Bad Birding … Great Colors!

The last week has been horrible for birding. Almost all our locals have departed south, and the Arctic and Tundra arrivals are staying north (think southerly headwinds). Add almost nonstop dreary skies and frequent rain showers and a person could almost decide to move to the desert southwest (almost … but not quite). When the sun did pop out on a few occasions and I was poised with my camera. It was beautiful.

Last Monday Molly suggested at the last moment we enjoy some unexpected sun and eat out at the top of Mont du Lac. This is the hill where we both learned to ski back in our youth, and over the past few years a new owner has invested lots of money in what was a tired ski resort. This image was taken at sunset from the restaurant at the top of the hill overlooking the St. Louis River.

Tuesday afternoon found me escaping the “blah” conditions next to Lake Superior and driving over to Sax-Zim Bog. The Tamaracks are golden, and the late afternoon sun made for brilliant birding, but someone forgot to tell the birds! I walked for three miles and saw only three of our feathered friends … a chickadee, crow and blue jay.

Here is a photo of Admiral Road from that afternoon.

Finally yesterday afternoon I heard there were some local Arctic celebrities at the Forest Hill ponds. I enjoyed the four Ross’s Geese and the one Blue Morph Snow Goose.

This Monday morning … more rain … I am NOT out birding.

In love of Sedge Grasses … Sandhill Cranes

Monday morning while driving back to Duluth from the Twin Cities I stopped by Crex Meadows. I left by 5:30 am which allowed me to reach Crex 1/2 hour before sunrise. While hundreds, if not thousands of Sandhill Cranes leave Crex each morning to feed in surrounding farm fields, before killing frosts hit this area of western Wisconsin the marshes / sedges grasses of Crex are also popular feeding spots. Why visit a corn field when there is  lots of food in the marsh? The Minnesota DNR says this about habitat (Crex is just east of Minnesota into Wisconsin): “In Minnesota, nesting habitat consists of lowland emergent marshes and meadows dominated by sedges and grasses, often with stands of phragmites, cattails, bulrush, and wild rice occurring in deeper water in larger basins.”

Here are a whole lot of images I took … starting at 7:00 am, 30 minutes before sunrise, till about 9 am.

Before Sunrise

Flying into the Sedge Grasses minutes before sunrise

A Mass Take-Off Event from the Main Dike Road

Feeding after Sunrise

Greenwood Forest Fire Spruce Grouse

As noted in earlier posts, I am very much enjoying the Greenwood Forest Fire Region. It is now two years since the wildfire, and nature is starting to recover. While the days of majestic pine vistas are years in the future, there are actually lots of pockets of living pines on McDougal Lake Road, and Stony River Forest Road was used as a fire block line, but the fire never reached this forest road. The end result is you will find lots of wildlife if you head out into the woods at sunrise. Although I am featuring Spruce Grouse in this post, it was not from seeing lots of Ruffed Grouse. With both birds, if I stop my car some distance away I am normally able to walk within five yards of each species of grouse.

These images were taken two mornings ago. They also show the difference between a male and female spruce grouse plumage.