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Surf Scoters are perfectly at home in the element they’re named for. They swim smack in the middle of what surfers call the impact zone: Just where the waves break with greatest violence. Why risk the harshest waves when there’s calmer water close by? Because the churning action of crashing waves can expose the small clams and crabs that scoters eat. And how do Surf Scoters avoid getting mashed by the sea? When a towering wave is about to crash down, the scoter deftly dives and swims under the crest of the foaming breaker, then pops up on the other side.
BirdNote®
Surfing With Scoters
Written by Bob Sundstrom
This is BirdNote.
[Music: Catch A Wave by The Beachboys]
The sea ducks called Surf Scoters are perfectly at home in the element they’re named for. Male Surf Scoters are black with massive orange bills, and they swim alongside brown females among the waves — smack in the middle of what surfers call the impact zone. Just where the waves break with greatest violence.
Why risk the harshest waves when there’s calmer water close by? Because the intense churning action of crashing waves can expose small clams and small crabs that scoters eat.
A more crucial question: how do Surf Scoters avoid getting mashed by the sea? When a towering wave is about to crash down, the scoter deftly dives and swims under the crest of the foaming breaker, then pops up on the other side. Very slick.
Surfers, the human counterpart of Surf Scoters, share something vital with the ducks. A surfer swimming out from shore to find that perfect wave may need to pass through some prodigious breakers without being smacked backwards. To accomplish this, the surfer shoves the tip of the surfboard down below the surface, dives under snug to the board, and swims safely under the wave’s crest. Just like a scoter.
It’s a move that surfers call “duck diving.”
For BirdNote, I’m Michael Stein.
[Music: Catch A Wave by The Beachboys]
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Bird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York.
BirdNote’s theme music was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Sallie Bodie
© 2017 Tune In to Nature.org March 2017/2019 October 2023
Narrator: Michael Stein
ID# SUSC-01-2019-3-21 SUSC-01
Surfing and duck diving https://surfing-waves.com/surfing_lesson_three.htm
Photos of Surf Scoters in the surf: https://wickershamsconscience.wordpress.com/2013/03/01/surfer-dudes/
More on Surf Scoter http://www.mobileranger.com/santacruz/the-surf-scoter-the-surfing-bird/
Impact zone: http://surfing.about.com/cs/wordortheday/g/111003.htm