12:30am Saturday, March 24, 2012

 
51 degrees F   Clear   Calm 
 
 
Earlier this evening, I put the nesting platform out in the lake!
 
It still is not completely ready but since I am going to be gone the next couple days, I wanted the loons to know that it was here for them.
 
I am waiting to hear when the new camera will be ready and when we can get it to mount it on the platform and finish the preparations.  Once the camera is on the platform there are still technical things that must be done before we can send you a live picture.
  
But I wanted you to know that things are progressing and that hopefully very soon you can watch the camera and be part of another year's adventures and dramas.
  
Early yesterday morning a neighbor said they saw a pair of loons on the lake.
 
Today I saw a single loon across the lake.
 
So whether there is a pair or not or whether they are 'our loons' remains to be seen.
 
Only two of the USGS satellite transmitter loons have started moving north.  But obviously others are already up here.  I think the loons may be just as confused as all the rest of us by this unusually early spring.
 
For those of you aroung the world or even in other parts of the United States, normally we would still be contending with the last of our snow drifts and the lake would still be solidly frozen.
 
But I have daffodils and crocuses and forsythia blooming.  Nankin cherry ready to bloom.  And grass that was dormant seeded last fall is already green and up and growing.  So we are well ahead of our normal schedule as is much of the country.
 
When I was getting ready to take the nesting platform out into the water, I had second thoughts.
 
A pair of beautiful white swans was swimming straight out from where the nest is anchored.  Suddenly they started honking and noisily took flight. 
 
The reason they left was that another pair of swans was coming in for a landing and they had decided that they wanted the same spot.  And right behind them was a Canada goose honking as he came in.
 
The swans swam closeby as if waiting for me to put out the nest.
 
I do not want them or geese to claim the nest before the loons can claim it.  Although it would be pretty spectacular to have a pair of trumpeter swans on camera.  They are huge birds.  So majestic and so beautiful with their stark white plumage and black beaks.
 
But this is meant to be a LoonCam and a nest for loons.
 
Hopefully it will be just that in the very near future.
 
Stayed tuned.
 
Stay hopeful.
 
Let your friends and family know that we are getting close.
 
 
Questions or Comments?  LoonCam@yahoo.com
 
 

12:45am Thursday, March 22, 2012

 
53 degrees F    Cloudy    Cloudy
 
 
WE HAVE A LOON!
 
Tonight shortly before dark, I spotted a single loon swimming out in front.
 
Not swimming around where the nest is but further straight out in the lake.  All alone.  No other loon in sight.  No calls.  But in the general area of the lake where the nesting platform has always been.
 
He was still swimming back and forth out there until it got dark.  For all I know, he is still swimming out there now.  I would assume that he is.
 
The ice went out of the lake here on Sunday morning.  I have been gone for the last week so I did not see it.  But the neighbors told me about it.  They said it did not even move even though there had been wind during the day before.  It simply melted and disappeared early on Sunday morning.
 
The temperatures had been 80 degrees for several days.
 
This is one of the earliest days that the ice has gone out of the lake here in many, many decades.
 
I had wondered if the loons would be back early or not.  And then tonight's sighting proved that yes at least that one loon knew exactly when to come back.
 
How do they do it?!
 
Whether it is 'our loon' or not remains to be seen.  The mate does not seem to be here yet.  But now the waiting and watching begin.  It may be a loon that is just passing through and is on its way to lakes even further north.  Or it may be our male scouting out the territory.
 
The conventional wisdom has been that the male arrives first and scouts out the territory before the female arrives.  But my experience has been that the male and female arrive here together more often than not.  We will have to wait and see what this spring holds for us.
 
But as of this evening, we had a loon on the lake!
 
We also have other visitors.
 
Before I left last week, there were some seagulls flying over the ice on the lake and a few of them landing on the ice.
 
But tonight there is a 'racket' out on the lake as thousands of seagulls are here.
 
They will stay for a couple weeks before they continue their journey north.  But some of them will stay on the lake for the summer.  And then things will be a little quieter.
 
