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Malibu Lagoon Trip Report: 24 November, 2013

November 26, 2013

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The Lagoon that is our monthly bird walk site seems to have fully recovered its attractiveness to various coastal bird species after a year’s restoration. Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets and Great Blue Herons were lined up on a bank, waiting for some of the ample supply of small fish to swim by. The numbers of birds were heartening also, with all areas of the lagoon well-populated and a gull flock that must have numbered over 2,000 a few hundred meters off Surfrider Beach’s first point. (This is not included in our count since we were unable to ascertain species.)

Osprey between meals (Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

Osprey between meals (Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

We were also treated to a few unusual visitors: a Cackling Goose which fit to a T the Sibley Guide drawing of the Aleutian form Cackling Goose; a group of 1 male and 3 female or juvenile Redhead; a Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher; plus a Townsend’s Warbler for the second month in a row. As we finished our count we were able to share our good results with visiting Supervisor Craig Sap of the Angeles District of State Parks, who was probably admiring his organization’s handiwork.  [Lucien Plauzoles]

Redhead with a few Snowy Egrets looking on (Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

Redhead swims as Snowy Egrets watch
(Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

The Redhead is not a common duck in the lagoon, as in SoCal they generally prefer fresh water. We’ve recorded their presence only 10 times since 1979, for a total of 25 birds, with 6 birds on 2/14/82 as the record.

Birds new for the season were: Cackling Goose, Redhead, Bufflehead, Horned Grebe, Osprey, Cooper’s Hawk, Boneparte’s Gull, and Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher.

Got one! (Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

Great Egret nabs a fish on the inundated winter tidal ramp
(Randy Ehler 11/24/13)

Our next three scheduled field trips:  Butterbredt Spring Christmas Count 14 Dec 8:30am; Malibu Lagoon, 22 Dec, 8:30 & 10am; Carrizo Plain, 28 Dec, 6:45am.
Our next program:  Tuesday, 4 Feb., 7:30 pm. Urban Bobcats III, presented by Laurel Serieys.

NOTE: Our 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk meets at the shaded viewing area.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon from 9/23/02.
Prior checklists: July-Dec’11, Jan-June’11, July-Dec ’10Jan-June ’10, Jul-Dec ‘09, and Jan-June ‘09.

