Friday, May 20, 2011 7:28am CDT

 
61 degrees   Cloudy   Wind 2mph N
 
 
The loons continue their faithful vigil on the nest this morning.
 
They are now more than half way to the goal...two new little chicks.
 
Today promises to bring rain to the lake and our loons.  In fact, it should be rainy for the next several days with the possibility of thunderstorms this afternoon and tomorrow.
 
Some have asked how much 'territory' or how big a lake a loon needs or will protect.  
 
Some have said that they need at least 10 acres and I certainly would not argue with that.
 
However, a more important criteria is if the loons can stay out of sight of each other.  Therefore if a lake has many bays and fingers it probably can support more loons.  The loons are able to go back into those bays and most of the time stay out of sight of other loons whereas on a round lake with no bays, the loons are in sight of other loons most of the time and that raises the potential for confrontation.
 
Last night I watched as both loons were off the nest and swimming together.  The male was issuing his yodel call which is his territorial call.  I could see no other loons in sight.  But then from across the lake came the call of another loon.
 
The male would extend his neck parallel to the surface of the lake and yodel two or three times.
 
It was his way of saying 'this part of the lake belongs to me!  Stay away!'
 
A loon will often turn as he is making this yodel call as if to broadcast it to a larger section of the lake.  Normally I have seen them turn 45 to 90 degrees while making the call, just like 'beaming' it to different parts of the lake to let anyone and everyone know that he is here.
 
In some studies that have been done, loons tend to establish very specific lines which define their territories on a lake.  Invisible lines but lines nonetheless.  And they seem to know where those 'lines' are.
  
Someone asked about the 'high twilling whistle' which can be heard late at night.
 
I am not completely sure I know what you were hearing but I am almost sure.  It probably is frogs that you are hearing.  Specifically spring peepers.  They all join in a song that can almost be deafening at times.  It is one of my favorite sounds of spring.  When you hear the spring peepers sound begin their chorus it is one of the surest signs that spring is actually here.
  
Sit back, relax and enjoy our loons and all the good things of life!
 
 
Questions or Comments?  LoonCam@yahoo.com
 

Thursday, May 19, 2011 5:37am CDT

  
50 degrees  Clear  Calm
 
 
On a Minnesota spring morning, one loon sits on the nest while the other one floats nearby.
 
The sun is just ready to peak over the eastern horizon.
 
The avian choir has begun its concert to salute the dawn.
 
What a beautiful Minnesota morning it is.
 
There are times when I allow things to crowd in around me.  To become too busy.  To let pressures get to me.  To have to do this.  To have to do that.  To not have enough time to get done what I want to do and what needs to be done.   To forget the gift of what has been given to me.  To stop and look and listen.
 
A morning like this is the perfect reminder to do just that.
 
To slow down.  To savor the moment.
 
To look at the small things that go unnoticed in the normal busyness of life.
 
Things that are there all the time.  But that we never stop to see.
 
The pink of the morning sky.  The lazy movement  across the surface of the water.... not a ripple, not a wave, just smooth movement of water on water.  The clear song of a Baltimore oriole.  The hoarse crackling sound of a sandhill crane.  The coarse caw of a black crow.  The trilling of purple martins on the wing.
 
May your day be filled with the wonder of life and the miracles that have been placed all around you for you to enjoy.
 
On this beautiful morning, however, there is one thing that is on the loon's mind.
 
A dedication to two eggs that keeps them on the nest 24 hours a day.  A bird that is normally wild and free is now 'tamed'.  Inexorably drawn to sit on a nest.  Ever alert.  Ever watchful.  Always looking for potential danger.
 
We are now halfway through the normal incubation for the first egg.  Fourteen days and fourteen days to go.  Although I would expect that we do not have 14 days left and that the egg may very well hatch a day or two earlier than that.  But the 'normal' due date for our expectant parents is June 1st.
 
I have often described watching the loons on the nest as watching grass grow or paint dry.  But there is something that is so mesmerizing about it that we can't take our eyes off them.  And then something happens that makes all the watching worthwhile!
 