Only one of the 20 loons that the USGS implanted with satellite transmitters has started to move north as of Tuesday.  So that is one of the reasons that I was surprised to see a loon on the lake here tonight.  One of the faithful LoonCam watchers saw a pair of loons on the St Croix River just east of St Paul, MN.
 
I got an email from Kevin Kenow from the USGS.  He said that the loon that we implanted the satellite transmitter into on the St John's University campus in the summer of 2010 is STILL transmitting data.  That is MUCH longer than any of us anticipated.  But wonderful news.  Here is Kevin's email from last Friday....
 
"The radiotransmitters we implanted in loons during summer 2010 have lasted much longer than I anticipated.  I've been receiving regular location estimates for Big John throughout the winter.  Earlier this week he reported in from Ohio and represents the first of the radiomarked loons to move off the wintering grounds!  He's a bit ahead of last year's schedule.  Also,  we saw a few common loons on southern Lake Michigan while flying waterbird surveys this week."
 
So we continue to gather data from all sources and learn more and more about our beloved loons.
 
I have been working on getting the nesting platform ready today.  But now that the ice is out and there is one loon on the lake, the urgency grows.  Normally it would still be buried under snow and ice.
 
I will keep you up-to-date as things progress.
 
It will be very interesting to see if the loons nest earlier because of the unusually mild and early spring.  Or whether they will wait until their normal nesting time near the end of April.
  
Questions and drama already!
  
And we haven't even started yet.
 
But now is the time to start letting your friends and family know.  And the teachers in your local school.  And your newspaper and local radio stations.  And your Facebook friends.  And to Tweet that the loons are on the move and now is the time to get ready for another season of watching them together.
 
What a special and exciting time of year this is!
 
 
Comments or Questions?  LoonCam@yahoo.com
Because of the number of emails, I am not able to answer emails personally.  But I do read all of them and I will try to answer some of the more common questions in this blog.  I will update things every week or so to start.  But then when the loons get serious, I will try to do a daily update of what they are doing and what I can see that cannot be seen on the webcam.
 
 

12:00 Noon Wednesday, March 14, 2012

 
65 degrees F   Sunny   Calm
 
 
After a very mild winter, spring continues to be unusually mild as well.
 
After snowstorm of about 9 wet heavy inches of snow a couple weeks ago, most of that snow is melted.
The forecast for the next week is for very mild weather to continue, with 80 degrees F even being forecast for early next week.  But we will wait to see what happens.  
 
Minnesotans have an old saying, "Don't like the weather?  Wait for 5 minutes and it will change!"
 
The boys from all the high schools across the state have a State High School Basketball Tournament near the end of March.  It seems to be traditional that we get the "basketball tournament blizzard"!  So we will see what the next few weeks bring.
 
But spring inexorably "marches" on.
 
The first few daffodils have been poking there way up on the south side of the house.  Slowly but surely.  I think they are just sticking a hesitant toe out the door to see what is going on up above.  But there they are.  Green and alive.
 
Some of the crocuses are poking through as well but none have been brave enough to bloom yet.
 
Cardinals and chickadees are in their full spring song.
Flocks of geese are flying over.
Some seagulls circle overhead, their stark whiteness standing out against the deep blue sky.
The distinctive call of sandhill cranes can be heard as they make their way north.
 
I am not sure if our loons know how warm and mild it is here.
 
As of March 12, the USGS "satellite loons" were all still down on the Gulf.  http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/terrestrial/migratory_birds/loons/migrations.html
 
They apparently are not easily fooled by early spring signs.  And all the lakes are still locked in a prison of ice.  Although with these temperatures it will not take long for that ice to turn "rotten".
 
But for now, our loons remain in their winter homes down south.
 
I want to remind you and to invite you again to join me at the National Eagle Center on Sunday, April 1st for two workshops ... one at 1pm and one at 3pm.
 
It would be such a privilege to meet some of you who have been such faithful viewers of the LoonCam.  Bring your family for a spring outing along the bluffs of the Mississippi River Valley.  And a wonderful opportunity to see eagles up close and personal at the great National Eagle Center.  http://www.nationaleaglecenter.org/live-eagle-watching/march-31st-and-april-1st/
 
Bring your friends and family.
 
