Thursday, June 14, 2012 6:07am CDT

 

65 degrees F     Cloudy     Wind 2mph E

Sunrise  5:24am     Sunset  9:02pm

 

The important things first.

The chick is doing well and is active and healthy and growing.

However, he still continues to return to the nest and get up on the nest.

He is up on the nest right now and has been for the last several minutes.  One of the adults finally just got up on the nest with him.  Maybe out of frustration that he won't get off the nest.

The chick definitely is the one who likes to get up on the nest.  The adults seem to take their cue from the chick and finally they will get up on the nest when the chick does not get off.  It is unusual behavior to say the least.  

But it is one more window into the world of loons and is a chance for us to learn.

The chick is spending more and more time away from the nest.  In fact, the majority of the time by far is spent away from the nest.  

But when they come swimming by the nest, he seems to love to jump up on the nest and sit there and survey his kingdom.

Along with you, I miss the cam being live and being able to see what he does when he is on the nest.  From what I can see, he sits and rests, he preens and he moves around the nest.  Then eventually he jumps into the water and swims off with the parents.

I am hoping that BroadBand will be able to make it out today to look at what the damage is to the equipment from the thunderstorm on Sunday.  I am not sure what they will find but I am not hopeful that the LoonCam will be up again this year.  It may be that Mother Nature decided to shut it down for the year.

My plans right now are to leave the nesting platform in place through this Sunday.  That will be the chick's 2 week birthday.

I will probably then take it in to shore but still leave it in the water in case there is some 'need' for the chick to get on the nest.  As active as he is, I think it has just become a habit for him more than anything else.  But this behavior is so new to all of us that it is hard to tell what it means.

Whether the LoonCam comes back online for the season or not, I will try to periodically keep you up to date on what is happening with our loon family.

Today the forecast is for more thunderstorms to move through the area.  Some of them could be severe.  I for one have had enough of thunderstorms and rain.  But they are necessary parts of life too and are what makes Minnesota so green.  One more thing that we take for granted.

But for now just be reassured that our little loon chick is doing fine.

 

Questions or Comments?  LoonCamATyahooDOTcom

Copyright 2012     Larry Backlund

 


Tuesday, June 12, 2012 6:38pm CDT

 

69 degrees     Sunny    Calm

Sunrise  5:24am     Sunset  9:01pm

 

Hello everyone!  Sorry for no update until now.

Things were worse than I thought when I got home last night!

Apparently the storm on Sunday night fried a lot of things.

Not only was the cam down, I had no phone service and no internet service ... so I could not update you on what was going on.  And for that I apologize.

In one of my last blogs, I had mentioned that my blogs would become less frequent but that we would at least give you a couple days notice before we shut the cam down.  Little did I know how quickly they would become 'less frequent' or that the cam would go down on Mother Nature's timetable.

She seems to be calling the shots this year.

I was only home for a couple hours before I had to leave for a meeting last night.  But fortunately Comcast verified the problems and set up an emergency appointment for a technician to come out today.  So I finally at least have internet service to be able to update you.

But it looks like the server for the LoonCam may be fried as well and I am having problems with my computer but finally able to function a little bit.

When I talked to BroadBand last night, most of their techs were commited or out of town but they were going to try to get out today if at all possible.  Apparently it was not possible so hopefully tomorrow.  If it is wthe server that is fried totally that will raise a lot of other questions.  Suxh as qhether it is worthwhile trying to get the cam going for this year or if we just shut it down for the year.  Because you do not just that kind of server off the shelf and it would be a few days.

So we will have to take it a day at a time.

But you aren't really interested in all that.

You are interested in only one thing - the loon chick!

In the couple hours I was home last night, I did not see the chick!  Even though I saw both adults.  That caused me concern of whether he had survived the storm.  I could not see if he was on the nest or not.

So I went to the meeting last night with a lot of questions and concerns in my mind.

This morning, once again I saw both adults.  But not the chick.  So my concern grew.

But finally about mid-morning I saw the chick swimming with the parents/.

