Patience is a virtue!
I have been spending a lot of time over the past two weeks with this Duluth area Snowy Owl … waiting for an afternoon when it would come out to hunt before dark with bright sunny skies and no crows around. Jackpot!
Yesterday was a reunion of sorts, and for a while I did not believe the event would take place. Let me back up. Most people have favorite birds. For some folks it is a Cardinal or Baltimore Oriole due their flashes of color. There are some individuals who love owls, but normally their favorite seems to be the Great Gray or Snowy Owl. For me, it is the Northern Hawk Owl.
Having a Northern Hawk Owl (NHO) as a favorite bird can present difficulties, even when one lives in northern Minnesota. My region is at the southern edge of the Boreal Forest, which means although the NHO could live in my area year round, these owls normally live a touch north in Canada and wait for winter to fly south a few hundred miles and visit the Duluth area. Some years only one or two of these owls are seen across the entire continental United States. Such was the case during the winter of 2015/16, and thus my reunion was put on hold. During the winter of 2016/17 I had to drive 400 miles round trip from my home to the Big Bog for the reunion. I was thrilled when the two NHO’s I was watching decided to nest in northern Minnesota, but unfortunately by June their nesting attempts had failed. Regardless, it was fun to visit my owls during the warmer Spring and Summer months.
Last winter two Northern Hawk Owls’ decided to take up their winter residence only 6 miles from my home. I was in seventh heaven, and visited them many times per week. Thus, you can imagine I was thrilled when I heard reports for this winter that NHO’s had returned to Minnesota for the winter, and were only up in Sax-Zim Bog … 45 miles away by car. I actually serve as a volunteer naturalist in the Bog each winter. Tomorrow is our grand opening day for the winter!
Thus, yesterday along with my friend Jeff, we arrived at Sax-Zim before sunrise. After all, we had an owl to find. However, even though we heard the owl was definitely around, it eluded our efforts to find said bird. After four hikes back into the frozen bog over a half day’s search, it appeared my reunion with the Northern Hawk Owl was not slated to happen that day. However, after dropping Jeff off at his car so he could drive home to the Twin Cities, I decided to turn around and give it one more try. Eureka! I found my Northern Hawk Owl. For most of the next 45 minutes except for a short time, I had this owl to myself. My friend was actively hunting, and required me to make frequent trips into the Boreal Forest’s frozen bog to keep watching the hunt. I loved every minute of the reunion.
Here are a few family reunion photographs



And two other images from yesterday … Red-Breasted Nuthatch and Gray Jay


Finally, I finished up processing some photographs from last week when I hung out with Snowy at Sunset. They are cool owls, just not my favorite!

When I was a student at Dartmouth College years ago, a friend and classmate, Mark, always gave me grief that I lived in Frostbite Falls … home to Rocky and Bullwinkle J. Moose.
Well after all of these years I am finally admitting Mark was right. In fact, yesterday morning I hiked in to Frostbite Falls at sunrise … occasionally known at High Falls on the Pigeon River …. the international border between the USA and Canada in northern Minnesota.
My reason for being on the border was that I was returning to Duluth having chased the CP Holiday Train from Schreiber to Thunder Bay via Nipigon. Imagine two trains all decked out for the holidays which chug across Canada and the northern United States stopping in small towns to raise money for the local food banks. At each town people bring food donations, and get to watch a nationally known act perform. Yup … the side of a boxcar folds down and a concert stage is revealed! This years primary act on the Canadian version of the train is country singer Kelly Prescott. Pretty darn cool, and the true holiday spirit comes through in these small town. Last year we watched the Holiday Train concert in a the small prairie town of Plummer, Minnesota. (see schedule for the USA and Canada)
In summation, I love that I live in Frostbite Falls!
Photographs on this page are copyrighted and may not be used without my permission.
Frostbite Falls! (High Falls on the Pigeon River)
CP Holiday Train – Nipigon, Ontario

CP Holiday Train – Schreiber, Ontario

CP Holiday Train – Lake Superior near Rossport, Ontario
CP Holiday Train – Concert in Plummer, Minnesota
Video of Frostbite Falls