All posts by richardhoeg@gmail.com

Mud Lake Fighting Tree Swallows

Weather conditions were unexpected this morning, but drove me to make a 2.5 mile hike to Mud Lake (St. Louis River Backwater). While the forecast was for sunny and calmer winds, as usual Lake Superior thought otherwise. I arrived at Morgan Park’s Slag Point to discover finding birds given the wind would be very  tough. However if one walks to the end of the trail and then along some old railroad tracks next to the river, one reaches a protected area named Mud Lake. I was hoping migrating birds would home in on the protected area.

While the number of species was underwhelming,  Common Tree Swallows put on amazing courtship / fighting displays. Along the railroad tracks out over the water there are very few trees, and the many swallows enjoyed the one dead birch … as did I! Given the aforementioned wind, the swallows stayed in a small area which had bugs. The metallic blue of the males was very much in evidence. Not as many females were back on the scene.

Mud Lake Courtship Flights and Fights!

Saying Good-Bye to this Year’s Owl Family

Momma Great Horned Owl has been enticing her owlets to move a little bit every night. I suspect food is the motivating factor. Each morning the owlets would be in a tree about 15 yards further away from the nest than the prior day. I believe the goal was to leave the thicket for much denser forest regions. And now the owl family is gone!

Here are the final faces the owlets made at me (actually the second image is an owl pellet upchuck in progress).

Gray / Canada Jay Fledglings!

In my 14 years as a volunteer naturalist at Sax-Zim Bog, I had never seen “fledgling” Canada / Gray Jays till this morning. I had always heard that for a very short time after the young birds leave the nests they are “gray fluff balls”. This morning was super special for me. I almost drove by the mature Canada Jay I saw foraging on the side of the road, but I decided to stop and oh my … how lucky. I spent almost one hour with the jay family.

Just to give some perspective, in the same 14 years I have seen Great Gray Owlets on three occasions (and multiple times per nesting season). Thus, at least for me this is a much rarer birding event!

Canada Jay / Gray Jay Fledglings (two youngsters in third image)


An adult from this morning …


Attacking an old bee hive ???


The Movie (video link for blog email subscribers)