Comments on Bird Lists Below
Total Birds:
   November total birds of 514 is 58% below the 6-year Nov. average, due primarily to the absence of gulls and terns which were offshore by the thousands but too distant to determine species. Sandpipers were also several hundred birds below average.
Summary of total birds from the 6-year average so far:  Jun’12 +36%, Jul’12 -9%, Aug’12 -9%, Sep’12 +12%, Oct’12 +3%, Nov’12 -5%, Dec’12 +30%, Jan’13 -20%, Feb’13 -29%, Mar’13 -30%, Apr’13 -34%, May’13 -37%, Jun’13 -24%, Jul’13 +83%, Aug’13 +37%, Sep’13 +23%, Oct’13 +41%, Nov’13 -58%.
Species Diversity:  November 2013 with 58 species was slightly below (-3%) the 6-year average of 60.
Summary of species diversity from the 6-year average so far:  Jun’12 -10%, Jul’12 +10%, Aug’12. -6%, Sep’12 -20%, Oct’12 +5%, Nov’12 +2%, Dec’12 -4%, Jan’13 +2%, Feb’13 -8%, Mar’13 +9%, Apr’13 -2%, May’13 +3%, Jun’13 +13%, Jul’13 0%, Aug’13 +11%, Sep’13 -14%, Oct’13 +19%, Nov’13 -3%.
10-year comparison summaries are available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page.   [Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013  
November 2008-13 11/23 11/22 11/28 11/27 11/25 11/24  
Temperature 50-61 60-72 55-65 68-72 60-62 62-70
Tide Lo/Hi Height H+5.8 H+4.6 L+2.59 H+6.63 H+5.83 L+3.14 Ave.
Tide Time 0608 1137 0842 0945 0647 0741 Birds
Snow Goose 1 0.2
Brant 1 0.2
Cackling Goose 1 0.2
Canada Goose 9 1.5
Gadwall 35 7 6 4 12 19 13.8
American Wigeon 15 6 14 15 9 4 10.5
Mallard 22 15 18 30 18 12 19.2
Northern Shoveler 12 5 10 10 18 8 10.5
Green-winged Teal 6 7 4 3 3.3
Redhead 4 0.7
Lesser Scaup 8 1 1.5
Surf Scoter 24 15 6.5
Bufflehead 8 5 6 8 3 3 5.5
Red-brstd Merganser 2 1 5 9 7 11 5.8
Ruddy Duck 25 20 26 3 48 20 23.7
Red-throated Loon 7 1.2
Pacific Loon 1 1 10 2.0
Common Loon 1 1 1 0.5
Pied-billed Grebe 6 5 2 1 4 1 3.2
Horned Grebe 1 1 0.3
Red-necked Grebe 1 0.2
Eared Grebe 6 6 4 3 3.2
Western Grebe 20 15 16 6 27 2 14.3
Brandt’s Cormorant 10 2 2 6 3.3
Dble-crstd Cormorant 25 29 37 31 24 18 27.3
Pelagic Cormorant 1 1 1 1 1 0.8
Brown Pelican 18 12 40 8 32 20 21.7
Great Blue Heron 6 3 7 2 2 2 3.7
Great Egret 1 1 4 3 1 8 3.0
Snowy Egret 4 8 31 30 10 20 17.2
Cattle Egret 1 0.2
Green Heron 1 0.2
Blk-crwnd N-Heron 5 1 8 1 2 2.8
Osprey 1 1 0.3
Cooper’s Hawk 1 1 1 0.5
Red-tailed Hawk 2 1 2 0.8
American Kestrel 1 1 0.3
Merlin 1 0.2
Virginia Rail 1 1 1 0.5
Sora 2 6 7 3 3.0
American Coot 85 295 206 57 194 80 152.8
Blk-bellied Plover 24 89 110 263 217 44 124.5
Snowy Plover 54 48 58 52 61 33 51.0
Killdeer 4 3 5 5 11 3 5.2
Spotted Sandpiper 1 2 2 2 2 2 1.8
Willet 12 18 2 4 34 20 15.0
Whimbrel 3 5 2 1 12 3.8
Marbled Godwit 8 14 31 4 9.5
Ruddy Turnstone 32 13 13 1 5 2 11.0
Black Turnstone 8 1 1.5
Sanderling 58 155 290 308 11 137.0
Least Sandpiper 1 7 15 21 4 8.0
Boneparte’s Gull 2 5 1 3 1.8
Heermann’s Gull 35 13 37 21 2 18.0
Mew Gull 1 0.2
Ring-billed Gull 18 50 800 60 25 20 162.2
Western Gull 68 67 130 50 55 61.7
California Gull 63 58 500 30 215 2 144.7
Herring Gull 1 1 0.3
Glaucous-wingd Gull 1 1 1 0.5
Forster’s Tern 2 5 2 14 1 4.0
Royal Tern 2 2 3 1.2
Elegant Tern 1 1 0.3
Rock Pigeon 5 6 6 38 9.2
Mourning Dove 6 3 2 1.8
Anna’s Hummingbird 4 3 2 1 1.7
Allen’s Hummingbird 1 2 1 3 1 1.3
Belted Kingfisher 2 1 1 1 1 1 1.2
Black Phoebe 6 6 6 5 5 4 5.3
Say’s Phoebe 1 1 1 2 1 1.0
Western Scrub-Jay 1 0.2
American Crow 6 6 3 4 5 2 4.3
Common Raven 1 0.2
Tree Swallow 1 1 0.3
Bushtit 22 40 30 30 20.3
Bewick’s Wren 1 1 1 0.5
House Wren 1 2 0.5
Marsh Wren 1 1 1 0.5
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1 0.2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 1 0.3
Northern Mockingbird 1 1 1 1 2 3 1.5
European Starling 5 6 40 7 9.7
Ornge-crwnd Warbler 3 0.5
Yellow-rumpd Warbler 12 6 8 2 12 60 16.7
Townsend’s Warbler 1 0.2
Common Yellowthroat 4 5 5 4 3 2 3.8
California Towhee 2 2 0.7
Song Sparrow 2 4 2 3 4 2.5
White-crwnd Sparrow 4 8 15 4.5
Western Meadowlark 3 0.5
Great-tailed Grackle 3 1 4 7 4 3.2
House Finch 5 6 4 30 5 2 8.7
Lesser Goldfinch 2 2 3 6 2.2
Totals by Type 11/23 11/22 11/28 11/27 11/25 11/25 Ave.
Waterfowl 151 65 108 92 120 82 103
Water Birds-Other 170 367 319 115 309 126 234
Herons, Egrets 16 13 51 36 14 32 27
Raptors 1 3 3 1 1 4 2
Shorebirds 205 347 490 650 394 124 368
Gulls & Terns 191 190 1481 143 335 29 395
Doves 11 9 8 0 38 0 11
Other Non-Pass. 3 7 5 3 5 2 4
Passerines 67 92 37 134 84 115 88
Totals Birds 815 1093 2502 1174 1300 514 1233
  2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Total Species 11/23 11/22 11/28 11/27 11/25 11/25 Ave.
Waterfowl 9 8 10 9 10 9 9.2
Water Birds-Other 11 10 12 9 10 8 10.0
Herons, Egrets 4 4 5 4 4 4 4.2
Raptors 1 2 3 1 1 3 1.8
Shorebirds 11 9 10 8 10 9 9.5
Gulls & Terns 8 6 9 5 8 6 7.0
Doves 2 2 2 0 1 0 1.2
Other Non-Pass. 2 3 3 2 3 2 2.5
Passerines 13 15 13 13 15 17 14.3
Totals Species – 93
61 59 67 51 62 58 59.7

