Tuesday, April 12, 2011 3:45pm CDT

 

75 degrees   Bright Blue Skies and Sunshine   Wind  South 4 mph

 

The news keeps coming faster and faster!

I just got home a little while ago and the man who is here installing new underground cable for the LoonCam said he had seen 2 loons right out in front and that they had been doing a lot of calling.

Then one of the neighbors told me that she had also seen and heard them.

When I went down to the lake to look through the binoculars, lo and behold there were not only 2 loons on the lake!  There were at least 5!

There are 2 pairs and one loon that looks like a single loon.

Which ones are 'our' loons?  I don't have a clue.  Although one pair has been swimming closer to the area where the nest has been in past years so I would have to guess that it might be that pair.  But it is only a guess!

The important thing is that there are loons on the lake.

That will be the case for more and more lakes as they move farther north throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin and Michigan and New York and all of New England.  And then all will be 'right with the world' once again!

There is also news from Carol Jansky at St John's University.  "Big John"  [loon #55480] is back on campus!  Apparently eager to "get back to school"!  He is not on Sagatagan Lake yet but is very close.  Here is Carol's note from earlier this morning....

"As Kevin probably already knows, “Big John” is back on campus.  He’s been on East Gemini (the bigger of the lakes as you drive in) since early this morning.  Sagatagan is still pretty ice-filled, but Gemini has broken up quite a bit.  We are all excited to have him back!   Carol"

The techies are busily working on all the things that have to happen behind the scenes to get the LoonCam up and running.  And I am working on the nesting platform.

We will bring it to you live as soon as we can.  I will try to let you know our progress as we go along.

But the important thing is already in place.  The loons are here.  They have done their part so far.  Without them, the view on the LoonCam would be pretty boring.  Then the next big step is for them to actually use the platform and build a nest and lay eggs.  All of that is out of our hands.  At times like that we once again realize how powerless we are and how little control we have over anything this wonderful

 

 

Monday, April 11, 2011 11:40pm CDT

 
  
Events start to come much faster now.
 
The news increases in not only speed but amount.
 
The changes of spring comes at us from all directions and at times comes close to overwhelming our senses.  But the wonder of it all fills us with awe and gratefulness for all that has been placed into our lives and all around us.
 
Tonight I arrived back home shortly after dusk.  It was almost dark but still light enough to see the changes that had taken place.  Most of the ice is out of the lake!  Talking with some neighbors, it went out today.  It will take another day or two for it to be completely ice free but there is definitely enough room and open water for loons.
 
One of the residents on the lake said that tonight they saw two loons!
 
So they are back!  And they are back on the day the ice went out.  How do they do it?  We can only stand back in wonder of what they do.
 
Are they 'our' loons?  Who knows.  I have not had the privilege of seeing them yet.  Or are they just a pair passing through and stopping here while they wait for lakes farther north to open up?  We will just have to wait and see.
 
But we have arrived at the time we have been waiting for.  The arrival of the loons!
 
There will still be a few days at least before I will be able to get into the lake and put the nest out.  But we are getting close.  Tomorrow some of the 'techies' will be here running cables and hooking up servers and all the other amazing equipment that allows us to send live pictures to you from a loon nest.  Where else can you watch the beauty of nature unfold right before your very eyes and you watch them as if you were only a couple feet away.  But you can do it without them even knowing you are there.
 
Now is the time to give a 'heads up' to your friends and family and schools and teachers to let them know that it will not be long before the LoonCam is LIVE once more!
 
It is noisy here tonight!
 
With the lake now mostly ice free, the seagulls are here by the thousands!
 
So from the lake, there is the almost deafening sound of all those seagulls.  And from the little pond in the woods, from the other direction there is the sound of thousands of spring peepers and frogs.
 
It is like there is 'dueling wildlife' tonight!
 
Today there is also news that Loon #55489 just moved from the Gulf of Mexico to southern Lake Erie near Cleveland, Ohio.  So if you are near Lake Erie, you may want to make a trip down to the shore to see if you can spot some of the loons on Lake Erie.  And if one of them has an antenna sticking out of his back.... looking like your kid's radio control car ..... that is our loon #55489!
 