But now that we are in the 'boring' part of the nesting cycle, let me mention a couple other things that make loons such amazing birds.
 
Most birds have bones that are almost hollow, interlaced with a 'swiss cheese' of open areas.  This makes the bone very light but strong.  It allows most birds to fly by not having so much weight to get into the air.
 
But a Common Loon has bones that are nearly solid.
 
This works well for them being birds of prey that spend most of their time in the water.  The solid bones allow them to easily make deep dives whereas another waterbird would tend to pop back up to the surface because of its hollow bones.
 
Loons have been verified to dive to depths of 250 feet and more!
 
But these almost solid bones also mean that there is extra weight to have to lift into the air to become airborne.  That is why a loon requires a long expanse of open water in order to get into the air and fly.  They may require up to a quarter of a mile in order to take off from the surface of the water.
 
These solid bones allow a loon to do something else that almost no other water birds can do.
 
Loons normally dive when they want to go underwater.
 
But they can almost literally 'sink out of sight'.
 
Loons can compress the feathers on their body to squeeze out any air.  And they can also compress small air sacs or bladders within the muscles of their body to decrease their buoyancy.  Most of the time a loon rides pretty high in the water.  But there are times that a loon will swim with its body almost completely submerged, just by adjusting how buoyant it is.
 
You will most often see this behavior if the loon feels threatened or if it does not want to be seen.  Then it will just sink lower and lower in the water until sometimes only its head is exposed.  I have seen times when a loon has disappeared under water and I have watched to see where it came back up to the surface.  Only to realize that the loon had surfaced with only the top of his head and his eyes and his bill above water.
 
Just enough of him exposed to be able to breath and to see what is going on around him.
 
Had I not been watching very closely, I would have never even seen him nor have been aware that he was even around.
 
Yet one more of the many things that makes our loons so amazing.
 
So today as you watch the loons, also watch for the many other wonderful little miracles that Someone has placed into your life to make it richer and even more beautiful.
 
 
Questions or Comments?   LoonCam@yahoo.com
 
 

Wednesday May 19, 2011 7:08am CDT

 
46 degrees   Clear   Wind  Calm
 
 
On a sunny northern spring morning, our loon sits faithfully on the nest.
 
They had a quiet night last night.  
 
A lake of glass with no wind.
 
These are the days that there tend to be 'convection winds' during the day but with the setting of the sun, those winds die down and the lake becomes quiet as can be.
 
The loons deserve all the restful time they can get.  Once the chicks are born, it becomes a non-stop task of catching enough small fish to feed their hungry charges.
 
There are some people who have asked about the nesting platform itself so let me say a few words about that this morning.
 
Nesting platforms like this help loons because it gives them a place to nest that puts them out of reach of many land-based predators.  Many of their natural nesting areas along the shore have also disappeared as more and more lakes have become developed.
 
In a totally wild setting, loons will often seek out a small island to build their nests.  Many times they will use old muskrat houses and build their nest on the top of the house.
 
One of the worst predators of loon eggs on the nest are raccoons.
 
Skunks and mink are also known predators of loon eggs.  These animals are capable of scaring the loon off the nest and then making a meal of the eggs that are left unprotected.
 
On an island, or in this case a floating nesting platform, the nest is out of reach of most of these animals.  They do swim and still could possibly reach the nest, but usually will not put in the effort to reach the eggs.
 
With lakeshores becoming more and more built up, it also introduces dogs and cats and human traffic to the mix and they will scare the loons off the nest.  After being scared off enough times, either the eggs are damaged or the loons will just abandon the nest.
 
So a floating nesting platform like this removes many of the dangers for the loons and it resembles small islands that they normally would look for in the wild.
 
We have been very fortunate with the usage of this particular nest in that it has been used and eggs have been laid every year since it was first placed on the water.  If I remember right, one study showed that only 42% of nesting platforms ever actually get used.
 
