Thursday, June 8, 2017 11:15 pm CDT

63 degrees F   Partly Cloudy   Wind Calm

Sunrise  5:26 am CDT    Sunset  8:59 pm CDT

 

Today has once again been a beautiful day here.

Lots of sunshine.  Light winds.  Low humidity.  The days that Minnesota Winter Dreams are about.

And for our loons it has been a good day.  With a few challenges.

But the important thing is that our chicks today were still doing well and growing.  When i got home from a meeting I could not spot them anywhere but I have to assume that they are still ok.

Shortly after the loons and chicks made a swim by of the nest (which excited everyone watching), the loons were swimming close together, one chick on each parent's back.  They were perfectly reflected in the mirror surface of the lake.

It was one of those perfect images that is etched in the mind forever.

But just a couple hours later, things changed!

Wails and tremolos and yodels.

When I went to see what was going on, two loons were in a face off.  A tense face off.  The other loon of our pair was a distance away with the chicks.

But soon he left the chicks almost flying across the water toward the other two loons!

The intruder loon was back!  There were full penguin dances.  Calling.  Aggressive diving.  Circling each other.  Splashing.  More penguin dances.

As if that were not enough, at exactly the time of that confrontation, a mature bald eagle flew low right over the chicks.  He did not swoop down on them thankfully.  They were sitting ducks sitting there all alone.  Or should I say sitting loon chicks!

One of the loons seeing this headed for the chicks.  Half running.  Half flying!  Then the other loon realized what happened and did the same thing.

They landed where the chicks had been.  But where were the chicks now.

I looked and looked and could not see them!  There were now ripples or small waves on the lake and I tried desperately to pick out the chicks.

The two loons called and looked and peered under water and called and looked.  Then they started a number of excited dives.  I still could not see the chicks.  In all the excitement of an intruder loon AND an eagle, had another predator taken them.

The loons kept diving excitedly and surfacing and calling.

It seemed like this went on for an eternity.  But it was probably only a minute or two that they kept diving excitedly.

But I watched with increasing concern, unable to spot the chicks!

Had something taken them?  Had something pulled them under water in those few moments?  Were they just hidden by the little waves?  Was this real or a product of my concern or overactive imagination?

But then THERE was one chick.  The adults immediately went to it.  And then there was the second chick.

WHERE did they come from?

Obviously the adults were as concerned or more concerned than me.  So it could not have been that they were there all along.

I have no explanation of what just happened.

But I am happy that the chicks are well!

Late this afternoon, both loons and chicks were relaxing near the outer buoys.

Much further out there were two kayakers sitting obviously just watching the loons.  I look and kept working.  They were being very respectful and causing no concern to the loons.

But about 5 minutes later, I heard the loons calling.  I went to see what was upsetting them.

The two kayakers were outside the buoys to the right of the camera, but they were well inside the distance of the outer buoys.  They had 'forced' one of the loons with the two chicks way up near shore.

She was calling with great concern.

Whether they had actually paddled in or just floated in, they had come in way too close.  They were just sitting watching and enjoying the female loon calling and the little chicks.

But they were totally unaware that the male was right behind them doing repeated penguin dances.  VERY upset.  The female and chicks were trapped between the kayaks and the shore.  I don't think they even realized what stress they were causing for our loons.

I waved at them and motioned for them to move off to the side and leave.  If they understood, they took their sweet time doing it.

As they were turning their kayaks, the female took the opportunity to quickly swim with the chicks out to the male.

But unbelievably, just then a speed boat came by!

They slowed down to almost a stop when they saw the loons!

Now the loons were trapped between the kayaks and the speedboat.  Fortunately he left right away, but as the kayaks left, they paddled right AT the loons!

There are sometimes for my own mental health I just need to walk away.  But it is too hard to do.

I am an avid canoeist.

So I know that sometimes we think we are so much more 'environmentally friendly' than power boats (although I love them too!).  But we sometimes have a superiority complex even though we seldom admit it.

It was very disappointing to me when I learned by watching our loons that canoes and kayaks can be much more stressful to loons than most speedboats.

I think it is because we are much slower, we get closer and we are lower to the water than other boats.  And so loons see us as much more of a threat.

Did these kayakers mean to upset the loons.  I don't think so for a minute. 

I think it was just another case of sometimes we love our loons too much!

But other than those things, it was a 'real easy day' for our loons, I thought with tongue in cheek!

I need to take this opportunity to say THANK YOU to my wonderful neighbors!

Without their interest and support and love of our loons, it would be impossible to do the LoonCam!  They limit their own activities to keep from upsetting the loons.  

All it would take is one neighbor who did not do that and the LoonCam could not be done.

THANK YOU!

 

Copyright 2017    Larry R Backlund

 

Wednesday, June 7, 2017 10:18 pm

65 degrees F   Scattered Rain   Wind 6 mph E

Sunrise  5:26 am CDT    Sunset   8:58 pm CDT

 

Today has been a very good day.

