfly on the island.



February 6th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

It is pretty much impossible to get tired of watching and photographing pelicans. When we went to the marina at Pelican Key to catch the ferry to St. Barths, I had another perfect opportunity to do just that. I also happened to find some interesting leafhoppers on one of the trees.



February 5th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

My last attempt to climb Mont O’Reilly was the best so far. Although I didn’t have time to try for the top, I did find a very serviceable passage from the villas above La Savane to the dip between Mont O’Reilly and the unnamed peak to its southwest. The passage was clearly made some time ago and subsequently overgrown, but the going was pretty easy and there were lots of interesting insects. The passage ended in a field, which itself ended in a bit of forest, which ended at a stone wall that bordered a large pasture area that extends all the way to the slope of Pic Paradis across from the lookout point/beginning of the extreme zipline course. Really a terrific hike, and next time I’ll go earlier and see how close I can get to the top of Mont O’Reilly.



February 4th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

The last couple times I’ve been to Pinel and searched the little forest in the southeast for creatures, I have noticed something peculiar. Of the two dwarf geckos that I had seen in the area previously, I have only seen one. Sphaerodactylus sputator seems to be entirely absent now in an area where it was previously quite common. Perhaps it’s just chance that I haven’t seen any, only time will tell. I also happened to see a kingfisher, but didn’t get a photo of it. The American kestrel scanning the fields for prey was much more accommodating.



February 4th, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

Nestled at the foot of the central mountains, Colombier is one of the prettiest towns on the island. I recently did a little cross-country hike from the entrance to Colombier, up to the “castle” and over to Morne Valois. I started at the little stream near the main road, where I found large crayfish and three species of freshwater fish. Later highlights included a color variation of Gasteracantha cancriformes that I hadn’t seen before and the very strange micropezid fly that I had seen previously on Pic Paradis. The last portion of my journey was a rather difficult scramble through dense brush leading to an abandoned water storage facility and, finally, through someone’s backyard back into civilization.



February 3rd, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

Saint Martin has at least sixteen salt ponds, most of which are both heavily polluted and important wetland habitats. Often ringed with mangroves, they’re a great place to see a variety of birds as well as iguanas and invertebrates.

The first photos in this post are from Étang Chevrise near Orient Bay. In the late afternoon, there was a large flock of pelicans and a mysterious chicken egg on a rock in the water. I also found a number of interesting spiders.

At Étang Guichard, between Grand Case and Friars’ Bay, a family of common moorhens was out feeding. I am particularly fond of moorhen chicks because they are bald.

A few days after that, we also saw moorhen families at the Great Salt Pond, as well as some black-necked stilts and a green heron.



February 2nd, 2011 by Marc AuMarc

It had been a while since I’d been to the large bat cave, but when Patrick from Uncommon Caribbean was looking for unusual things to do on Saint Martin, it seemed like an obvious choice. We headed up in the afternoon a couple weeks ago and found things pretty much as they were before: lots of bats, lots of mosquitoes and plenty of smell. His terrific article about the bat caves, complete with video, is posted on the Uncommon Caribbean site. Below are a few photos I took while we were there.