He looks like he is doing well.  Healthy and active.  And growing.

His black down has gotten lighter and lighter and is now a gray tan.

I did see him come back to the nest at least once today so apparently that bond with the nest has not been broken yet.

I will try to update you when I know more of what the outlook is for the cam coming back online.

But the good news is that the chick is alive, healthy, doing well and active.  He survived his first big storm.

 

Comments or Questions?  LoonCamATyahooDOTcom

Copyright 2012     Larry Backlund

 

 

Monday, June 11, 2012 5:35am CDT

 

[I apologize for the LoonCam being down.  I am out of town right now and will not get back until later today.  I have tried to restart the LoonCam remotely as has BroadBand.  Apparently whatever happened during the storm last night necessitates a restart onsite.

I will do that when I get home later today.

Hopefully there is nothing more serious than that.

In the meantime, enjoy some of the many videos, under the "Videos" tab, that I have made over the last few days of our little loon chick!

Once again, I apologize.]

Sunday, June 10, 2012 5:51am CDT

 

70 degrees     Clear    Calm

Sunrise  5:24am     Sunset  9:00pm

 

On a warm morning, one of our loons and our healthy little chick sit not too far from the nest.

The chick is sitting on the back of the loon.  Up until a few minutes ago, it was getting a grand slam breakfast of minnow after minnow.

But for now, it seems to have had its fill of food and is content to just ride on mom or dad's back.

Riding on the back is one of the iconic pictures of little loon chicks.

It is something they do often during the first couple weeks of their life.  It serves several purposes.  By riding on the parent's back, it protects the chick from predators above and especially below.  A northern, muskie, bass or snapping turtle cannot easily pluck it from the surface of the lake.  Nor can an eagle easily take it off mom or dad's back.

Plus it allows a chick to stay warm.

So much of the time that a chick is not actively feeding during the first couple weeks of its life, it will be seen riding on the adult loons back.

This morning our little chick is one week old.

Can it really be a week ago already that we first saw this little guy poke his head out from underneath a wing?

In a way it seems like such a short time ago.  But in some other ways it seems like we have known this chick for so long and come to love him.  To love his antics as he time after time has gotten back up on the nest.  Constantly preening.  Always moving.  Moving up, down and over the adult on the nest.

What is unusual is how often it has returned to the nest.

And more often than not, it has been the chick that has taken the lead to return to the nest.  It is the chick that has led the adult back to the nest.  He seems to be very comfortable at spending time on the nest.

What will he do today?

Will he behave more like a loon and be content to stay in the water?  Or will he once again spend more time on the nest?

He was up on the nest for extended periods of time yesterday.  Seemingly happy and content to be there.  He last left the nest at 11pm last night and I assume has not been on the nest all night.

I watched him just as it was getting dark last night.  The chick was on the nest all by himself.  One of the adults sat about 20 feet away from the nest with a minnow in its beak.  It mewed over and over.  Seemingly saying to the chick 'I have a minnow for you.  Come over and get it.'

But the chick stayed on the nest.

Finally the the adult gave up and brought the minnow over to the chick on the nest.

Most of the time that you have seen the chick alone on the nest, one of the loons has been nearby keeping watch over it.

But last night at about 7pm, our family had to confront an 'intruder loon'.  This is the first time in several days that I have seen any territorial struggles with another loon.

Our family had been quietly swimming inside of the buoys when all of a sudden there were yodels.  And tremolos.  Over and over.

Both parents left the chick floating by himself and swam out to meet the intruder.

There was a full-fledged confrontation.

Call after call.  Complete with penguin dances.

Then one of the loons went flapping and rowing rapidly across the surface of the water as it headed toward the middle of the lake.  With two loons in hot pursuit.

And our chick sat bobbing all alone.

Any time I see the chick bobbing around all by itself, my heart skips a beat.  I watch in dread of that swirl of water from below.   Maybe if we had not lost a chick exactly that way a few years ago, I would be less concerned.

But a chick by itself at this age is so defenseless.

Once the parents had driven the intruder well away from the area, they quickly returned to the chick and swam around the nest.  All was well.

