Post Blizzard Birding

As planned I drove north to Sax-Zim Bog this morning. My plan was to leave home an hour before sunrise which would allow me to arrive in the Bog area right around sunup. Hopefully I would catch a Great Grey Owl still hunting for an hour after dawn. I knew that it had been impossible hunting conditions for the last 48 hours. In fact, the local paper stated the waves out on Lake Superior reached 35 feet, and all the freighters hid in harbors to avoid the weather.

On the drive up to Sax-Zim I was the only car on the road. The highway conditions were solid ice, but I just slowed down and took it easy. Without any other traffic on the roads, and by going slowly it was actually an easy drive. Upon reaching the Bog, the winds were howling with gusts up to 25 mph. Over the course of a few hours I saw 14 Bald Eagles, 2 Rough-Legged Hawks and finally 2 Sharp-Tailed Grouse, but no owls. I think the combination of the high winds and all the eagles (their enemies), I struck out on finding any owls. However, with the blue skies and fresh snow, it was a fun time. Here are a few images I took of one Bald Eagle taken just minutes after sunrise. It was having a hard time hanging on to its perch in the high winds. I have also included a photo of the entrance to the Welcome Center. We should be open in about two weeks.
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Blizzard Birds

Take one nasty storm with 50 mph wind gusts and add one crazy photographer and what do you get? Blizzard birds! While most people would be inside on a day like today, I tried to deal with horrible photographic conditions and take a few photos. Tomorrow I plan on driving up to Sax-Zim Bog. The snow is supposed to end overnight with clearing skies around 6 am. I hope the end result will be ice / snow plastered trees. All the raptors including owls should be very hungry and hopefully hunting all day long with a backdrop of a deep blue sky.

Blizzard Birds …
Red-Breasted Nuthatch, White-Breasted Nuthatch and Black-Capped Chickadee
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Good-Bye Pure Google!

Pure Google Birding … alas, it is no more!

Four years ago I purchased a Google Nexus 10 tablet. I loved the “pure Google” platform w/o bloatware which also insured I received the latest Android operating system updates. This tablet went birding everywhere with me in northern Minnesota. My trips often took me off the grid deep into the boreal forest on unmarked logging roads. Thankfully my Google Nexus 10 had a gps chip, and by having downloaded Google Maps for offline use, even when off the grid and approaching remote dirt road intersections, I could figure out my location. Thus, when I spied some interesting new bird, not only did I know how to get home but had my birding apps to help with identification.

Yes, I originally  had cravings for a Google Pixel C, but their new tablet unlike the Nexus 10 no longer has a GPS chip. During my research I discovered that most “wifi only”(i.e. no cellular plan) tablets no longer have GPS chips . One of the few tablets with GPS is the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 (9.7 inch screen with 32 gb). This morning I found out that if you are willing to be “uncool” and order a “gold colored” tablet, the price is marked down from $499 to $385. Now it is quite possible that some New York City fashionista will track me down near the Canadian border in Minnesota and look down their nose at my non chic tablet color … who cares!

Given my years of being known by my nickname, The Northstar Nerd, I will need consolation from my readers during my time of mourning over the loss of pure Google! However, I will still be on the Android platform. Apple? Eh gads, no!

Seriously … if your travels while birding or photographing often take you off the grid, when purchasing your next tablet, check VERY carefully to insure that device has a GPS chip.

Good-Bye Pure Google
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On the weather front, the promised winter storm / blizzard appears to be starting to make itself known early this morning in Minnesota. Birding will be difficult today. Thus, in the meantime here is a pic from a few nights ago … a calm, warm night down on the Duluth waterfront. A classic ore boat is approaching the Duluth ship canal with the moon rising immediately behind the freighter.
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