Wednesday, April 14, 2010 7:33am

51 degrees   Partly Cloudy    Wind SSW 7mph
 
 
There is good news this morning!!
 
Just a few minutes ago, I happened to look over at the television [where I keep the picture on from the LoonCam most of the time] and the loons were up on the nest and mating.
 
This is very good news since it indicates that they are once again taking ownership of the nest and that we may actually be able to watch them again this year.
 
This is the first time this year that I have seen them actually up on the nest.  As I have already told you, they have been in swimming around the nest platform but I have not seen them on the platform before now.   There has been no nest building activity so far.  
 
Right now the female is still sitting on the nest while the male swims a few feet away.  She is not showing any signs of nest building but is just sitting there looking around at the nesting platform....as if she is asking herself 'I wonder if this will work for us?  Yeah, I think this can work for a nest again.'
After a few minutes, she slips off the nest and the two of them swim off together.
 
So there is good news this morning!
 
Later today, the technical gurus should be here to install more equipment that is necessary to make this whole thing run and to be able to send a picture to you....no matter where in the world you are!  Stop and think of the miracle of just that!  That you can watch our loons no matter where you are in the world or how many miles away you are!
 
So hopefully, if all goes as planned, you will be able to once again watch our loons LIVE!
The anticipation starts to build!
 
 

Monday, April 12, 2010 7:58pm


60 degrees   Cloudy  Light Breeze  Sunset

 

The sun has just set and in half an hour it will be almost dark.

Earlier today the temperature was in the mid-70s.  But now a front has come through and on a cloudy evening there is a definite chill in the air.

Tonight I have spent some time putting some finishing touches and refinements on the nesting platform.  However, several things happened tonight that were intriguing, unusual and unique.

As I was heading down to the lake to add some willow branches to the nesting platform [I will explain more about that some other time], I saw one of the loons sitting a ways out on the lake.  I stopped.  I have not seen much of them for the last week.  So I did not want to go out to the nest if  they were checking it out and if my being there would scare them away.

But then I heard a loon call...an alarm call.  But it wasn't the loon that I was watching.  Where did it come from?

Two loons came around the island, one in hot pursuit of the other!  And there were a couple alarm calls.  I could not tell if it was coming from 'the chaser' or from 'the chasee'!  But they were definitely moving!  It was a half running on the surface and half rowing with its wings type of motion for both of them.  Both of them going as fast as they could.

The other loon just sat and watched the two as they raced around.

This isn't in itself unusual behavior when there is an 'intruder loon'.  The resident loon will chase the other loon until he decides it is not wise to stay and he will fly away or beat a hasty retreat to another part of the lake.

But the two turned the corner around the island and headed in toward shore.  The one in front would halfway dive and the loon chasing him would immediately dive as well [once again I will try to remember to tell you a little bit about this behavior sometime],

But the loon in front was a little devious because he would not dive fully...only half way.  Whereas the loon in back would dive under completely.  By the time the loon in back came to the surface, the loon being chased had gained a few feet of distance on him.  And then he would make a turn and the loon in back would cut him off and gain ground and almost catch him.

They looped back out into the lake...only to turn again and come towards shore.  And then back out in the lake.  And then towards shore.  And then UNDER the neighbors dock!  And back out into the lake.  Over and over and over without stopping or slowing down!  Then back towards me.  Once again, back out into the lake.

I could not believe how long this went on and how tired they must be.  But they kept it up.

For at least TEN MINUTES straight, they chased each other all over the place.  The third loon came in closer and just sat and watched.  And I watched...through binoculars.  Just when you think you have seen everything, these amazing loons do something completely new.  I have never seen a chase go so far or so long.  I think with all of their chasing, they easily covered a mile or maybe even two MILES on the surface of the water.

I started to become concerned that one was going to injure the other or they were going to wear themselves out and maybe even go into shock.

Then near shore, they just stopped!  As I watched through the binoculars, they sat about 20 feet apart and "alarm called" at each other - yodel and tremolo calls.  Had they tired themselves out so much that they couldn't move any more?  Were they just going to sit and 'call each other names'?!