 

Part III: The First Americans of Ballona—Culture and Time of Change

November 15, 2013

This is the third in a 3-part series of articles on the Tongva people by Cindy Hardin, LA Audubon Outdoor Education Director, and  Jane Beseda, Director at Large, Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society.  

"The Best Indians I ever glorified in Pictures" by J.A. Brooks, June 1916, at unspecified site, presumably in California.  Source:  http://tongvapeople.com/collage.html

“The Best Indians I ever glorified in Pictures”
(Photo:  J.A. Brooks, June 1916, at unspecified site, presumably in California)

With plentiful resources, the Tongva were able to establish a community of more permanence than those usually found in hunter-gatherer societies.  They also had a very effective and far-reaching trading network that enhanced their comfort level and provided social stability.  In fact, abalone shells used for trade have been found as far east as the Mississippi.

The Tongva’s great skill as boat builders helped to facilitate this trading.  The Chumash and Tongva made large seaworthy boats, called tomols, out of planks instead of hollowed-out logs.  They split pine into boards, steam-bent the boards in hot sand pits, and sanded them with sharkskin.  A sticky mixture of asphaltum and pine pitch, called yop, was applied to the seams and joints in order to waterproof the vessels.  They were then coated with ochre and pine pitch as further waterproofing.  Canoe builders were the members of elite guilds, and highly respected within their societies.

Replica of Tongva sewn-plank canoe, 1912, Bowers Museum.  Source:  tongvapeople.com

Replica of Chumash sewn-plank canoe, 1912.
(Photo: Bowers Museum Collection)

These incredibly seaworthy boats allowed the mainland Tongva to trade with the island-dwelling Tongva on Santa Catalina, San Clemente and San Nicolas.  This was very important, as steatite, or soapstone, was quarried on Santa Catalina.  Steatite can be heated directly over fire without breaking, and was carved into cooking bowls.  Steatite chunks were also superheated and dropped into watertight baskets in order to bring liquids to a boil.  Meat, seeds and acorns were traded for this important material.

Specialized technologies facilitated better food gathering and cooking techniques.  The Tongva were highly skilled at basketry, and made seed beaters, winnowing trays and mush boilers using local plant materials.  They also fashioned digging sticks, which were weighted with stones carved into donut shapes, to hunt for roots and bulbs.

The Tongva had a codified and complex leadership system.  Each settlement had its own leaders, and several settlements would form a confederation overseen by a more powerful chief.  The Tongva had strong spiritual traditions, and every settlement had a shaman, or holy man.  They held intricate rituals on various occasions throughout the year.

Modern Gabrielino woman representing Toypurina.  Source: http://sparcinla.org/product/witness-to-la-history-toypurina/

Modern Gabrielino woman representing Toypurina.
(Photo: Alchetron)

Power was passed down along hereditary lines, but they would skip a generation if they thought the next heir in line was unsuitable for the job.  Since the position of chief was based on blood lineage, chiefs could be either male or female.  If a chief had no son or brother, elders could appoint his sister or eldest daughter, but not his wife as she was of a different lineage. Born in 1760,  Toypurina was a powerful female spiritual leader, respected for her bravery and wisdom.  She was considered a great communicator, speaking with and trading with dozens of villages.  She opposed the rule of colonization by Spanish missionaries in California and, at age 23, led an unsuccessful rebellion against them.

