Greenwood Creek YouTube Channel at Sand Lake / Seven Beavers

Thursday evening Molly and I will attend a small reception given by The Nature Conservancy celebrating their recent land purchase of over 10,000 acres which has dramatically expanded their Northeastern Minnesota initiative, Sand Lake / Seven Beavers Preserve. As many of you know, I am the individual who most likely spends the most time hiking in their wilderness preserve, and provides the Greenwood Creek Bird Feeders for everyone’s enjoyment.

I recently created a YouTube Channel with a primary focus upon the Greenwood Creek Boreal Forest Bog in the Sand Lake / Seven Beaver’s Preserve. My goal was to have the channel finished before the The Nature Conservancy’s reception.

Please browse to my new channel and consider subscribing!

The channel is 100% non commercial and will feature the nature and wildlife of Greenwood. In the preserve I have remote birdsong listening stations, trailcams and bird feeders. A small trailhead parking area may be found 1/2 mile south of Greenwood Creek on Lake County Highway #2, which is also where the birdfeeders are located.

Learn more via this channel’s web links:

And that special night when Lady Aurora danced over Greenwood! (video link for email subscribers)

Northland Winter Birding Eye Protection … or Dork Alert?!

Apparently I will NOT win any fashion awards, but both of the eye protection options presented here are field tested by me. Thankfully at my advanced stage in life I am not trying to be an Instagram or TikTok Influencer!

Use a golf visor in tandem with your stocking cap on cold winter days. This combination works on sunny days to provide shade, and on ugly days to keep eyeglasses dry from sleet or snow. I use the Nike Swoosh Golf Visor. Putting a visor OVER a stocking cap is much warmer than wearing a hat under a stocking cap. I have worn this combination both yesterday and today as I visited the Long-Eared Owl perch. Yesterday because it was cold and sunny, and today because of wet snow (kept the eyeglasses dry).


Now we move on to my Darth Vader winter look! I wear somewhat expensive Giro goggles which fit over my eyeglasses. These goggles protect my eyes from fierce wind while doubling as sunglasses. I provide the Amazon link to the goggles I own. You may not need as expensive of goggles, however additional features which are important for me are … anti fogging and nicely fit over eyeglasses.


In closing I may get the “looks like a dork” award, but I am comfortable while dealing with any weather conditions winter might throw at me.

A Holiday Tradition of Long-Eared Owls!

Quite a few years ago my middle child moved to the Milwaukee area, and thus Molly and me often make the trip south from Duluth to visit his family during the holidays. Such was the case this year as we dodged winter storms up in the Northland, and now down south in Milwaukee. There is normally plenty of free time in the mornings, and of course I then steal off to go birding.

One of my favorite spots is a heavy treed deciduous wetlands where I learned Long Eared Owls often spend the winter. Over the past three mornings, I have hiked into this area on the lookout for Long-Eared Owls. On morning #1 I saw zero owls (not unusual), however for days #2 and #3 the owls have been present. Yesterday was calm and sunny (saw one owl), while today is the start of a winter storm (saw three owls).

Day #2: Long-Eared Owl & Sunshine


Day #3: Three Long-Eared Owls & a Snowstorm


Molly and I cycle our visits between each of our three kids and their families. Here is my visit from three years ago over the Christmas Holidays to this same Long Eared Owl dense wintering thicket of trees.

Two images from that post …