For those of you who are on Facebook (I am not), let people there know about the time at the Eagle Center.  Let them know that our loons will soon be back.
 
And then once again we will be able to see these amazing birds.
 
And hear that beautiful haunting call.
 
And we will know that we are in the "North Woods".
 
And that all is well with the world.
 
 

Friday, February 17, 2012 10:50pm

 

28 degrees  Overcast  Wind NW 2mph

 

Here in the 'great north' of Minnesota, this has been a "winter that wasn't".

We have had very little snow, mild temperatures (mild for Minnesota anyway in the middle of winter, freezing for most of the rest of you in other parts of the country!) and very little of what we can truly call a Minnesota winter.

For most of the winter, the ground has been mostly brown and bare.  With only spots of white where the sun has not been able to melt what little snow has accumulated.  The lake is frozen but it is one of those rare winters where you can skate on a lot of the lake and skate around the snow drifts that are few and far between and small.

There are numerous fish houses out on the lake.  But people have been careful about driving out there with their cars and trucks.  They do it but are more aware than usual that the ice may not be as thick as what they are used to.  We have approximately 12 to 16 inches of ice on the lake.

For those of you from other parts of the country or especially other parts of the world, YES we actually drive our cars on the ice during the winter!

And "fish houses" are small buildings that are put out on the lake so that fishermen can fish in comfort.  Most are small - like 8 feet by 8 feet - and are nothing fancy or much more than 4 walls and a roof to stay out of the weather.  But almost all of them have some kind of a heater so that you can literally fish in comfort in your shirtsleeves in middle of winter.  Let the cold and wind and snow rage outside.  Inside the fish house it is cozy and comfortable!

Others are bigger and have all the comforts of 'home'.  Beds.  Kitchen.  Television.  Furniture.  And some of them are finished very nicely with paneling and even carpeted floors and electric or gas lights.  Some people actually move out on the lake in the winter for anything from a few days to even weeks or MONTHS!

There have been no vehicles that have fallen through the ice here.  But there have been some instances of cars falling through the ice in the more southern parts of the state.

Up along the Canadian border they are reveling in the fact that they have plenty of snow for skiing and cross-country skiing and snowmobiling.  But even up there, they have less than normal.

"Our loons" are most likely somewhere in the Gulf of Mexico along the Florida Coast.

There far there does not seem to be any confirmed dramatic or drastic effects of the Gulf Oil Spill that have been documented ... although I am sure there probably are some loons that have been affected.

I have mentioned to you (and I know some of you have been tracking the loons) that Kevin Kenow and his staff surgically implanted satellite transmitters in 20 loons this last summer.  You can track where they are right now by going to the USGS website.

http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/terrestrial/migratory_birds/loons/migrations.html

Of the twenty loons with satellite tranmitters this year, unfortunately 3 have died.  That is something that we seldom stop to think about.  That every year numerous loons, and actually any birds or animals, die.  What is out of sight is often out of mind and something that we really do not think about or consider.

Three other loons have lost contact, probably because of technical problems with the transmitters.

But you can follow the progress of the other 14 loons on the website.  (If you want, drop a thank you note to Kevin Kenow and Bob Kratt who put so much time and effort into this wonderful project.  I am sure it would be an encouragement to them.  There is an email address on the website.)

Right now the loons are probably beginning their spring molt.

For the last several months they have been the non-descript gray brown plumage that those of us in the north never see.  Nor can we believe that our beautiful common loons are so "common".

Their beautiful black and white plumage is starting to return in preparation for their migration north for the summer.

But it will still be at least two months before we see them back up north on their home lakes.

So we wait and continue to hope that we will see them and hear them soon.

And to know that all is well in the north woods!

Next month I will be back up along the beautiful North Shore of Lake Superior for a conference at the beautiful Naniboujou Lodge with dear friends who own the Lodge.   http://naniboujou.com/

Those of us in the Upper Midwest tend to take the Great Lakes for granted and never stop to think how unique and special they are.  Especially Lake Superior.

Did you know that Lake Superior is, by surface area, the world's largest freshwater lake?