He apparently did it in one of those marathon flights and may have flown all the way from the Gulf of Mexico to Lake Erie in one non-stop flight.
 
Loon #55488 is still on eastern Lake Erie northwest of Erie, Pennsylvania, near the Pennsylvania-New York border.  So once again, if you live near that area, you may be able to spot many loons there including #55488.  They probably won't stay long.  So now is the time to look for them if you have the opportunity.
 
Loon # 55490 has started moving farther north on Lake Michigan and is now near Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
 
And loon #55484 is still near the Illinois-Indiana border on Lake Michigan.
 
At least three of the loons seem to have transmission problems but apparently are still alive.  It may be a bent antenna or something like that and it prevents them from getting an accurate location for them.
 
Every day that passes now gets more exciting.  So don't miss one of them.
 
Check back here often to see what is happening and share your experiences and your observations with everyone in the Loon Chat Room.
 
I just gets better and better!
 
 

Monday, April 11, 2011 9:55am CDT

 
 
Exciting news for you!
 
Loon #55480, the Sagatagan Lake male is back to within 10 miles of the lake!
 
I got news from Kevin Kenow from the USGS and Carol Janske from St John's University.
 
Kevin had reported that the satellite signal show that he had moved from southern Wisconsin to the Mississippi River near Sartell, Minnesota.  Sartell is a small paper milling town near St Cloud, MN.
 
Carol said that she went to look for him and she found him right away just above the paper mill dam in town.  They have given him the name 'Big John', I am sure in honor of St John's University.
 
She said that he looked to be in very good shape and that the satellite antenna was very clearly visible.
 
Here is her email:
"I went out to check the ice on Sagatagan and then went to find Big John.  As expected the ice is still there but has definitely lessened over this weekend.  Big John was very easy to find.  He was above the dam at the papermill--on Riverside Drive between 4th and 5th Street North in Sartell.  His antenna was readily visible and he looks in great shape!"
What wonderful news!
 
So he apparently made it through the winter and the oil spill with no obvious ill effects.
 
And is now back in the area no doubt waiting for Lake Sagatagan to open up so he can be back "home"!
 
We can be sure that he is only one of tens of thousands of loons are doing the same thing.  Gradually moving farther and farther north, waiting for their lakes to be ice free so that they can once again do that which they were made to do.  Have a new generation of little loonlings!
 
I have been in far northern Minnesota this weekend and while all of the lakes are still frozen, most of them all the way to the shore, there are definite signs that they are changing.  A lot of 'black ice'.  Although there was a fisherman out on the ice of Leech Lake yesterday afternoon.  So the ice is apparently still strong enough to support him.
 
Several people have reported sightings of loons or hearing loons.  So they are here.  They are trying.  And I am sure that the same thing is true of loons in New England and parts of southern Canada.
 
Every day brings new signs of spring.  New hope that it is actually here.  And new hope that soon our beautiful loons will once again be on the lakes.  We will be able to enjoy not only the sight of them swimming, silhouetted at sunset.  But we will be able to hear that beautiful call echoing back and forth across lakes throughout the great north woods.
 
The sound that is the quintessential sound of wilderness!
 
 

Thursday, April 7, 2011 11:33pm CDT

 
 
47 degrees   High Haze    Wind  Calm
 
 
Spring is on its way here in the far north!
 
Today it got to 72 degrees here at the lake.  I was surprised.  It did not get that warm in the Twin Cities.
 
However, had the wind been coming off the lake, it would have been a different story.  It could have easily been 20 degrees cooler if the breeze had been moving across all that ice on the lake.
 
So far that ice on the lake is solid up to shore in most places.
 
It is trying to melt.  But it has been a long winter and the ice does not seem to want to let go easily.
 
For those of you who may not have lived on a lake, you may not be familiar with a term "black ice".
 
However, this is different than the other kind of black ice that you can encounter on a road.  Cases where the road is icy but you can't see it.  Until you are in a full-blown skid.
 
The kind of black ice that I am talking about is part of the process of the melting of lake ice.  And it is a very hopeful signal that we may be getting close to the ice going out of the lake.
 
The whole sequence of ice changes is fascinating.
 
Once the snow has melted, the ice tends to be gray.  But then one day it becomes very white.  This is a sure sign that the ice is starting to change.
 