The loons came back!

All four of them.  Both adults and BOTH chicks.

They have spent the entire day in the area of the nest, usually hanging out right at the buoys that surround the nesting area.

Why they disappeared for a few days, I don't know.  Where they went, I don't know.

But now they are back and that is the most important thing and the best thing.

Like I mentioned before, I was gone most of Saturday and Sunday so I didn't have a chance to look for them with binoculars until evening.  What concerned me the most was that one of the other people on the lake said they had gone around the entire lake actually looking for them and saw no loons at all.  That is when my heart sank.

Whether they were hiding in the weeds.  Or whether they made their way into one of the channels off the lake will probably be something we never know.

Today someone else said on Sunday they saw the loons and the chicks on Sunday on the other side of the lake from where I spotted them last night.  So they really ranged far and wide in these few days.  She said there was so much boat traffic on the lake that she was very concerned that a fast boat would hit the chicks.

After all, they cannot dive at all at this age.  Or dive deep enough to get away from a boat bearing down on them.  That is a very good reason for you to share with your boating family and friends to be on the lookout for little loon chicks.

I guess we could speculate and guess endlessly of where they went and why, but the important thing is that they are back.

And today they seemed very content just to stay here in the area of the nest.

And I was very content as well to have them back and to know that they were ok.  Healthy and active.

In the 3 /1 days since I saw them, they have grown SO much.  In my field notes that I keep, I made the note that it looks like they are at least THREE TIMES as big as they were when they left the nest on Saturday morning! 

Obviously they must have good appetites and they must be getting fed very well.

The chicks are totally dependent on the parents for their food for the first number of weeks of their lives.

I may delay shutting down the camera for a few days now that they have come back to the nesting area.  I hope that you will get a glimpse of them now and then.  I don't want to raise your hopes unnecessarily because the glimpses will still be few and far between.  But hopefully you will see them.

But today you can rest assured that our two little loons are alive, very active and doing well.

And that is the whole reason we have ridden this roller coaster of emotions, isn't it?

 

Copyright 2017     Larry R Backlund

 

Tuesday, June 6, 2017 9:30 pm

64 degrees F  Clear   Wind Calm

Sunrise  5:26   Sunset  8:56 pm CDT

 

Today has been another absolutely spectacular day here in Minnesota.

Blue skies, lots of sun and low humidity.

We are rapidly approaching our longest days of the year.  And during these days we also experience something else that many of you in other parts of the country do not - a long period of twilight in the evening.  Just a beautiful, peaceful time of the day.

A perfect summer day.

The one thing that would make it better is loons.

I still have not seen our loons since early Sunday morning when I told you about seeing them.  But I have been gone so much that I have not had much time to look.  And I have not had a chance to get out on the lake since they left the nest.

Yesterday I told you that I 'was not concerned at all' that I had not seen them.  That they could be anyplace.  And that is true that they could be anyplace.  But the first part was a little bit of a white lie.

When it comes to the loons, it seems like I always get concerned.

And I didn't want to pass that concern on to you without knowing what I was talking about.

But I have to admit that my concern was starting to grow.

When I got home just before dark on Sunday night, I immediately went down to the lake to look for our loons.  They weren't there!  There were waves so I kept telling myself  that they are out there someplace even though I expected them to be closer to the nest.

I am used to them remaining in the area of the nest for the first couple weeks.  And then they gradually wander out further and further.

And they definitely were not in the area of the nest.

I thought back to Sunday morning when I had last seen them about 5 am.  About an hour after that there had been NUMEROUS wails and even yodels from quite a distance away.  I looked but I could not spot them  I did not see an eagle but I figured that THEY had seen one in the area and did not like it.

So that started to concern me when they still were not around Sunday night at dusk.

Then Monday morning about 5:30 am I went down to look to see if I could spot our loons. NOTHING. Anywhere.  I had fully expected to see them somewhere in the area of the nest.  But they were not there nor could I see them with binoculars anywhere on the lake.

My concern grew.  That is when I told you the white lie that I was not concerned at all!

I kept telling myself that they were just hiding in the bull rushes someplace where I could not see them.  And that they were there and that they were OK.  But I WANTED to see them to KNOW that was true.

So that is when I told you that I was "not concerned at all".  I was starting to become concerned.  Not an overwhelming concern but concerned none the less.  I wanted to give you facts that I KNEW, not something I feared.  And I did not want to concern you.

About 3:30 pm on Monday, I heard a loon yelling "EAGLE!"  I know!  It is silly but it really has gotten to the point where most times I can tell when they are calling about an eagle in the area as compared to some other call.

There was a SINGLE loon sitting just out beyond the buoys!

Was it one of our loons?  There were two mature bald eagles circling overhead.  And the loon did not like it.