San Gabriel Mission with Tongva ki in foreground.  Source:  www.missionscalifornia.com

San Gabriel Mission c. 1800 with Tongva kiiy in foreground.
(Courtesy of the San Gabriel Mission Museum)

The prosperity and success of the Tongva began its decline when increasing contact occurred with the western Europeans.  In the winter of 1604-1605 the explorer Vizcaino sailed into Santa Monica Bay.  He was followed by various exploratory parties, and then the Spanish monks.  The Tongva were marched against their will to build a mission in San Gabriel.  The Spanish gave them a new name:  Gabrielinos, meaning the people of the San Gabriel Mission.  Families were split up, and chiefs and leaders killed.  European diseases to which the Tongva had no immunity further decimated the population.  By the end of the 19th century, 250,000 people had been reduced to 9,000.

There are still surviving members of the Tongva living among us.  Some of them are hard at work preserving what remains of their culture, and educating others about the first inhabitants of the Los Angeles region.  Critical to this effort is preservation of the Tongva language, which is part of the Uto-Aztecan family.  To take part, you may want to order “Now You’re Speaking Our Language,” a phrasebook of words and sentences  by Julia Bogany.  You can also visit Tovemur Rock in Palos Verdes, where the “first Singer and Dancer” of the Tongva Nation was turned to stone.  You might want to say a prayer or sing a song or just enjoy the gorgeous area.

Tovemur Rock, Rancho Palos Verdes. (Photo: Denise Clement)

Tovemur Rock, Rancho Palos Verdes. (Photo: Denise Clement)

The Tongva are also pursuing the goal of achieving Federal recognition as a tribe.  Anthropologist Alice Mirlesse  of Claremont McKenna College published in 2013  “Identity on Trial: the Gabrielino Tongva Quest for Federal Recognition,” written to enrich the scarce body of literature about the Tongva, and to reach both policymakers and a general audience.  The state of California and the cities of Los Angeles and San Gabriel already recognize the Tongva as a tribe.

tongva blue dolphin book

Believed to be Juana Maria, the Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island.  Source:  wikipedia.org/wiki/Juana_maria

Believed to be Juana Maria, the Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island.

About The Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O’Dell:   This very popular book about “the lone woman of San Nicolas Island” is often included in the State of California’s fourth grade curriculum.  It contains much information about how this woman, known as Juana Maria, lived alone on San Nicolas from 1835 until her discovery in 1853, including how she fashioned a cormorant-feather cape for herself.  However, the book is not historically accurate.  Upon her “rescue” from the island, she was taken to Santa Barbara, where she could not communicate with the Hokun speaking Chumash of that area, or with those who spoke the Tongva language.  Upon her arrival in Santa Barbara she consumed large quantities of fruit and unfamiliar foods and perished within seven weeks.

Horuura’!
That’s All!

Link to Part I: The First Americans Of Ballona – Origins and Daily Life
Link to Part II: The First Americans of Ballona – Food and Plant Uses

REFERENCES (Sources for this series of articles are *starred):

Places to Visit to Learn More:

Sites

  • Ballona Wetlands, while much of the reserve is currently closed to the public, Friends of Ballona Wetlands and other community partners offer many tours, restoration events, and more.
  • Tovemur Rock,  can be viewed from Pelican Cove Park, 31300 Palos Verdes Drive South, Rancho Palos Verdes.
  • Satwiwa Native American Indian Culture Center, hosts Native American workshops and programs throughout the year.  Rolling grasslands, oak woodlands, and chaparral can all be seen on the same hike.  Newbury Park, Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.
  • Kuruvungna Springs Cultural Center & Museum, at University High School, West Los Angeles.
  • Heritage Park Tongva Exhibit, Santa Fe Springs.
  • Discovery Park, museum without walls, Playa Vista.
  • The Rancho Los Alamitos, once the sacred Tongva village of Povuu’ngna, Long Beach.
  • Louis Robidoux Nature Center, home to an authentic Tongva site housing genuine artifacts, such as a worksite for women and slicks and mortar, Riverside.
  • Tongva Memorial, at Loyola Marymount University, a place to learn more about the first Angelenos and some of the plants they used, Westchester.

Gardens

Museums

Sources for Further Research:

Alcala, Martin“The Gabrielino/Tongva Indians of California Tribal History” (pre-2008).

* Altshcul,  Jeffrey H. and Grenda, Donn R., Islanders and Mainlanders:  Pre-historic Context to the Southern California Bight  (2002), SRI Press, Tucson, Arizona.

