Monday, June 1, 2015 10:07 pm CDT

 

I think I am getting too old for this!!

Or my heart is too weak!

What an evening of drama it has been.   And it is still not over.

The chick left the nest and got in the water when he was only 2 hours old.

I always cringe when they leave so early and wish that they would at least spend the first night on the nest.  But he hopped into the water right away.

He even found the chick ramp and got up on it and slept in the warm sunshine.  But he could not quite figure out how to get the rest of the way up the nesting material to the adult loon on the nest.

But the chick also swam around the nest frantically all the while calling and peeping.

It was so hard to watch.

After a couple hours of uncertainty by our loons of taking care of BOTH a chick and an egg at the same time, they seemed to have figured it out.  

The female sat quietly on the egg on the nest.  While the male faithfully took care of the chick in the water.  Feeding the chick.  Swimming with it.  And letting the chick ride on his back.

But then about 8 pm, the female left the nest and the male got up on the egg.

It looked like it was going to be a routine and smooth nest exchange.

But the female just swam away leaving the chick behind.

The chick swam around and around the nest as he called constantly.  He even found the chick ramp numerous times but could not figure out how to climb up on the nest itself.

The male was frantic.

Staying on the second egg.  But hooting, yodeling, tremoloing and wailing.  He used every call in his repertoire including a few that were maybe not there before!

The chick was frantic.

It was amazing to watch how fast he could swim!

When he started venturing further and further from the nest in his panic, the male finally left the nest and swam out to him and got the chick up on his back.  He then swam back to the nest and stayed close by.

But now the second egg lay exposed..

After a while, the male got back up on the nest and rolled the egg and settled down.

But as he got up on the nest, the little chick was bucked off.  Back into the big dark scary water.

Once again he started calling and swimming frantically.

The male once again began his constant calling.

Calls that the female could have heard anywhere on the lake and should have called her back.  But she did not come.

Once again after a protracted time of calling, the male once again left the nest and got into the water and rescued the chick.

That time of night there would not be much danger from eagles.

But there would be GREAT danger from bass and northerns and snapping turtles.

I sat watching all of this play out hoping beyond hope that I did not see our new little chick disappear in a swirl of water.

It was heartbreaking to watch.

The female was absolutely no where to be seen nor did she answer any of his calls.

I tried to think of any possibility of what I could do to rescue the chick.  I kept hoping beyond hope that the female would return and all would be well.  But it was not to be.

But going out in the water and trying to grab a little chick while a distressed male was right there would be foolhardy and dangerous.  The likelihood of a severe stabbing, or multiple stabbings, is very real. But  haven't ruled it out yet.

The whole scenario repeated itself for yet a third time!

A chick frantically swimming and crying in the water.  The male on the nest calling over and over and over.  In a panic.

And finally the male getting in the water for yet a third time to rescue our little chick.

And that is where it stands right now.

The male is in the water with the chick on his back, swimming near the nest.

He seems to have chosen the chick over the egg.

I am not sure the egg will survive the night in the cool to cold air.

Nor am I sure the chick would survive without the male there either.

Such life and death decisions.

And no easy answers.

We can only hope the female will return.  But she has not normally returned in the middle of the night.

So we are faced with more drama than any of us wanted or hoped for!

 

Copyright  2015   Larry R Backlund

 

Monday, June 1, 2015 12:30 pm CDT

 

WE HAVE A CHICK!

He still looks like he is wet and he is not out yet.

But he is TALKING a lot and moving around.

This has been one long labor.

Now to get him completely out and dried.

And on to the second egg.

Oh the DRAMA!

 

Copyright   2015   Larry R Backlund

Monday, June 1, 2015 6:35 am CDT

44 degrees F   Partly Cloudy   Wind Calm

Sunrise   5:28 am CDT     Sunset   8:54 pm CDT

 

I am STUNNED!

We just had a nest exchange and there was NO chick under the male who had been sitting there for 17 hours and 10 minutes.

The female quickly and efficiently moved on to the eggs.

With all the wing lifts and body pushups that the male had done all last night and throughout the night, I was sure we were going to see a little chick this morning.

The exchange was quick enough that I could not examine the eggs.

But both eggs looked to be intact yet.

So now we wait some more.

I still have to believe that the male was reacting to something from a chick trying to get out of the egg.  But there was no chick to be seen.

Now let's see if the female reacts the same way.

And let's see if there IS a chick trying to be born.

 

Copyright  2015    Larry R Backlund

 

 

Sunday, May 31, 2015 5:14 am CDT

36 degrees    Clear   Wind Calm

Sunrise  5:29 am CDT    Sunset   8:53 pm CDT

 

So far I do not see any signs of an imminent hatch.

The loon on the nest, who I presume is the male, is sitting quietly.  No obvious "twitching" from movement of chicks beneath him.

His wings are tightly wrapped around the precious eggs to protect them from the cold morning air.

Wisps of fog drift lazily across the surface of the lake.

We are still under a 'frost advisory' until 8 am this morning.

Right now we are at 36 degrees here at "Loon Lake".  And the temperature still could drop a few degrees in the next couple hours.

A number of reporting stations around the area are already a few degrees lower than that.  And numerous reports around the Arrowhead of Minnesota have temperatures in the upper 20s!

Good grief!  This is the first of June!

The wind has gone way down after the last couple days of winds rocking the nest in the waves on the lake.

The sky is clear and this should prove to be a sunny, if cool, spring day.