The nesting platform itself is built of a square of 4 inch PVC pipe.  It is approximately 5 feet by 5 feet.  The PVC pipe joints must be very carefully sealed or the frame will simply fill with water and sink.  To give the nest additional support, the interior of that 5x5 foot frame is filled with about 4 to 6 inches of foam sheeting.
 
This whole assembly is then wrapped in plastic "snow fence" to hold everything in place.  I wrap the plastic snow fence around the platform in 'both directions' to give it the greatest structural integrity.
 
Then around this whole assembly, I wrap the entire platform both directions with landscape fabric.  I do this to try to eliminate all the small holes that a chick could fall through and become trapped.
 
Only after all of this has been done is the platform ready for the nesting material itself.
 
I usually rake up the weeds that have normally washed up on shore and place them on the platform to a depth of about 6 inches.  In addition to weeds washed up on shore, I cut dried cattails that are from the previous year's growth.
I try to use the cattails to build a 'structure' under the other nesting material that will help keep all the material from being washed away by waves or blown away by the wind.  Both of these thing are very real problems.
 
Use whatever is available to you but try to put yourself in the loons place and ask what they would normally use that is available in your area.
 
Loons will use whatever is available.  There are instances of loons just making a slight depression in the sand or gravel along a lakeshore if nothing else is available.  I have personally seen a loon nest in the Boundary Waters Wilderness Canoe Area where a loon used a slight depression in a rock sticking out of the water in the middle of the lake.
 
So quite frankly, the amount and type of material that they have available to build this nest is truly a "Ritz Carlton" for them.
 
Once all of this material is on the nesting platform it is ready to put out in the water...and hope for the best.  This is the time that you really realize how little control you have over anything.  You can put everything out there.  But ultimately it is the decision of the loons whether they will use it or not.
 
And like I said, I have been very fortunate that the loons have used this particular nest every year since it was put out.
 
There are some older research papers that I have read that claim a loon must have access to water that is at least 5 feet deep right by the nest.  I have not found that to be the case at all.  The depth of the water by this nest is normally 2 to 3 feet deep and the loons seem to find that completely acceptable.  When you realize that they normally nest on the edge of the shore, I think they would tolerate water depth even less that that.
 
But it is important as they slip off the nest that the water is deep enough for them to dive and swim away unnoticed if danger threatens.
 
You can anchor the nest with any type of anchor that is heavy enough to hold the nest in place during high winds.  If you have an area that is out of the wind, that is even better.  I use two anchors on this nest.  One is a 'mobile home' anchor that is screwed into the bottom of the lake and stays in place from year to year.  The second anchor is simply a cement block.
 
The two anchors keep the nest from twisting around and around in the wind.  For this particular nest that is especially important with the tv and audio cables that come off the nest to bring you this picture and sound.
 
In addition to the nesting material, for the last number of years I have started placing plants on the nest to help hold the materials in place and to keep them from being washed away.  The two types of plants that have been the most successful for me are clumps of iris and daylilies.  They have definitely helped to keep the waves from washing the nest away.  A side benefit is that you may actually have some flowers bloom on the nest.
 
This year some of you have asked what the yellow flowers are that are already blooming.  As best that I can tell, it looks like dandelions that have grown naturally from seeds that were apparently in the nesting material that I put on the nest.
 
Once you have done all of that work, you can only wait and hope that the loons use the nesting platform. 
 
The loons will rearrange whatever material you provide for them and make a nest that fits them exactly.  One year I thought I would 'control' where they built the nest on the platform so that it was perfectly centered for the camera.  So I used the nest from the year before and added more material around it.  I felt so smug about how smart I was!
 
Well, the loons had different ideas.  They promptly tore the previous years nest apart and built the new nest exactly where and how they wanted it.
 
Be sure to check with your state department of natural resources before you build and place a loon nest to see if they have any advice or any regulations that you need to follow.
 
Your goal should not be to have "tame" or "pet" loons.  Your goal should be to help loons be more successful in nesting and raising young loon chicks.
 