Or that it is over 1300 feet deep?

Or that Lake Superior contains 10% of all the earth's fresh surface water.

Or that there is enough water in Lake Superior (3,000,000,000,000,000--or 3 quadrillion-- gallons) to flood all of North and South America to a depth of one foot!!

What a treasure Lake Superior is!

I would like to invite all of you, but especially those of you in the Upper Midwest, to a couple of presentations that I will be doing this spring.

The National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minnesota has been kind enough to ask me to return to do a couple presentations on Amazing Loons.  I was with them last year for their special spring festival called "Soar With The Eagles" 

I will do two sessions on Sunday, April 1st.  One at 1 pm and one session at 3 pm.

I was privileged to meet a number of you who have been faithful LoonCam viewers and hope to meet more of you this year.

The National Eagle Center does a great job with eagles and other wildlife.  It is located in Wabasha, Minnesota, right on the banks of the Mississippi River.  You are guaranteed to see live eagles up close and personal in the Center.  And it is very likely that you will see eagles in the wild flying over the Mississippi River as they search and dive for fish.

You will enjoy the drive along the beautiful Mississippi River valley on a wonderful spring day.

Consider making it a family outing and bring your kids and grandkids with you and spend the day at the National Eagle Center.

http://www.nationaleaglecenter.org/live-eagle-watching/march-31st-and-april-1st/

On Tuesday, April 17th I will be doing a presentation of Amazing Loons at the Sandhill Center for the Arts (call 763-213-1641) in Bethel, Minnesota.  This presentation includes lunch and is called Lunch and Learn.  The lunch starts at 11 am.

http://www.stfrancisce.com/insight/registry/classinfo.asp?courseID=4834&catID=1045

The Director of the Chik Wauk Museum at the end of the Gunflint Trail in northeastern Minnesota has asked if I would be willing to come up there and do a presentation this summer.  I am not sure the schedule is going to work but I wanted to let you know about the museum and I will let you know if I do a session up there.

http://www.chikwauk.com/

Last year they did a floating loon nest for the first time.  But the first attempt at nesting was unsuccessful because black flies drove the loons from the nest and an eagle took the eggs.  You have seen these flies up close on the LoonCam.  Fortunately we have never had a nest abondonment because of black flies.  Nor have we ever lost eggs or chicks to eagles, although there have been some close calls.

http://www.chikwauk.com/blog/2011/06/the-chik-wauk-bay-loons/

It is wonderful to see the interest in loons that seems to grow with every passing day.  And it is so encouraging to see the number of school kids who have taken an interest in loons in particular and nature in general.

Begin now to let your family know that the LoonCam should be back somewhere around the middle to end of April.  And get set for a new year of suspense and wondering what will happen this year that we are not able to predict.  There never seems to be a lack of drama when it comes to watching our loons so closely on the LoonCam!

Encourage your kids and grandkids teachers to use the LoonCam as a wonderful tool to teach kids both young and old.

I remember a letter from a teacher in California a couple years ago.  They don't even have loons in most of California.  But she said the LoonCam was the best motivational tool she had ever had in all her years of teaching.

The first thing in the morning when the kids arrived for class, they always wanted to watch the LoonCam.

She saw a perfect teaching opportunity.

So she told them as soon as EVERYONE had completed their assignment, she would turn the LoonCam on so they could watch it.  

She said it would get very quiet and everyone would work so hard on their assignment.

Some of the 'smarter kids' would finish early.  But they knew no one could watch the LoonCam until ALL of the kids were finished with their work.  So they would help some of the other kids and would 'tutor' them until they finished their work, too.

And then they all could watch the LoonCam.

She said it had been the best 'motivational tool' that she had ever had in all her years of teaching!  So we can never fully understand how far reaching something this simple is.  And you all have been so faithful in making it happen.  

So start to prepare your family and friends and teachers that the LoonCam will return very soon.

As will our beloved loons!

 

Comments or Questions?  LoonCam@yahoo.com   

Because of the number of emails, I will not be able to answer then individually.  But I do read all of them.  And try to address some of the questions here in the blog.