A perfect day for our first chick to arrive.

If we are going to have a successful hatch, expect to see one chick hatch first.  And then the other chick will hatch about 24 hours later.

A couple weeks ago I said that if I had to guess, the eggs would hatch either today or tomorrow.

I am still standing by that prediction.

Now we can only wait to see if it comes true.

The drama builds.

 

Copyright, 2015     Larry R Backlund

 

Saturday, May 30, 2015 6:00 am CDT

43 degrees F    Clear     Wind 13 mph N

Sunrise   5:29 am CDT     Sunset 8:52 pm CDT

 

On an unseasonably cold and windy morning, we have just had our morning nest exchange.

The male has left  after his long overnight shift the nest and the female smoothly moved onto the nest, turned the eggs and settled in for her shift.

The eggs are now once again protected from the wind and cold air.  Safely sealed under the female loon.

Are there chicks in those eggs?  How far along are they?  Are they doing well?  When will they hatch?

So many questions.  So few answers.  And the loons aren't talking.

So we can only wait and watch.

It will take the chick sometime to work its way out of the egg as it uses its egg tooth to break through the shell.  It will work its way around the egg internally first and then externally through the shell.  This is something called "pipping".

Or as someone has referred to it, "pip and zip" as it unzips its egg.

Whenever it is going to happen, it definitely should be within the next few days 

Now that some of the flowers have bloomed, just in time for the arrival of our chicks, it may be time for me to tell what they are.

You have made so many wonderful guesses.  And people have guessed one of them, but not the other.

First of all, there are yellow irises and daylilies which have not started to bloom yet.  

My yellow irises around the house are already blooming.  But the irises on the nest have suffered a number of indignities that they do not look like they are even close to blooming yet.

First it was very cold and dry for them during the first couple weeks on the nest.  So they did not grow much.

And then the loons seemed to want to dig and mine every bit of soil they could from around the iris roots.  Which probably set them back even more.  So they are surviving but that is about it.  I do not see any blossoms that are ready to open.

There were two new plants that I had put on the nest this year.  And you have guessed one of them.

The white flowers are daisies.  And specifically they are Shasta daisies

The ones on the far side of the nest have been blooming for almost a week now, but the blossoms have been up above the top edge of your picture so you could not see them.    The ones on the right side have now opened and are in view.

The other new plants that I put on the nest this year is the lavender flower that you see right next to the nest.

If you remember, the female loon pulled it out by its roots when she was 'excavating' and moved it right next to the nest!  I am surprised that it even survived!

There was a second plant of the same flower in the top corner furthest from the camera.  But that one obviously did not survive all the excavating.

The plant has been stunted by its rough transplanting.  Normally it would be almost 3 feet tall.

It is what I have known all my life as Sweet Rocket.

I am not sure what the scientific name for it is, but it is a wildflower.  It has a head of individual florets and in a large grouping is really quite pretty.  It can spread and take over an area and can be quite invasive.  But during its main bloom period a large group of them offset with white daisies and yellow and purple irises can be quite striking.

Those of you who were watching very early in the year may remember what someone referred to as a 'stick' in the upper left hand corner of the nest.  A stick that the wind blew over fairly quickly.  That stick was the flower stalk from last year's Sweet Rocket flowers.'

The other small green plants that you see beginning to grow at the bottom center of your picture look like they might be Jewel Weed.  This is also a wildflower that often grows along the shores of lake and rivers and swamps.  I have a lot of it that I let grow along the lakeshore.  Later in the summer it has attractive yellow/orange flowers.  It is part of the impatiens family.

But the best part about the plant is that if you have mosquito bites or even poison ivy, crushing the leaves and stems and rubbing them on the site will give you some relief from the itching.

So now you know what the new flowers are.

And they have bloomed just in time to welcome our new chicks.

But the chicks aren't quite here yet.

We will have to wait just a little bit longer before we see what could be some of the cutest chicks in the whole world of birds.

And then unfortunately we only get to see them for about one day before they leave the nest!

Let me tell you about something else you might be interested in.  Most of you know the name Kevin Kenow.  I h talked about Kevin many times and the work that he has done for years studying loons.  Kevin Kenow is with the United States Geological Services (USGS) and he is the one who has banded our loons.  They bands that you are now thankfully able to use to know which loon is which.  Which one is the male and which one is the female.

For those of you in Minnesota or even the Upper Midwest, you might be interested in hearing Kevin speak.  He will be giving a presentation on the results of some of his research on loons at Douglas Lodge in Itasca State Park on Thursday evening, July 8th at 7pm.  I am sure you would find it very interesting.

Itasca State Park is well known to Minnesotans.  But even those of you from other states or even other countries around the world may know of Itasca State Park.  You just didn't know you knew it.

It is Minnesota's oldest state park and the second oldest state park in America, right after Niagara Falls State Park.

Itasca State Park is where the Mississippi River, one of the great rivers of the world starts!

The Mississippi River flows out of Lake Itasca and at its headwaters, you can walk across the Mississippi on a few rocks!

For many years it was not known where the Mississippi River started.  But finally the explorer  Henry Schoolcraft found its true source.  In fact the name "Itasca" comes from the Latin words for 'true head'  - "verITAS CAput".

I bet you never thought you were going to learn all that when you started reading this morning.

But the main thing that all of us want to "learn" is when the loon chicks are going to hatch.

That is still a secret known only to the loons.

 

Copyright 2015   Larry R Backlund