Category Archives: Year 12

Great Gray Owl Irruption Winter 2024/2025

By the 1st of December I will likely know whether a smaller owl irruption will follow last winter’s great event. Bird statistics show that it is not unusual for a smaller irruption to follow a big event (like last winter).

Last November, I was actually one of the first individuals who realized that a magical winter of owls was in the offing.  Given all the hikes that I take up in the Greenwood Boreal Forest Bog Region, I knew the number of owls I was seeing was most unusual. I kept my mouth shut about sightings with the exception of a few very trusted friends. Eventually the owls would move down to more populated and birded areas near Lake Superior, and we wanted to enjoy the experience before the word got out across America’s birding community (and it did).

Yes, last winter was special. For the first time ever I had a “Great Gray Owl” yard bird, and the owls were easily found within ten minutes to twenty minutes of my house from the latter part of December through mid February. I have a HUGE number of images of last year’s irruption. This is a small subset of photos which I am thinking of entering in a contest.

Great Gray Owl Irruption … The Hunt

I learned from a friend who is a scientist with the Superior National Forest, that during the owl irruption almost nary a bird was a first year owl, a juvenile. Apparently Great Gray Owl reproduction had been good over the past few years, but now their primary prey, the forest vole, was in short supply. Although Great Gray Owls are not a bird which normally migrates, the lack of food forced the owls to move south. We also have native Great Gray Owls which live year round in northern Minnesota, including Greenwood.


Gray Gray Owl Irruption … Hunting During an Intense Snowstorm

This was one of the more crazy birding adventures I ever took. I was sitting at home on Groundhog’s Day, and Punxsutawney Phil definitely was NOT seeing its shadow in northeastern Minnesota. Instead we had almost blizzard like conditions with HUGE winds off Lake Superior. Who would go birding during such kind of weather? Me! Only 8 miles from my house on the Two Harbors Expressway, during the middle of the storm, I found many owls hunting from sign posts. Only starvation would make an owl hunt during the day AND a horrible snow storm.


Great Gray Owl Irruption … Two Harbors Lighthouse Scenes

For almost one month up to four Great Gray Owls would hunt at the Two Harbors waterfront. Eventually the word got out, and later in the day the crowds would get crazy. If I decided to visit Two Harbors (20 minutes from my home), I would normally arrive about 40 minutes before sunrise, and leave shortly after sunup. In this way I felt I captured the most dramatic light from pre-dawn to the 20 minutes post sunrise. Most people arrived a bit after sunrise or later. Thus, my experiences were mainly crowd free!

Fat Bear Week … Northern Minnesota Style

It’s Fat Bear Week in Northeastern Minnesota! While folks may better know the national park “fat bear competition” than our local version (YouTube Overview), we still enjoy our bruins efforts to pork up before the big winter sleep.  We even have a salmon run up from Lake Superior, but it definitely does not rival the runs in Alaska.

Last night was the third night out of five that my local bears competed in the event. Earlier this week the competition centered around a young male which always visited Amity (i.e. our home and bird feeders) by its lonesome, but now Momma and her cubs are back and are making a serious pitch to me named this year’s winners. Two nights in a row this trio has pulled down my platform feeder. Momma has even taught her youngsters  the fine art of bird feeder destruction that she waits till the main feeder is down, and the hanging feeders are spilled before coming on the scene.

Molly and I were watching from inside our home, only a foot or two away from the black bear family. We don’t bother them, and the bears do not bother us. Please note we definitely DO NOT bake fresh cookies just before sundown and leave our windows open!

Fat Bear Week … Northern Minnesota Style!

Ten Ton Tillie (i.e. Momma Bear)


One of the Yearling Cubs


Mom acquired this name last night from a friends little girl. I was sending updates to friends via a private birding group, and Momma was given her name!

All the pictures were taken by my trailcams, or cell phone. About 30 minutes before the competition started Molly and I arrived home from a writing / photography gig. Foolishly, given it was pitch dark, I decided to leave all my photography gear in the car. After all, what photo ops would appear at this time today? Foolish me, the bears had been visiting nightly around 1 am, and I thought they would stick to this pattern.

In the video, the first two segments were taken by my trailcams. However by final three segments I was watching live and using my Google Pixel mobile phone to record the 30 minute visit.

Fat Bear Week … Northern Minnesota Style … The Movie! (video link for blog subscribers)