Category Archives: Year 10

Sunflowers at Sunrise!

We are having a mini family reunion up here in the Northland. I offered to lead folks on an outing early yesterday morning. I would not reveal the focus of our jaunt, other than to promise it would involve bursts of color, and was not a birding expedition (not everyone birds in my family!).

When we arrived at the humble sunflower fields during the early morning light, there were exclamations of joy. We spent over 90 minutes enjoying and walking in the midst of the sunflowers. Our location was Matten Road in Wrenshall … a delight for the senses. Here is the Google Maps link. We were visiting MK3 Hardwood Farm (Facebook page). The sunflowers are just coming into their own in terms of blossoms. Birding will be better next week.

Molly and I wish you a joyous rest of the summer. Note in the photograph of the two of us how the sky had become much less blue. The combination of being 90 minutes later in the morning, plus smoke building into the area dramatically changed photographs. However, before planning this outing I had taken into account which morning would have a lesser amount of smoke at sunrise. Happy August!



A number of folks have asked me privately and via the comments how I am able to forecast the smoke. There is one tool from the National Weather Service … linked via this url. It only forecasts the smoke a little over 24 hours in advance.

Here is a screenshot. Select the “vertical smoke” from the left menu, and then use the two sliders … one changes the forecast period, the other changes the ability to see through the “smoke overlays” to the map below.

Northland Bog Sightings

Over the past 10 days I have spent some time driving my favorite bag roads … remote forest roads through wilderness bogs. My favorite road, bar none, is Toomey Williams Forest Road in Pine Island State Forest west of Big Falls. This road is a narrow (just barely one lane wide) through beautiful forest bog and forest. Sax-Zim Bog is strictly minor leagues when compared against Toomey Williams. However, unlike Sax-Zim, most Pine Island roads are not plowed free of snow in the winter. I have a page which reviews my favorite NE Minnesota birding locations, including Pine Island.

Spruce Grouse (female) and Pine Siskin on Toomey Williams


Closer to home I love an area I affectionally named the South Bog. Just like in Sax-Zim Bog, you will find the occasional farm on slightly higher. I found this Sandhill Crane on a hay bale, which was a new one for me. While I have seen many birds and animals hunting from the tops of hay bales, I had never seen a Sandhill Crane on a huge mound of hay. The crane was calming picking grubs, etc. out of the hay. After about 10 minutes, it moved on to another hay mound and repeated the process. Cool to watch.

Sandhill Crane Enjoying Breakfast on a Hay Bale


Finally, on the way home from the South Bog, I swung by Forest Hill Cemetery. The two ponds are now a food factory … generating bugs that hatch and fly (prey for Cedar Waxwings), and small swimming fish and other yummies (prey for Green Heron)

Green Heron

Cedar Waxwing

The Forest Reborn

The Forest Reborn!
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I just wrote and photographed an article on this topic for the just published issue of Lake Country Journal. Although wildfire can and is often tragic, the article reviews the benefits of fire to our ecosystem. Our forests need to burn to stay healthy. My story includes research and interviews with The Nature Conservancy of Minnesota, the Minnesota DNR, one of the world’s leading experts in forest health from the University of Minnesota, Professor Lee Frelich, and Outdoor Writer and Photographer, Michael Furtman who owns a cabin right in the middle to the Greenwood Forest Fire region.
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Here is a photograph I took near the end of the Gunflint Trail. The location is the overlook near Gunflint Lake and the image was taken during the summer of 2020, 13 years after the Ham Lake Fire … beautiful once more.
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This is what the region looked like from the same exact location just four years after the fire in 2011.

Forest Fire Rebirth at Gunflint Lake
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