I strained mightily to try to see chicks.  My heart sank.  I could not see any chicks.  Just the loon concerned about the eagle.  My concern went up another notch and my heart sank a little deeper.

Had all the calls I heard on Sunday morning actually been eagles targeting our chicks?  I actually thought the unthinkable!  Had the eagles actually TAKEN our chicks?

I wondered if they took them all the way over to where they had nested last year?  But that was TOO far away with two tiny chicks.

My concern grew.

Early this morning, once again I went down to the lake with binoculars right at dawn.

NO sign of loons that I could see anywhere.  My concern went up another notch.  I started to think how do I tell YOU about this?  What if our chicks are really gone?  I didn't want to say ANYTHING until I was sure of something.  But it was looking worse and worse.

The evenings and nights had been silent.  No loons calling.

Later this morning I was talking to another resident of the lake about some business concerning the lake and maintaining its quality.  After we took care of business, he asked me about the loons.  I told him that I had not seen them since early Sunday morning but that they could be almost anyplace.

But then he said something I did NOT want to hear.

He had been around the entire lake on their pontoon on Sunday afternoon.  They specifically were looking for loons.  And they did not see ONE loon!  Anywhere on the lake.

My heart really sank.  And my concern went up a number of notches.

I was being forced to come to terms with what I did not want to come to terms with.  Our loons were GONE!

Where?  Why?  HOW?

Once again my thoughts went to you.  All of you who have watched and cared so deeply about our loons and those two cute new loon chicks!

How was I going to tell you that I think they are actually gone but I don't know how or when or where?

About 9:15 pm tonight, just after the sun had set I was raking weeds in the lake and we were in the long twilight hours, I heard a loon wailing.

Yes!  Unmistakably it was a loon wailing.  

I ran up to the house to get the binoculars.  Another wail.  And then another.

In the shadows of trees reflecting in the darkening light, I think I see a loon.  But I can't be sure.  I strain to see.

YES!

It IS a loon about a quarter of a mile away around the lake.  But it definitely is a loon in those shadows and darkness.

Just then there is a YODEL a little further away.  There is a MALE loon.  Then tremolos and answering tremolos.  Wails and answering wails.

I see a second loon, apparently the male, swimming toward the first loon that I had seen.

Oh how I wish they would come further out into the lake out of the dark shadows of the trees reflecting in the lake so that I could see them.

But they stay in the shadows.

Can it be?!  CAN IT BE?!

I think I see a tiny little speck of black moving between the two adult loons!

CAN IT BE?!

I strain and look and squint.  The more I look, the more I become sure that it is a little chick swimming between the two adults.  I don't want to just think and I hope that it isn't wishful thinking.

The more I look, the more I am convinced it is a little CHICK!  

It is OUR loons!

But is it just one chick?  Or are there two?

Then I see another shadow that might be the second chick!

The more I look, the more I am convinced that BOTH loons and BOTH chicks are there!

I am still not FULLY convinced but I am more than 90% sure of what I have seen.

Now I want to see them in bright daylight to be absolutely sure!

But my heart soared.

Our loons were there!

Our chicks were there and seemingly active and healthy from what I could see.

So tonight is a good night!

A VERY good night!!

 

Copyright  2017   Larry R Backlund

 

Monday, June 5, 2017 12:00 Noon

79 degrees   Clear  Wind 8 mph NE

Sunrise  5:27 am CDT    Sunset   8:57 pm CDT

 

It is a beautiful blue sky Minnesota day with lots of sunshine and low humidity.

I have not seen our loons yet today.

I am not sure where they are.  Now that does not mean I am concerned at all.  They could be anyplace.  I just have not seen them.  And there are enough waves on the lake that makes it harder to spot them.

I am a little surprised that they have ventured further than I would have expected at this point.  Normally they would stay closer to the nesting area for the first few days and then gradually move out further and further.

But again let me repeat that at this point it does not concern me that I have not seen them.

I was gone all day yesterday as well so I was not able to watch them.  But I know that early yesterday morning I saw one very active little chick swimming alongside the parents and I am 90% sure that the other chick was on the back of one of the adults.  In the early morning light I could not tell for sure.

I will try to give you reports of any sightings  and updates.

But what we do know is that we have two beautiful little loon chicks.

This is a bittersweet time of year.

So much anticipation.  So much watching.  So much cheering.  So many stomach-churning moments of concern.  So much JOY in seeing our new loon chicks.

And then it is all over so fast as the little chicks leave the nest to begin their new life where they were intended to be.  ON the lake!

The yellow irises started blooming just in time as if to celebrate the birth of the chicks.  And they are beautiful.  There are a whole bunch of them, as well as daisies, that protrude up out of your picture at the very top of the screen.

But it just isn't the same, is it?

What had been such a place of such fascination for the last month, is now just a nice little flower garden.  Almost like one you could have in your backyard.