When I took my eyes away from the binoculars, I could see why they stopped.  A neighbor's dog had come down to the shore and was in the water!  It was enough for the loons to be as much concerned about the dog as they had been about each other for a minute!

And then they were off on their chase again!

After a couple more rounds of chasing out into the lake, the 'intruder loon' finally made his way off to another part of the lake and the chasing loon settled down.  And the two loons approached each other and swam peacefully together.

I could not believe what I had just seen.  Like I said, just when you think you have them somewhat figured out and have seen all their behaviors, you see something like this.  So new.  So unusual.  So fascinating.  I cannot even begin to imagine how tired BOTH of them must be.

The pair of loons swam out and across the lake.

The encouraging part of all of this is that apparently this pair has once again staked this out as THEIR territory.  And they are not going to let some interloper move in on their territory!  That is hopeful that they will once again nest this year, hopefully on the platform in front of the camera.

So I decided it was safe for me to do the work on the nesting platform that I had originally come down to do over half an hour ago!  I also put out the raft and the buoys to try to keep boats away from the nest.

I spent some time doing the work and then headed up to the house.  Just as I finished putting the tools away, I looked down to the lake and saw both loons coming from out in the middle of the lake.  It looked like they had been sent for!  They were making a straight line toward the nest and they were not wasting any time.

They swam around the raft and checked it out.

Can they really remember all of this from year to year?  Were they watching me the whole time I was working on things?  After checking the raft out, they swam straight to the nesting platform.

Side by side they swam all the way around it THREE times!

They looked up at it.  They even looked UNDER it.  They swam and they looked.  But they did not try to get up on it.

Apparently they satisfied themselves because they started to swim away.  Did they approve?  Did they recognize this as the place where they had nested so many times before?  Oh, to know what was going on inside that 'loony brain'!

As they swam away, they checked out one of the buoys as well.  And then they were off to another part of the lake.  Who knows....maybe they went to see their 'loon realtor' and started signing papers for this year!

Whatever they did, whatever they thought, the encouraging part with this behavior too is that they are definitely interested in the nest and gave hints of taking ownership of it.

So now we watch and wait and hope and pray.  Maybe again this year 'our loons' will grace us with their presence!!

In the next few days we will do some of the final testing on all of the equipment and making sure everything is connected properly to bring the view (and the SOUNDS) of our loons to you.

Stay tuned.  Tell everyone you can think of to watch a new season with our amazing loons!

 

Friday, April 9, 2010 8:52pm

 

54 degrees   Calm and Clear

 

The sun set an hour ago and there is just the slightest hint of glow in the northwestern sky.  That will become more pronounced as spring progresses until we reach the point where we have that magical twilight most of the summer. 

But right now it is dark and somewhere out on the lake our two loons are swimming.

It has been a beautiful, bright sunny warm day with the high about 72 degrees.  We have been blessed with an unusually mild and warm spring.  But we do need rain.  It is so dry here.  But as of now the lake level is near normal.

Since it has been a week since I last wrote, I wanted to bring you up-to-date on what has been happening.

This is that sort of  'in between time' without a lot of activity to report.  I haven't seen a lot of the loons. Once again even before the nesting platform was out, the loons came in and swam right over the area where it always is anchored.  It is like they know exactly where it has been in previous years.  But they are around and I see them once in a while and occasionally hear them.  To hear that haunting call immediately transports you to the northwoods and the memories of camping and fishing trips through the years.  That amazing call that speaks of all that is wonderful and wild.

They  have not gotten serious about nesting yet.  It will all come in due time.

The nest is out and ready for them.

The last several weeks I have done a major rebuild and renovation on the nesting platform.  You won't notice much difference on the surface but hopefully this rebuild will keep it in good shape for a couple more years.

I wish you could see what I am seeing on my television right now.  The night vision camera is working well and I think you will enjoy this new addition.  As we have been hinting at and telling you, we have two new features this year that we hope will make the LoonCam even more special for you.....night vision and sound!

Very soon you also will be able to see what I am watching right now.  The technical gurus are working on all the things that are necessary to be able to get the picture and sound from the nest to your home and your computer.  I know that they are hoping to have everything online very soon.  So keep watching and checking.