Bogany, Julia et al., “Now You’re Speaking Our Language,” (2012), Pamela Munro and the Gabrielino/Tongva Language Committee.  A phrasebook of words and sentences in the Gabrielino/Tongva/Fernandeno language of the Los Angeles Basin.  Available at Lulu.com.

*Bowers Museum, Southern California Indian Curriculum Guide (online).

* Eagle Rock-Highland Park 4-H Club, “Mixed Nuts: Tongva Use of Southern California  Mixed Oak/Black Walnut Woodland” (1997), Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, CA.

Gray-Kanatiiosh, Barbara A., “Gabrielino (Native Americans),” (2004), ABDO Publishing Co.  Order on Amazon, or find new or used copies at multiple sites on the internet.

* Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, Tongva Section and various exhibits, 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, CA.

Los Angeles Indymedia: Activist News website, Tongva: Our Voice, Our History, Our People, featuring highlights of an exhibit held in November 2008, in Aleupkingna (Arcadia).  Includes photos of rock paintings and reproductions of female attire and shoes.

Loyola Marymount University, Hannon Library,  Online Gabrielino Indians Publications Collections, 1 Loyola Marymount University Dr., Los Angeles, CA.

Mirlesse, Alice, “Identity on Trial: the Gabrielino Tongva Quest for Federal Recognition” (2013).  Pomona Senior Thesis.  Paper 90.

National Park Service website, Channel Islands Section, California Islands Symposium 2012, “The Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island” presentations.

* Thomson, Mary Leighton, “The Gabrielinos.”  (1993), Playa del Rey, CA.  Historical booklet now out of print, carried by the Loyola Marymount University Library, or online on the Santa Monica Bay Audubon website smbasblog.com.

Welch, Rosanne, “A Brief History of the Tongva Tribe: the Native Inhabitants of the Lands of the Puente Hills Preserve” (2006) (download), PhD Program, Department of History Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, CA.

Part II: The First Americans of Ballona—Food and Plant Uses

November 14, 2013

This is the second in a 3-part series of articles on the Tongva people by Cindy Hardin, LA Audubon Outdoor Education Director, and  Jane Beseda, Director at Large, Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society.

The Tongva cooked outside over open fires as a communal activity.   To shade them as they worked, each group of  kiiys (dwellings), had a large structure without walls, called a ramada by the Spanish.  Like the kiiy, the ramada was framed with willow branches, with the roof covered by tules.

Replica of Tongva granary/  Source:  http://tongvapeople.com/collage.html

Replica of Tongva granary

Each cluster of dwellings also had a raised storehouse, or granary, for acorns.   The granary was a large basket woven from young, pliable willow branches and lined with the leaves of the Bay Laurel tree.   The leaves served two purposes: they kept the acorns dry, and the pungent laurel acted as a natural insect repellant.   To protect the acorns from other contamination, the Tongva placed the granaries about six feet above ground on stands made of poles.

Coast Live Oak

Coast Live Oak
(G. LoCascio)

The acorns of various species of California oak, particularly the Coast Live Oak, provided the source for acorn mush, the staple of the Tongva diet.   Acorn gathering was a group activity which occurred annually in the fall when the acorns were ripe.   Foraging groups from the village of Sa-angna walked to the nearby Baldwin Hills, which are visible from Ballona, where Coast Live Oak grew in profusion.

The Tongva carried the nuts back to their villages in burden baskets that held up to 200 pounds.   They wore basketry hats to ease the pressure of the carrying strap that went across the forehead.   These hats were also used as measuring standards for acorns and seeds.   After the acorns were gathered and shelled, they were pounded in a stone or wooden mortar.  The bitter tannin in the meal was leeched out with water through several rinse cycles.  Then the meal was boiled in tightly woven watertight baskets by dropping super-heated rocks of steatite, or soapstone, into the water.   The rocks were moved constantly with looped stirring sticks, so as not to scorch the basket.   The Tongva ate the mush cold.

The Black Walnut was another important plant resource.   They ate the meat of the walnut, and used the inner shells to make a black dye.   The Tongva were excellent basket weavers and used this dye to decorate their handiwork.   They filled the empty shells with asphaltum, a sticky black substance that naturally seeps up from the ground in the Los Angeles area, as we can still see today at the La Brea Tar Pits and on our local beaches.   They pressed pieces of abalone shell into the asphaltum, and used the walnut halves to gamble in a type of dice game.