We have all smiled and marvelled at the spunk of our little chick as he has returned to the nest.  It has been so much fun to watch him even though we wish that he would not keep coming back to the nest.  But we will take as a gift every view of our chick.  And this year we have had a lot of 'gifts'.

You can see that he already has grown dramatically in the one week since he was born.

Already his black down that we saw when he was first born is turning to more of a brown color.

He will continue to go through that color change over the next couple weeks.  It will be several weeks before he begins to get actual feathers.  Down will be his coat of 'choice' for several weeks yet.  It is normal for the chick to preen almost non-stop.

Even when they are in the water, if they are not feeding there is a good chance that they will be preening.  They will roll over on their side, one huge foot waving in the air as they preen the down on their belly.  With one foot in the air and the other in the water, it tends to spin them around and around.  Like everything else that the chick does, it makes it almost impossible for us to take our eyes off him.

There has been a lot of speculation as to why the chick seems to want to keep returning to the nest.

I will be honest.  I do not have any good or easy answers.

Several years ago, when one egg hatched and the other one did not, the adults came back to the nest to incubate the remaining egg.  And each time they came back, the chick came back with them and spent time on the nest.  We were privileged for 10 days or two weeks to watch the chick grow dramatically.

But in that case, it was the parents that came to the nest and the chick followed.

In this case, it seems to be the chick that wants to return to the nest and he brings the parents along with him.

If you will remember, just a few short days ago we were concerned that they parents had seemingly abandoned the second egg and were off all day long swimming with our little chick.

When the second egg broke on the nest, I really expected that it would break the bond with the nest and that the loons would move on with life.  But that seemed to change the chick's behavior.  He started returning to the nest for extended periods of time and he brought the parents with him.  Rather than the other way around.

So let us see what today brings.

I have been starting to consider what our options are or should be.

Suffice it to say that we will not just turn the LoonCam off 'cold turkey'.  I will try to give you at least a couple days warning before the cam goes dark for another year.  The determining factor will be what the loons do.

Several have also asked what will happen to this blog.

As we go along, my posts will become less and less.  Rather than daily it may be every couple days.  And then once a week or once every couple weeks.  Or once a month.

But I will try to keep you up-to-date on what is happening with our loons and with our little chick who will not be 'little' for very long.

And then this fall the cycle will start all over again or will continue as our loons once again migrate south for the winter.

This is a good time to remind you about the USGS website that tracks loons that have had satellite transmitters implanted in them to track their movements.  http://www.umesc.usgs.gov/terrestrial/migratory_birds/loons/migrations.html

The site is no longer being updated with the loons from last year that are now back on their summer breeding lakes.  But the USGS is continuing with its study of the migration patterns of loons.  There is so much that is still unknown about their migration and especially about their wintering habits.  But the work of Kevin Kenow of the USGS has added so much knowledge about this part of a loon's life.

And it continues.

I got an email from Kevin a few days ago.  It is looking promising that this summer, probably in mid-July, we may actually have 'our loons' banded and fitted with data recorders.  Not a surgical implant of a satellite transmitter but of a data recorder fitted to their leg.  This data recorder will document where the loon goes, how deep it dives, how high it flies and other vital information.  Later the data recorder has to be recovered to download the data.

So that is very good news!

It is something we have wanted for sometime.  Very possibly next year we will see loons sporting some new 'bling' on their legs.  And we will be able to tell one loon from another.  And know if it is the same loons from this year that come back next year.

But the first requirement is for our chick to remain healthy and strong and growing.  Without that, nothing else happens.

So this morning I wanted to give you that update and something to look forward to.

But today the important thing is our little chick.

Today promises to be another very hot day with high temperatures in the mid-90s.  A day that our loons are much better to be in the cool water rather than sitting exposed to the hot sun on the nest.

What will our chick decide to do today?

I have given up trying to predict.

Late this afternoon or tonight, there is also a possibility for strong thunderstorms.  The loons are able to contend with thunderstorms much better when they are in the water than when they are on the nest.

