Tuesday, June 1, 2010 10:30pm CDT

 

Calm and order have been restored in loonland!

There are still over 400 of you watching over our loons!

No noise...other than the ones that are supposed to be there on a Minnesota lake at night.  No boats coming too close to the nest.  Nothing to disturb the loons.

The white spots that you see on either side of the picture and where the picture is out of focus are due to spider webs!  They show up more at night than they do during the daytime because of the infrared lights.  You can also see them move slightly with the air movements.

Once in a while you will see one of the insects get caught in the web.  Someone also posted a picture of the actual spider that is spinning these webs.  We can only hope that he won't spin too many or that too many insects get caught in them and block our view.

Today there were thunderstorms all around but we only got "teaser" raindrops here on the loon nest.  The iris and other plants are frying.  You can hear how dry the material on the nest is whenever the loon moves.

Even at 10:30 at night, the loon is still sitting with its beak open and panting even though it is only 69 degrees and no humidity.

So now we continue to watch for signs that the eggs are hatching.  The twitch.  The slightly lifted wing.  The body being raised just a little.

Tomorrow morning at 9:24am it will be 28 days for the first egg.

Will it be tomorrow?

Tuesday, June 1, 2010 9:34pm CDT

 

Well, we have been through a very noisy and even stressful day!

For those of you who missed it, there has been a lot of construction noise all day today.  There may be some tomorrow but nothing compared to today.  And it should not last all day.  Let's keep our fingers crossed.

Then tonight in an incident that I missed completely, there apparently was a boat that approached the nest way too closely.  From there it is hard to know exactly what was going on without actually having seen it.  Some thought stones were being thrown at the nest and others thought it was just fishermen casting toward a structure.

I can't say which one it was because I did not see it happen.  I hope that there is a video of it.

But right now, everything has returned to normal.  Peaceful and calm and with a loon on the nest.

So no loon chick today.  Will tomorrow be the day?  We are still well within the "normal range" of hatching.  I will not become concerned unless we go a number of days beyond this Friday.

But for now, it doesn't get much better than it is right now!

And the loon is there faithfully playing its part in this drama.  We are merely the audience.  An audience that cares deeply!  But an audience nonetheless.

 

Tuesday, June 1, 2010 9:58am CDT

 
72 degrees   Sunny  Chance of Thunderstorms this Afternoon
 
 
 
The loons are amazing!
 
I mentioned in the chat room that it may be a very noisy morning since a house not too far away is being torn down!  There has been MORE noise and disturbance this spring than I remember in a long time.  And I don't think that it is just because I am more aware of it because of the microphone this year.
 
There HAVE been more things going on from construction to DEstruction to trees being taken down and ground up to to a busy holiday weekend to you name it!
 
The house is already HALF down!
 
The loon has looked around a few times at some of the louder noises but has not gone down into a defensive posture.
 
While we always think of them as birds of the wilderness and the SOUND of the wilderness, it is amazing the amount of human activity that they will tolerate.  As long as it does not take place too close to the nest.  And as long as the human does not look like and EAGLE!!!
 
So maybe a few more hours of this noise and then the house will be gone and the cranes and bulldozers will be gone and things will return to normal...and QUIET!
 
This afternoon there is also a possibility of thunderstorms, some of them strong.  So we may have a different kind of noise then.  Hopefully we will get some much needed rain and that the storms will not be severe.  There is a line of scattered storms stretched all the way from the Canadian border down to Texas!
 
But for now, the loon is safely ensconced on the nest taking care of business!
 
The business of new loon chicks!
 

Tuesday, June 1, 2010 5:49am CDT

 

55 degrees  High Thin Clouds    Calm

 

This could be a good morning for some loon eggs to hatch!

But then almost any morning could be.

It is quiet on the lake.  The boats and people of the holiday weekend have gone home.  And right now there are not even any fishermen out in the early morning light that I can see.  Just a glorious chorus of birds greeting the dawn.  The dry weather and lack of rain has taken its toll on the irises!

And our loon.  Ever faithful.  Ever vigilant.  Always protective.  Super secretive.

What is under her?  Is it still eggs?  Or are we close to having a chick?  If she knows, she isn't telling!

This morning there are none of the tell-tale movements that would indicate that there is a chick trying to get out of an egg under her.  Or especially that there is a chick already moving around.  My first glance last night when I got home was that I saw 'something'.  But after looking again and again, after squinting until I could squint no more, I could not be sure of anything.  And then finally she got up and rolled the eggs and both eggs looked intact.

However, she rolled them so quickly and with them partially obstructed, one could not be sure.  There was still enough room for hope and speculation that something had started to happen.

So once again this morning, we wait and hope.  When they are ready, they will be ready.  At the perfect time.  There is nothing we can do to speed them up.

Tomorrow morning will be 28 days, the 'normal' incubation time for the first egg.

The last few nights, Minnesota's 'other state bird' has made its reappearance with a vengeance.  Technically known as the Mosquitii Airplanus Giganticus, the mosquitoes are back!

As much as mosquitoes can torment us, the black flies can torment a loon sitting on the nest.   They suck the loons blood just like a mosquito sucks our blood.  And the flies are such specialists that they only drink loon blood!  You have watched them fly around the loon's head and watched the loon snatch them out of the air.  Some years the black flies can get so bad they will actually abandon a nest.  When they are in the water, they can dive to get rid of them.  But on the nest they are vulnerable.

But fortunately this year does not seem to have been too bad for the loons.  There have been black flies around but for the most part they have been tolerable.

Last night there were a multitude of other bugs flying around.  On the iris and even on the loon!  Gauzy-winged bugs that some of you have referred to as 'fairies'.  And in the infrared light of the night vision cam, one could almost be convinced that indeed it was Peter Pan flying around.

They seemed to especially like the iris and were apparently even mating on it.  It was the first time I had seen these bugs in such abundance.  But then of course with the night vision cam we are seeing a whole new world open up to us!

I wondered if the iris were drawing these 'fairies' or what it was.  I even had to go out and look at other irises late last night to see if the bugs were on them as well.

They weren't.

So some combination of the water and the infrared light and the loon and the nest made it the perfect place and time for these delicate bugs to appear.

But then they were gone.

The 'big show' lasted for only an hour or two.

So now this morning we wait.  Along with the loon.

The advantage is that we can be doing other things.  The loon has to stay.  To be tied to that nest for at least a while yet.  She has come to far and invested too much time and energy to become careless now.  And so her home also becomes her 'prison'.  But they do it willingly.  Or is it?  What drives them to leave their preferred home in the water to sit on 'land' in the hot sun and the rain and the cold and the wind and all the other challenges?

How much do they actually understand of what is going on?  How much does she know of what is happening inside the eggs that she is not telling us?

There is so much we don't know.

So once again today, we are the students!  The loon is the teacher.

And today's lesson plan is 'perfect'.  If we will only listen and learn!

Monday, May 31, 2010 10:06pm CDT

 

The loon just got up and readjusted the eggs.

It looks like both of the eggs are intact but it was hard to get a good or a full view.

Are we close?  Let's hope and keep watching.

Twenty eight days will not be up for the first egg until Wednesday morning and the second egg on Friday night.

Is she sensing anything?  Movement in the eggs?  Sound from the chicks?  Anything?

Oh, if only we could know what is going on inside each of the eggs.  Night vision has been great.  But what we need now to satisfy our curiosity is X-RAY VISION!!!

The suspense is almost too much to bear.