11:06 am Monday, April 2, 2012

 
56 degrees F  Mostly Cloudy  Wind 3mph East
 
 
Thank you to all of you who attended the sessions at the National Eagle Center yesterday.
 
Thank you also to the good folks at the National Eagle Center for the invitation to speak about our beloved loons.  Thank you especially to Scott Mehus, Bridget Befort and Bucky.
 
It was so good to meet some of you.
 
As I promised you, here is the address for the USGS website that gives the current location of the 20 loons that they implanted with satellite transmitters last summer.
 
Even though a number of loons are already in the North Country, over half of the loons in the USGS group were still on the Gulf of Mexico as of last Friday.  I think we will see a lot of them having taken off to fly north by the time they update the page again.
  
If you have not looked at this USGS page before, be sure to click on the "All Migrations Summary" link in the center of the page.
 
You will see the location of all 20 loons beginning last summer.
 
As it plays, you will see the loons as they begin their flights south last fall and it will show you where the loons spent the winter.  Then you will see the dots representing each loon start to move north as they begin their migration.
 
I think you will find it very fascinating and informative as you watch the movement of the loons for the last 7 months.
 
Check it out.
 
I will also give you an update on preparations for the LoonCam as soon as there is something new to tell you.  There have been loons on the lake.  Whether they are "our loons" or just other loons that are passing through, only time will tell.
 
Until then, we will wait with anticipation until we can see our loons once again.
  
 
 
Comments or Questions?   LoonCam@yahoo.com
 
 

11:18pm Thursday, March 29, 2012

 
47 degrees F  Light Rain   Wind E3mph
 
 
Just wanted to give you a quick update.
 
The BroadbandMN people were not able to make it out today.
 
They are still working on the cam and the equipment necessary to bring the pictures to you.  They are hoping to be out tomorrow.  We will see how much we can get done before I have to leave for Wabasha.  I can't promise that everything will be ready before this weekend but I want you to know that we are working and trying our best to bring you the 2012 LoonCam before long.
 
I was here a good share of today and at least during the times I looked, I did not see any loons in the area or investigating the nest.  So I think we are still in good shape as far as time to get everything up and running.
 
From the time that a loon first checks out the nest, it usually takes a couple weeks before they get serious and lay an egg.
 
I got an email yesterday from Carol Jansky from St Johns University saying that "Big John", one of the loons that we implanted with a satellite transmitter in the summer of 2010, was back at Lake Sagatagan!  Earlier in the morning Kevin Kenow from the USGS had gotten a satellite signal that "Big John" was back on his home lake.
 
That transmitter is now almost 2 years old and is still transmitting and providing valuable data.  It has lasted much longer than anyone ever expected.  It also gives us confidence that the loons seem to tolerate the transmitters quite well.
 
Today Carol posted a response to my post from yesterday in which she said, "At St. John's, "Big John" and his mate were making the grand tour of the lake yesterday. We're not entirely sure when he arrived. Ice out was March 19 and some people heard loons as early as March 20 or 21. It was great to see him again."  Thank you, Carol!
  
If I get a chance, I will try to update you before I head down to the National Eagle Center.  I hope to see some of you there.
 
 
 
 
Comments or Questions?  LoonCam@yahoo.com

11:29pm Wednesday, March 28, 2012

 

36 degrees F   Clear   Calm

 

Good news for you.

Tomorrow morning the good folks from Broadband MN are supposed to be out here with the new camera and will be working on all of the technical things that are required to bring a picture to you.  There is a lot of work to be done.  In all likelihood it will still be a few days before we are able to be live with the camera once again but I wanted you to know that things behind the scenes are progressing.

A couple times over the past few days I have sighted a single loon on the lake.  I have yet to see a pair of them but I have been gone a lot, too.  One of the neighbors a couple days ago told me that he had heard at least one loon calling out on the lake.  

I have not hear a call yet but like I said I have been gone a lot.  I am still waiting for that first magical call of spring.

When I have been home, I have not seen a loon investigating the nest yet so I do not think you have missed anything at all.  Many years it has been a couple weeks after they first investigate the nest before they get serious about building their nest and laying an egg.

But with unusually mild spring weather, who knows how to predict what impact that will have on the nesting schedule this year. Or what the loons will do.

It seems like every year they do something that totally surprises us.

If you have not been following the USGS 'satellite transmitter' loons, they are now starting full migration with the 40% of them on their way north as of today.  The loons remaining on the Gulf will no doubt follow soon.

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

What is it that they know?  What goes on inside their brain and their body that says "Now is the right time to start flying north."?  What triggers that impulse to migrate?

And the biggest miracle of all, how do they find their way back to the very same lake!  All without AAA TripTics, maps or GPS.  We think we are so smart but they have had this figured out for thousands of years without any help from us.  Once again I choose to view it as one of countless miracles that are placed all around us that we seldom take time to stop and look and learn and consider.

We know that a number of loons have been up here for almost 2 weeks already.

Why did they come north early and the other loons are still waiting?

So many questions.  So many mysteries.  So many wonders!

But very soon we will be able to once again watch our loons and learn from them.

I hope that I will have the privilege of meeting some of you at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha, MN this next Sunday, April 1 at either 1pm or 3pm.  Invite your family and friends and teachers to come with for a beautiful spring outing in the Mississippi River Valley.  Or let your Facebook friends and your Twitter tweeters and all the other social media know about it.

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

Or if you cannot make it to the National Eagle Center, I would enjoy meeting you at the Sandhill Center for the Arts on April 17th at 11am for lunch.

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

What a wonderful time of year!

Daffodils and crocuses and Nankin cherry and apricot in full bloom.  Tulips and apples and pears on the verge of blooming.  Rhubarb leaves already 10 inches across.  Grass turning emerald green.  Leaves bursting.  Trees in bloom.

The evidence and promise of new life all around us.

The only thing that would make it better?

LOONS!

 

Comments or Questions?  LoonCam@yahoo.com

 

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.