Usually after the ice turns very white, it is only a matter of days before it turns black.  And black is a very descriptive term because the whole lake becomes very dark and close to black.  All of the changes in color signal that the ice itself is starting to 'rot' or disintegrate and turn into long shards of ice called 'candles'.
 
Yesterday we had a combination of white ice in the morning and black ice in the afternoon.  Depending on the temperature, it goes back and forth between these phases as the air temperature goes below freezing and above freezing.
 
But the appearance of black ice is a sure sign that spring is here and the ice will break up very soon.  It could be days to a week or two.
 
There are so many other sure signs of spring in the last few days as well.
 
The crocuses are now in full bloom!  It is the first of any flowers to bloom.  Daffodils and tulips are coming up but it will be a couple weeks at least before they bloom.
 
Seagulls came back a few days ago, even though the lake is completely frozen.  But today the large flocks of seagulls arrived.  By the thousands they come.  And today thousands of them were here.  When they are on the lake, the sound is almost deafening.
 
But tonight there is no sound of them so they have moved someplace else for the night.  I am not sure where they go but they must go to a river or a lake closeby where there is open water.
 
They will usually stay for a couple weeks until they finally move on north.
 
But tonight what is making a sound that is very loud are the spring peeper frogs.  They started singing last week from the little pond in the woods.  What a wonderful serenade they sing to you when you are outside after dark!
 
Another of the signs of spring is that the sandhill cranes are back.  I have not seen them yet but I have heard them in the neighborhood and have heard a number of them flying over today.
 
But that surest sign of spring that I watched and listened for from the time I was a little kid is the first robin.
And yesterday I saw and heard the first robins of this spring!
 
Can the loons be far behind?
 
If you have been following the migration page of our "satellite loons", two more loons have started to move.  Loon #55488 has begun to move up the Atlantic Coast and now is off the coast fo Virginia.  And Loon #55489 today was 'seen' in flight over southern Alabama. 
 
These satellite loons are only a sampling of what are sure to be thousands and thousands of loons now on their way north.  Winging their way along unseen highways in the sky.  Unerringly making their way to their lakes from previous years.  All of it guided by a 'miraculous' GPS that puts the GPS in our cars to shame.  GPS that they have had for thousands of years!   We can only stand back in wonder and amazement.
 
We have already been working on things to get them ready for you to once again watch our beautiful loons as they once again nest this year.  In the next few days I will be rebuilding the nesting platform and try to have it ready to put out into the lake soon after ice out.  Shortly after that we hope to go 'live' so that you can once again join us in watching the loons...and losing sleep and not getting any work done around home for the next month or two!
 
Stay tuned.  Every day ..... especially the warm sunny days .... brings our loons closer and closer and closer.
 
And the excitement begins to build!
 
 

Tuesday, March 29, 2011 10:34pm CDT

 

30 degrees   Clear   Wind Calm

 

As I mentioned last night, it looks like the major part of loon migration may have started!

We now have a third loon, #55490, on his way north.

This loon was from Trude Lake in Wisconsin.

He spent most of the winter in the Gulf of Mexico just off the coast of Florida near Pensacola.  He was the westernmost of the loons that we tracked this winter and the one who would possibly have been most vulnerable to the oil spill.  He stayed in the same area for most of the winter.

But then on Sunday he started north and apparently made the entire trip to the southern end of the Lake Michigan in one non-stop flight, arriving there this morning.

So now we have three loons on the move.  Two others are still down south....one on the Atlantic Coast and one on the Gulf of Mexico.

There are four other loons that have problems with their satellite transmissions.  They apparently are all alive but are not consistently transmitting data that will permit good pinpointing of their locations.  Kevin Kenow thinks that this may be due to bent antennas.

Who knows.  Maybe when they start moving again we will be able to receive signals from them and find out where they are.

The migration seems to be underway!

What is it that finally triggers them to take off and fly north?  What do they sense?  What cues and clues are they sensitive to?  So many questions and so many more answers that are needed to better understand our loons.

But whatever it is that triggers their migration, they seem to have gotten the signal.  Much like "Drivers start your engines!" at a car race.

Their 'engines have started' and they are on their way.

Every day now gets more and more exciting!