Where there was life and interest ... well, it is just no longer the same without our beautiful loons.

THEY were the ones that made this place so special!

I will leave the LoonCam on and the nesting platform out for a few more days so that hopefully you might get a glimpse of the loons if they come swimming by.

But in a few days we will turn the camera off and pull the nest in.

And another wonderful SUCCESSFUL loon season will come to an end.

And we will begin to dream about 2018!

 

Copyright  2017  Larry R Backlund

 

Sunday, June 4, 2017 5:06 am CDT

54 degrees F  Clear   Calm

Sunrise  5:27 am CDT    Sunset  8:56 pm CDT

 

The first color of morning is just painting the eastern sky with wisps of pink.

There isn't a breath of air moving and so the surface of the lake is like a mirror.  Reflecting the sky, the trees and our loons on its surface.

Right now both of our loon parents are floating peacefully near each other.

One chick has already gone for a swim and I think I see the other one on the adult loon's back in the early morning light.

Our little loon babies have apparently made it through their first long dark scary night!

I still stand back in awe of this amazingly awesome miracle.

And we are privileged to be a part of it and get a little glimpse into the life of our loons and the creation of NEW life.

I was gone most of yesterday but when I got home just as darkness was falling, I could clearly see both of our little loons swimming with the two adult parents.

They were obviously healthy and VERY active.  And wanting to be fed.  Two beautiful loon chicks that looked SO small on such a big lake.  But the parents were right there to protect them from danger and feed them.

Well after dark, I heard the male yodeling.  The yodel is the most extreme of the loon calls and is a strong claim of territory.  Since I did not hear an answering yodel from any other loon on the lake, I assumed that the male was simply broadcasting to anyone and everyone within range of his voice, "This is MY territory!  Stay away!"  And he may  have been teaching the chicks what it meant.

This morning both parents are right there with them as well and so the staking out of territory overnight apparently has worked.

Yesterday was an amazing day.

I have never seen two loon chicks hatch as close together as these two.

The two eggs were laid 2 1/2 days apart and yet they hatched only hours apart - less than 4 hours apart.  There is a thing that is called "catch up" where the second egg develops faster than the first egg.  There are all kinds of theories of why this is the case.

But this was a real case of "catch up".

The second egg hatched in almost exactly 25 days!  This is a new record on the LoonCam loon nest.  It has beat the old record by about half a day!  We continue to learn news things every day.  Historically it has always been believed that 28 days was the incubation period for loons. And that is a good guide.  But with us being able to observe them much closer and more accurately, we continue to rewrite the book of what is known about loons.

And you have been a part of it.

I think part of the two chicks hatching so close together may have been that the loons were off the first egg quite a bit after it was laid and that probably delayed the actual time that it started developing.  And so when the second egg was laid, they were on the eggs more faithfully and therefore both eggs probably started developing about the same time.

So it made for a VERY interesting morning yesterday to see BOTH chicks alive and so active.

I have to be honest that I questioned during the early days of nesting whether the eggs would be ok and that the chicks would hatch.

It seemed like the adults were pulled off the nest so often in some fairly cold weather.  If it wasn't an eagle, it was an intruder loon.  They had one thing after the other to be concerned about and to deal with.

But deal with it they did.  And much better than I.  And so today we have two healthy little balls of black down called loon chicks.

And what can be more special than those two little chicks?  And more bittersweet when we see them jump in the lake for the first time and swim off together with Mom and Dad?

This was also another first.  It is probably the earliest that I have seen both chicks jump in the water.  They both jumped about 9:30am yesterday morning.  That meant that the first chick was only about 8 hours old and the  second chick was less that 5 hours old when they left the nest.

Now they are the waterbirds that they were meant to be!

If you did not see it, here is a link to the video of the chicks making that BIG jump into an even bigger lake.  http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/104200927   The jump happens at the 9:57 mark of the video.

But the drama did not come to a close yesterday.  Our close up view of it may have closed when they left the nest.  But now our little loons enter the most challenging and dangerous part of their lives.

For the next two weeks they are especially vulnerable to so many dangers.  Dangers from above and below.

Especially eagles from above.

And from below, all kinds of dangers - largemouth bass, northerns, muskies, snapping turtles, just to name a few.

And from the surface of the water itself, boaters and jet skis that may not be paying attention to our loons.  The adults can dive out of the way of most danger from boats.  

But during these first two weeks, the chicks find it very hard to dive deep enough to get out of the way.  They simply pop back up to the surface like a cork.

So now is a good time to remind your family and friends to be very careful and watchful for our loons and especially the little loon chicks.

By being mindful and protective of our loons, it means that new generations will survive.

And we will be blessed with their beauty and the magical sound of loons calling at dusk on our beautiful northern lakes!

 

Copyright  2017   Larry R Backlund