Fishing with net, Bowers Museum.  Source:  http://www.bowers.org/files/SCIndianGuide.pdf

Fishing with net.  
(Photo: Bowers Museum Collection)

The sea was an abundant source of food.   The Tongva caught small schooling fish with nets, and larger fish with hooks of abalone shell or bone.   The fiber for both the nets and the fishing lines came from the milkweed plant.   Although they did not hunt whale, occasionally one would wash up on shore, and they would harvest the meat.   At low tide, they dug for clams, and collected shellfish and crustaceans, which they steamed in pits layered with hot coals and seaweed.   Ballona Creek also teemed with fish and freshwater crustaceans.   Steelhead Trout would head up the creek annually to spawn, as they did in all the local rivers and streams at that time.

The Tongva hunted land animals for their fur and meat, and kept dogs to help with the hunt.   The region was full of wild game, including bear.  Grizzly Bears were present in the Santa Monica Mountains, and would come down to take advantage of the steelhead spawning.    Although the Grizzly disappeared from this area long ago, the Black Bear is still present in our local mountains.

Deer and elk were hunted from blinds, with their meat used for food and skins used for clothing.   Arrows were fashioned from Elderberry branches, with arrowheads made of obsidian, a volcanic rock they obtained as trade goods from tribes to the north.  Sometimes a hunter would dress in a full deerskin—head, antlers and all—and stand downwind from a herd of deer.  Hunters would also rub their bodies with California sagebrush to camouflage their scent. This would allow them to get close enough to make a clean kill.

Smaller animals were also important to the diet.  Burrowing animals were smoked out of their holes, and rabbits were herded into nets.   According to village edict, a hunter or fisherman was required to share his catch with the rest of the group.  This rule helped to prevent hoarding and enhance group survival.

The Tongva used native plants for first aid, many of which can be seen at the Pitzer College native garden.  The John R. Rodman Arboretum began in 1984 as a movement to save surviving indigenous vegetation. The Arboretum gardens are spread through the campus and demonstrate that drought-tolerant and native landscaping can produce a beautiful and environmentally responsible setting.  A list of Medicinal Plant Uses was compiled by Barbara Courtois, founder of the Ballona Audubon Education Program.  In addition, a list of general uses of natural materials such as plants, minerals, and animals is included in the book California’s Chumash Indians, a project of the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Education Center.

Link to Part I: The First Americans Of Ballona – Origins and Daily Life
Link to Part III: The First Americans of Ballona – culture and Time of Change

See References at the end of Part III of this series of posts on “The First Americans of Ballona.”

Part I: The First Americans of Ballona—Origins and Daily Life

November 13, 2013

This is the first in a 3-part series of articles on the Tongva people by Cindy Hardin, LA Audubon Outdoor Education Director, and Jane Beseda, Director at Large, Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society.

Tongva Village

“Wiyot’s Children,” Gabrielino Indian Village of Sa-angna
Playa del Rey, California, Ballona Wetlands
(Painting: Mary Leighton Thomson)

The Tongva First Americans, also known as Gabrielinos,  who populated the Ballona Wetlands area, arrived from the east when desertification made the formerly lush Great Basin a less hospitable place in which to live.  This westward migration occurred between 9,000 BPE (before present era) and 2500 BPE.  The Tongva are distantly related to the Comanche and the Hopi Pueblo indigenous populations.  Their name means  “People of the Earth.”

The Tongva inhabited the Greater Los Angeles area as far east as the base of Mount Wilson, 40 miles inland.  Their territory was bounded by Malibu to the north and Laguna Beach to the south.  They also occupied some of the Channel Islands, including Santa Catalina, San Clemente and San Nicolas.  You can still hear their language in place names such as Pacoima, Tujunga, Topanga, Azusa, Cahuenga, and Cucamonga.

The Tongva’s appearance and costume were distinctive.  The people were somewhat short and sturdy by European standards.  They were also lighter-skinned than the indigenous people further to the south in Mexico and Central America.  They had brown or reddish hair, and no baldness.  The Tongva washed their hair with urine to kill lice, and this practice might have accounted for their light hair color.  Some Spanish explorers wrote of them as the “blonde” people of the area.  The women used red ochre, a type of clay that is heavy in iron, as sunscreen.

Hair and clothing shown in photo of trading display.  Photo"  Bowers Museum Collection.  Source:  tongvapeople.com

Hair and clothing shown in display of trade goods.
(Photo: Bowers Museum Collection)

Women wore their hair loose and long.  The men also wore their hair long, but wound the top part into a bun, fastened with pins of bone or wood.  Only the men wore hairpins, as this was done to keep the hair out of their eyes when hunting or fishing.