The average survival rate for loon chicks is only 0.62 chicks per nest per year.  Not a very high success rate.  So even a slight increase in that success rate means that loons will be around for years to come.  Once again I have been humbled at the high success rate that we have had with this particular nest.
 
[If you want to see the old tv program from several years ago about building the nest, you should be able to find it here on the MNBound TV tab.  They repeated the program on program #593.  There have been many changes (hopefully improvements) in how I do the nest since that program was first broadcast a number of years ago, but it will give you the basics of the nesting platform.]
 
 
Questions or Comments?  LoonCam@yahoo.com
I will try to read all emails but I may not be able to respond personally because of the volume of emails.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011 6:21am CDT

 

42 degrees  Clear  Wind 2mph E

 

A calm northern lake.

The sun rising in the east.

A clear sky.

Birds singing their morning song.

A loon on its nest.

And a call off in the distance.

Does life get much better than this?

The simple but yet profound things of life that put so much beauty and wonder around us.  If only we will take the time to stop and marvel at it.  To drink it in.  To savor it.  To appreciate it and say thank you.

We are now almost 2 weeks into the incubation of the first egg - the halfway mark.  One can only wonder what is happening inside those egg shells.  The miracle of something out of nothing.  The miracle of life itself.

The 'normal' date for that egg to hatch would be June 1.  But I would not be surprised at all to see it hatch a day or two earlier than that if all goes well.  The time we all wait for.  The excitement of our first peek at that little ball of black down called a loon chick!

But there are two weeks to go until then.  And a lot can happen in two weeks.  As everyone has seen, the action on the nest can go from zero to flat out at a moment's notice.

Yesterday the loons were off the nest a number of times in the afternoon.

The reason was that there was an immature eagle flying relatively low over the lake, apparently looking for his own meal.

As you know, loons have a long history with eagles and they do not like them at all.

Then last night there was a prolonged confrontation completely with wails and tremolos and yodels and both loons were off the nest for about 20 minutes.

It started with the male broadcasting his yodel in all directions.  A call that carries very well across a lake and even into and over the surrounding woods.  He was going to make sure that anyone and everyone within earshot knew that this was HIS lake.  And he was ready to defend it.

We apparently do have another pair of loons that are nesting on the lake.  Several people have told me about it but I have not tried to go and see the nest for myself.  But it does set up a natural territorial conflict between that pair of loons and 'our' loons.

If the loons can see each other, they will confront each other and fight.  So hopefully they are able to stay out of each others sight and that they do not draw each other off their nests too often.  Some time off the nest is normal.  Too much time off the nest, especially if it is cold or rainy, could cause the eggs to cool and damage them.

I am like everyone else and anytime they are off the nest, I get concerned and 'talk' to them and tell them to get back on the nest.  Normally times off the nest of 20 or 30 minutes is not going to harm the eggs at all.  Right now we are probably at the most vulnerable time for the eggs.  The chicks have started to develop but they are not far enough along in their development that they can generate some of their own heat.

In another week to 10 days, the chick inside the egg can actually generate some of its own body heat to keep itself warm inside the egg.

But today, we watch from a distance.

And wonder at the miracle of life that is going on inside those two eggs!

 

Questions or Comments?  LoonCam@yahoo.com

I will try to read all emails but because of the volume of emails I will not be able to answer them personally.  I will try to address common questions here in the blog.

Sunday, May 15, 2011 10:16pm CDT

 

47 degrees   Clear   Wind  Calm

 

Just when you think you have seen everything, something happens so quickly to threaten our loons that it is hard to comprehend nor prepare for. 

But the loons can never afford to relax for a moment.

They must be alert to danger and ready to respond at a moments notice.

What happened this afternoon was that a kayaker actually ran into the loon nest!

If you want to see the event, here is a short video clip of it from one of our faithful and ever vigilant LoonCam viewers as it actually happened.    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbXQkNnCUlc

There is a longer video clip of it also on YouTube that you can search for by the name "MnBnd 051511 135". 