In the meantime, feel free to use the chatroom to share your experiences with others.  And let us know when you see loons showing up for the first time in your area or your lake if you are in loon country.

You may be interested in a website that tracks the northward migration of loons and other birds and allows you to report your sightings.  It is Journey North at  http://www.learner.org/jnorth/maps/spring2010.html?layers=loon

I expect that in the next couple weeks the loons will start to get more serious about nesting and by the end of the month hopefully we will once again be witness to one of the miracles of nature as the loons lay their eggs and hatch new loons chicks.  It is a tense time as well.  The nest is out.  But now everything is up to the loons.  There is nothing I can do to MAKE them use the nest.  They are the ones who decide IF and when they will use the nesting platform.   Everything is now in their court.

So stay tuned and join us in this amazing journey and this unique look into their lives.

 

Good Friday, April 2, 2010 11:39pm

 

45 degrees  Windy  Dark   ;-)

Today was the first time that I have seen both loons.

Several other people around the lake have told me that they have seen two loons but it was not until this morning that I saw both of them together.

Today has been yet another unusually mild day.  We had a high of 70 degrees today and 85 degrees yesterday here at the lake.  And it has not gotten below 50 degrees for the last two nights.

Now when you realize that our AVERAGE high temperature for this time of year is 50 degrees, you can see that it has been unusually warm.

However, that started to change today.

We got our first thunderstorms today with our first rain of the spring.  In fact, we had not a flake of snow for the whole month of March which is very unusual.  It is the first time that has happened since back in the 1800s!  So we needed the rain.

It wasn't a lot of rain but there were a few good downpours.  And it was so good to hear thunder again!  Especially thunder with no bad weather attached to it.....just rain.

There was fear that it would rain out the Minnesota Twin and Boston Red Sox at the brand new Target Field in Minneapolis but the rain stopped just in time for the game.

The last several days I have spent a lot of time working on completely building the nesting platform.  As I was getting it ready, I realized that it had taken a lot of wear and tear over the last few years so it was time to rebuild it.  I hope to have it out in the next few days.  I want it to be there when the loons start to look for it and get serious about finding a place to nest.

We have also been working on the camera and have a couple surprises for you that I think you will really like....if we can make them work!

It will be interesting to see when they get serious about nesting since everything is about a week earlier than last year and more than 3 weeks earlier than in 2007 and 2008.

So gather all the  kids and old ladies (how does that song go?!?!) and gather 'round as we hope to be on LIVE with the Loon Cam in the next couple weeks!  Have your heart medicine close by as we watch and wait and hope and pray for our loons and the eggs and hopefully a couple new chicks.

 

Tuesday, March 30, 2010 4:25pm

 

72 degrees   Partly cloudy   Breezy

 

At least one loon is back!!!

This morning the wind starting picking up a little bit.  And by noon, the lake was ice free.

For the next 8 months, Minnesotans will have trouble walking on water!  But oh how we do enjoy our time on our wonderful lakes!

Just a few minutes ago I thought I heard the call of a loon.  I went down to the lake to look but I couldn't see any loons....only a pair of Canada geese and a bunch of seagulls.

But wait!  There it was again!  Could it be?

I scanned the lake with the binoculars.  Nothing.  No loons.  

I called.  And back came the call of a loon!

His call allowed me to zero in on where the call had come from.  But there was no loon there.  I KNOW I heard a loon.

And then the loon surfaced.  Sure enough!  There was a loon.  He was simply diving and fishing.  But I only saw one.  Is it one of "our loons"?  Or is it a loon passing through?

He kept diving and fishing.  He must be very hungry after his long migration north.  But I do not see a second loon.  That is not unusual.  Sometimes a pair both arrive on the same day (like they did last year).  And sometimes the male will arrive a day or two before the female joins him.

We will just have to wait and see.  Now the questions start!  Is this one of 'our loons'?  Will the mate come in the next day or two?  Or is this a loon just passing through and waiting for the ice to leave the lakes in northern Minnesota and Canada?  Will they nest this year?  Will they use the nesting platform?  Will we be able to watch them on the webcam? 

Will they once again grace us with their presence and let us be a part of the wonder of watching the miracle of life!

We can only wait and hope!