Women wore knee-length skirts or front-and-back aprons of skins, grasses, shredded bark or strings made from yucca fiber.  During the warmer months, men went naked or wore loin cloths, and the children wore no clothing.   During cooler months, the Tongva wore garments and wraps of animal skins, often made of rabbit.  All went barefoot except when traveling in cactus country or rough mountain areas.

Tongva woman at her shelter  covered with tule mats on the banks of Los Angeles River.  Photo:  Bowers Museum Collection.  Source:  tongvapeople.com

Tongva woman at her shelter covered with tule mats on the banks of Los Angeles River.
(Photo: Bowers Museum Collection)

The Ballona village site of  Sa’angna, is formally designated as Area CA-LAN-62.  The actual location is believed to have been east of the saltmarsh along the base of the Westchester bluffs in what is now Playa Vista.  At that time, Centinela Creek flowed freely and was a source of fresh water for the settlement.  The village of about 100 people was approximately 1500 feet long and consisted of several clusters of 4 to 5 houses, or kiiy (pronounced “key”), spaced 15-20 feet apart.  (Spelling variants include ki, pronounced “key,” and kich, pronounced “kish.”)   These houses, which the Spanish called  jacals, served mainly as sleeping quarters for an extended family.

The kiiy were dome-shaped and framed with bent poles.  The branches of the Arroyo Willow, which is still abundant at Ballona, were used to make the frame.  Tule grass, a type of bulrush found in freshwater habitats, was dried and used to cover the frame. Tules were also dried and woven together to serve as floormats inside the kiiy.  A hole at the top of the dwelling let out the smoke from a fireplace in the center of the structure.  The replica of a kiiy located at the entrance to Ballona wetlands is much smaller than the actual kiiy used by the Tongva, which were 3 to 4 times larger and served as sleeping quarters for an extended family.

The Tongva were a friendly tribe, paddling out to greet the first Spanish ships with gifts of nuts, berries, acorns, and seafood.  Conflict between villages over failure in gift-giving at ceremonies, abduction of women, poaching and trespassing, or hurtful sorcery sometimes resulted in war.  But the decision to go to war was taken very seriously, and all members of the community were involved.  Most conflicts were resolved by “song fights,” the days-long singing of insulting songs in vile language, accompanied by much stamping and tramping of the ground.

Tongva pictographs are very rare today, having been destroyed by the development of Greater Los Angeles.  There are paintings at a few sites in the San Gabriel Mountains and in the northwestern part of the San Fernando Valley, but none are public.  A replica of their rock art is on display at The Southwest Museum.

The purpose and function of Tongva pictographs may have been similar to that of the Luiseno, since both have diamond patterns and wavy lines.  Luiseno boys and girls painted with red hematite on rocks during their puberty ceremony.  During the ceremonies, sand paintings were created to illustrate the Luiseno conception of the universe, the night sky, sacred beings, and the spiritual component of the human personality.  At the end of the ceremony, the sand paintings were destroyed, and girls raced to a rock where they painted angular and diamond shaped designs.  Perhaps the young Tongva women also painted these symbols during their puberty ceremony.

Link to Part II: The First Americans of Ballona – Food and Plant Uses
Link to Part III:  The First Americans of Ballona – Culture and Time of Change

See references at the end of Part III of this series of posts on “The First Americans of Ballona.”  

Sepulveda Basin Trip Report: 9 November, 2013

November 11, 2013
Los Angeles River looking SW towards Sepulveda retention dam (L. Johnson 11/9/13)

Los Angeles River looking southeast towards Sepulveda flood control dam (L. Johnson 11/9/13)

We haven’t visited this area as a club for a couple of years. A deficit in chapter members was, to my great surprise, offset by a large number of San Fernando Valley and Pasadena birders.

Sycamore in Fall (L. Johnson 11/9/13)

Sycamore in Fall
(L. Johnson 11/9/13)

While waiting for potential late arrivals, we checked the lawn & trees near the parking lot and turned up a variety of SparrowsChipping, Lark, Savannah, Song, White-crowned and Dark-eyed Junco. Western Meadowlarks – the 1st of two small flocks – meandered through grass, as Ruby-crowned Kinglets, Lesser & American Goldfinches, House Finches and some of the ever-present wintering Yellow-rumped Warblers worked the leafy trees. A small flock of Yellow-chevroned Parakeets alerted us with their calls as they vanished beyond the trees. By the time we set off for the pond, it was already warm enough to shed jackets, due to late fall Santa Ana conditions.

