Monday, March 25, 2013 10:56am CDT
28 degrees Sunny Wind North 7 mph
Sunrise 7:06am Sunset 7:32pm
The Great North still lays quiet under a blanket of white.
Snow depths are measured in feet, not inches.
Lakes are still solidly frozen and cars are still driving on them. No sign yet that either spring or ice out are near. And so the lakes remain very unhospitable and unwelcoming places for our loons.
They will have to wait yet another day before they can return to their favorite haunts in the great forests and lakes of the north.
And we will have to wait to hear their beautiful haunting call which so typifies what it means to be part of the great north. The beautiful loons will not return, nor will we hear their call until there is open water for them.
According to the USGS website, the first few loons with transmitters have started their migration north. They are getting antsy and can wait no longer.
The sun struggles mightily. But it seems to be a losing battle. As soon as it melts some snow, more comes. We have missed the latest storm that went south of us and dumped up to a foot of snow on St Louis and other cities.
We have had our share of late spring snowstorms but for the last week we have had clear skies and bright sunshine. And today is another day with brilliant blue skies and sunshine.
Piles of snow that were over 6 feet high are now down to 5 feet. So the sun still has a lot of work to do.
Cardinals and chickadees sing their spring songs. Almost as if they are saying, "If we sing it, spring will come."
One year ago today, the ice had already been out of the lake for a week! The loons were back, we had had a day where the thermometer hit 80 degrees, the crocuses were blooming and I already had the loon nesting platform in the water.
Not so this year.
We are a long way from any of those things happening this year.
But it is time to start to tell your family and friends to get ready for another year of watching our amazing loons.
Until then, we do the only thing we can do.
Wait!
Copyright 2013 Larry R. Backlund
Wednesday, March 13, 2013 11:40am CDT
CHRISTMAS Day, 2012 3:09pm CDT
Wednesday, August 8, 2012 12:15pm CDT
69 degrees F Rain Wind 6mph NE
Sunrise 6:06am Sunset 8:30pm
[Once again I apologize for the long time since I gave you an update. In addition to being out of town on a couple trips, when I came home last week, my computer had decided to go to that Great Computer Hunting Ground In The Sky! I am at a library right now so this will be a very short update. Hopefully I can give you more later.]
I will try soon to give you another installment in the report about our time banding the loons. Although it is becoming ancient history.
When I returned home last week, several neighbors asked me if I had seen our chick lately. Obviously having been out of town, I had not seen the chick.
Several of them said that they had been watching and that they had not seen the chick for a week or more.
The latest report of a sighting of the chick that I have been able to get from anyone is that one of the neighbors said they saw the chick with one of the parents one week ago Saturday night.
I have watched and I have not seen the chick in the last few days since I have been home.
I have some concern at this point but I am not ready to say that something has happened to our chick. We will just have to keep watching and hoping that he is ok and that someone will spot him soon. This chick has been so independent that anything is possible or believable.
A few days ago, I saw two loons out in front of my place. I was glad to see them. I was sure it must be the chick and one of the adults.
However, when I got the telescope out and looked at them, it turned out to be the two adults. As hard and as hopefully as I looked, I did not see the chick anywhere in the area with the adults.
I wish I had better and more positive news for you. All I can tell you is what I have seen - or not seen.
One of the neighbors said he felt that the chick had maybe been hit by a boat. But there have been no reports of the chick washing up on shore. The other possibility is that an eagle may have taken him. That is a very real possibility if he is gone. Even though he was getting large, an eagle would be fully capable of taking him.
Nature can be very unforgiving.
So let us hope that neither boats nor eagles nor dark of night have taken our spunky chick from us.
I will let you know if I find out anything definitively either way. In the meantime, we can only hope that our chick is somewhere and still doing well.
Comments or Questions? LoonCam@yahoo.com
Copyright 2012 Larry Backlund