I heard some voices on the speaker in the house but I did not have the computer on.  By the time I looked with the binoculars, the kayakers were well off to the side of the nest but it seemed as if they were in very close to shore.  I thought they might have paddled inside between the shore and the nest.  I saw that the loon was off the nest.

I went down to the lake to watch and they continued paddling around the lake.

It was only after I read some of the entries in the Loon Chat Room that I realized something may have happened that I had totally missed.  The people who watch the LoonCam and chat in the Loon Chat Room are such a wonderful group of people who have come to understand loons and to care for them deeply.

A little later I got a call from one of the neighbors across the lake.  This neighbor had seen what had happened on the LoonCam and then looked out on the lake and saw the 2 kayakers.  She went looking for them but could not find them.  But then she found them bringing their canoes into the boat landing in the park.

To her credit, as she told me, she gave them a piece of her mind about what they had done.

She said she thought they were a little shaken and to their credit she said they said they were sorry.  But they also said that it was 'just there' before they realized it.  Which as you can see from the video is  not the truth at all.

So I give them credit on one count and take it back on the next!

But I think this is a perfect example of what we talked about in yesterday's blog....'etiquette' around a loon nest.  And obviously these two did not have any of it.

First the two came way too close to the nest and scared the loon off the nest after she had been in full hangover position for sometime.

I give credit to one of the kayakers that he did not come up to the nest.

The second one obviously from the video turned and came directly at the nest.  And he actually hit the corner of the nest with his kayak!

I will give them a little benefit of the doubt.  I do not think they meant anything malicious at all.  It is a case of curiosity and sometimes we love our loons a little too much.  I am as guilty of it as anyone else.  But after years of watching loons closely and now with the intimacy of the LoonCam, I am aware of how we impact them without even knowing it.

We spend little to no time down by the lake while the loons are on the nest.  There are certain things that still need to be done but we limit any other activity, even though the loons seem to know me and tolerate me more than other people.

Even this Memorial Day weekend if the loons are still there, the kids will not be able to go swimming.  I am sure they do not like it but they are very good about trying to understand the reason for it and make the best of it.

Loons are very tolerant of many things....but not close contact.

In the case of the two kayakers, I think it was plain curiosity that made him come directly up to the nest.  Then I think it was inexperience and the wind that made him hit the nest.  I do not think he meant to purposely hit it.

In fact, on the video you can hear him say to his buddy in the other kayak, "I didn't try to hit it!"

So I don't think they meant any harm, it was just curiosity and stupidity.

But what a perfect illustration of what we had just talked about yesterday about keeping a distance from a loon nest.

And then we get two people that give us a first-hand illustration of what NOT to do.

Remind your family and friends to be aware of what to do and what not to do when they are out on the lake.  And this serves as a perfect example.

I am an avid canoer.

I have probably put in a thousand miles or more of wilderness canoing.

Canoers and kayakers always think that we are so much better than big ol' boats.

But do you know what?  Loons are much more sensitive and concerned about canoers and kayakers than they are about boats.  It is hard for me to say that because I was always one who thought we were so much better than other people because we had so little impact on the environment and nature.

I think part of the reason that loons react more to kayaks and canoes than boats is that canoes tend to come much closer to the loons and their nests.  And they move much slower so they tend to spend much more time in close proximity to a loon where a boat just goes racing by.

Share that information with any canoers and kayakers that you know and encourage them to be aware of loons when they are on the water.

About the only thing that loons react to more than a canoe or kayak is a jet ski.  I don't know all the reasons but it is apparently the speed, the fact that jet skis tend to go close to things and there is a loud and high pitched noise from jet ski.

But peace has returned to loonville tonight.

The wind has gone down.  The waves have gone down.  The lake is like a mirror.

And the loon sits calmly and peacefully tonight watching in all directions to see where the next danger is coming from!

But with the clear skies and no wind, they are forecasting the possibility of frost tonight.  This is the winter that just won't quit.  We will see in the morning if the loon is surrounded by frost!

 

Questions or Comments?  LoonCam@yahoo.com