So let's see what our chick does today.

Will he be a loon?  Or will he be a 'land loon'?

The saga continues and you don't want to miss a minute of it!

 

Comments or Questions?  LoonCamATyahooDOTcom

Copyright  2012     Larry Backlund

 

 

Saturday, June 9, 2012 6:13am CDT

 

70 degrees F     Clear     Calm

Sunrise  5:24am     Sunset  9:00pm

 

In a very unusual year, thing seems to keep being unusual.

Once the chicks hatch, usually they leave the nest within 24 hours and from that point on, they are waterbirds.

Our cute little chick seems to be intent on being the first "land loon" ever!

It seems to be our little chick that is taking the lead at times of getting back up on the nest.

When the family has come swimming back by the nest, the chick has several times been the first one to get back up on the nest, even when the parents stay in the water.

Now it is not unusual for loons to make a short visit back to the nest after the chicks have hatched and they have left the nest.  But I have never seen where they have spent this amount of time on the nest after hatching.  And then for it to be the chick that seems to be taking the lead at times is most unusual.  Or is it?

We are never able to watch behavior or loons close up like this in the wild.  Minute by minute.  24/7.

But I must say I have not seen anything like this before on the LoonCam.

A few years ago, we had a situation where one egg hatched and the other egg did not.  The loon kept coming back to the nest to incubate the unhatched egg.  And it brought the chick with it.  For about 10 days, we were privileged to watch that chick grow dramatically.  But then we made the decision to remove the egg that obviously was not going to hatch in order to break the bond with the nest.

Once the egg was removed, the bond with the nest was broken almost immediately and the loons went on with their lives.

In our case today, we have a situation where an egg did not hatch but they loons keep coming back even though the egg itself was accidentally smashed by them and it would never have hatched anyway.

Now I don't think any of us are complaining about being able to see our little chick that has such an amazing spunk and personality.  It has been wonderful and entertaining to watch him.  But there is a part of us that also just wants them to be loons.  And to move on with their lives.

Yesterday on three different occasions, the loons were on the nest for extended periods of time.  And as I said, on a couple of those occasions the chick was the one who took the lead of getting back on the nest and seemingly not wanting to leave.

So we have gone from a situation where the loons left the unhatched egg all along on the nest for several days to where now they do not seem to want to leave the nest.

Do I have an explanation for this behavior?  In a word, no.  It is something that I have not seen before.

So we continue to watch with wonder and learn from what the loons are doing.

Yesterday morning. shortly before 10am, the chick got up on the nest by himself.  He was visible on cam for a while and then wandered off to the left, apparently back in the water.

You could not see what I could see.  When I looked after some minutes, the chick was sitting on the edge of the nesting platform, just out of view of the camera.  Sitting quietly, not moving around.  Content to just lay there.

But what concerned me was that neither of the parents were around.  I couldn't see them anywhere.

Finally I spotted them way over on another part of the lake, probably a third of a mile away.  They seemed to be just swimming and diving for fish.

It made no sense to me.  A chick on the nest.  The parents off seemingly unconcerned.

I started to worry about if they had abandoned the chick just like they seemingly abandoned the remaining egg.  I had to tell myself to quite watching so close and to wonder about every little thing.  But I could not help myself.  What if I had to 'rescue' the chick?  When and why and how?

And then what would I do with it?

I am not aware of anyone ever successfully raising a common loon chick without the parents there.

Fortunately about 15 or 20 minutes later, both parents returned to the chick and they went swimming off together.  And I could relax.  This being a 'surrogate loon' parent is hard.  It is not for sissies!  And it is not something which lends itself to watching too closely.  It is not good for your peace of mind.

But it is so hard to not watch and be concerned about this little beautiful loon chick.

What will today bring?

Who knows!  It has become impossible to predict what this family will do next.

So we can only go along for the ride and enjoy every minute that we have with this little chick who in 6 short days has found his way into our hearts!

 

Comments or Questions?  LoonCamATyahooDOTcom

Copyright 2012    Larry Backlund