Merlin (T. Hinnebusch 11/9/13)

Merlin (T. Hinnebusch 11/9/13)

The pond held the usual suspects: five species of herons, three of grebe, three of duck, coots, White Pelican and Double-crested Cormorant and Osprey, while the surrounding bushes had more Song Sparrows, California Towhees, Common Yellowthroats, Bushtits and the first of 2 Blue-grey Gnatcatchers. The best bird though – and really the best bird of the day –  was a Merlin which flew in and perched nearby in the leafless top of a small tree, staying for several minutes, affording everyone fine views and sufficient time to determine that it indeed was a Merlin and why it wasn’t something else.

We frequently heard, yet could not see, Soras calling from the dense lake-edge reeds. Overhead, on thermals from the warming day, rode adult and juvenile Turkey Vultures, and a very dark Red-tailed Hawk.

Dark Red-tail Hawk (T. Hinnebusch 11/9/13)

Dark Red-tail Hawk (T. Hinnebusch 11/9/13)

About half the group continued past Burbank Blvd. to the Los Angeles River. The Army Corp of Engineers did indeed whack down many bushes and trees, including the magnificent Eucalyptus, locally famous as host to warblers and vireos, including migrating eastern birds who’ve wandered off-track. Strangely, most trees bordering Haskell Creek remained, giving cover to birds and homeless denizens alike.

Where the large Eucalyptus used to be (L. Johnson 11/9/13)

Where the large bird-friendly Eucalyptus used to be
(L. Johnson 11/9/13)

From time to time odd birds like Bobolinks appear at the river. We searched for the Red-throated Pipit – a bird whose breeding range extends from Asia into the edge of far western Alaska, who very occasionally migrates south through the Americas instead of Siberia and China, and who had been seen earlier in the week – but saw only the plain-backed American Pipits patrolling the ploughed field on the river’s south side. Oh well, so it goes.

Birds in the Los Angeles River (L. Johnson 11/9/13)

Birds in the Los Angeles River at Balboa Blvd.(L. Johnson 11/9/13)

In the river were Spotted & Least Sandpipers and several White-faced Ibis keeping the ducks company. An Osprey made several plunges into the river, but arose fishless. We had earlier seen several sizable carp in Haskell Creek; perhaps they were in the river as well. Absent (perhaps oddly) were Orange Bishops which one frequently sees in the mid-river reeds and shrubbery.

By the time we staggered back to the cars, the day was hot, we were thirsty, and no one felt like visiting Lake Balboa.    [Chuck Almdale]

Sepulveda Wildlife Area Trip List 11/9/13
Canada Goose 7 Yellow-chevroned Parakeet 8
Gadwall 2 Merlin 1
American Wigeon 8 Black Phoebe 20
Mallard 50 Say’s Phoebe 4
Pied-billed Grebe 20 Cassin’s Kingbird 3
Eared Grebe 6 Western Scrub-Jay 2
Western Grebe 1 American Crow 10
Double-crested Cormorant 30 Barn Swallow 6
American White Pelican 12 Bushtit 8
Great Blue Heron 4 Bewick’s Wren 1
Great Egret 4 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 2
Snowy Egret 2 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 6
Green Heron 3 Northern Mockingbird 5
Black-crowned Night-Heron 5 California Thrasher 1
White-faced Ibis 2 American Pipit 12
Turkey Vulture 8 Common Yellowthroat 6
Osprey 2 Yellow-rumped Warbler 40
Cooper’s Hawk 1 Spotted Towhee 2
Red-tailed Hawk 2 California Towhee 8
Sora 4 H Chipping Sparrow 10
American Coot 10 Lark Sparrow 5
Killdeer 3 Savannah Sparrow 10
Spotted Sandpiper 2 Song Sparrow 10
Least Sandpiper 15 White-crowned Sparrow 30
California Gull 10 Dark-eyed Junco 8
Rock Pigeon 15 Red-winged Blackbird 4
Mourning Dove 8 Western Meadowlark 15
Anna’s Hummingbird 3 House Finch 30
Allen’s Hummingbird 10 Lesser Goldfinch 4
Belted Kingfisher 1 American Goldfinch 30
Nuttall’s Woodpecker 2 House Sparrow 6
Northern Flicker 4 Total Species 63