Sunday, January 19, 2014

Hunting for Hedwig

I consider myself a bird watcher. I have multiple feeders in my backyard and am able to recognize many birds. When I'm outside, it's usually birds that catch my attention. But I'm not one of those "must travel to the ends of the earth to add a bird to my life list" birders. I don't have a life list.

Today, that changed a little. I'd seen a couple of reports that snowy owls have been spotted around the state. Looking up where they've been seen, I noticed a lot of reports from here - in Dakota County. With them being this close, I wanted to go hunting for a snowy owl. My sister, brother-in-law, niece and I headed south on Highway 52. For the next couple of hours, we looked for owls and tried to locate geocaches in the area, too.

Near the intersection of 180th St. E. and Emery Avenue, we saw a car pulled to the side of the road. A man got out with a spotting scope so we pulled over, too and asked if he'd spotted "one." He knew exactly what I was asking about and sure enough, there in the middle of a cornfield was a snowy owl. There was no way I'd have known what it was without looking through the spotting scope. Their camouflage is amazing - they look just like a blob of snow. So in a snowfield, they are unrecognizable. Thank goodness for spotting scopes.

The gentleman with the scope was very generous. After he let all of us look at the owl, he told us where there was another owl. Birders are nice people.

It was easy to know where to stop for the second bird - there were about six cars lined up along the road. The owl was perched on top of a transmission tower. As we watched, it flew from that tower to the next tower over. How exciting to not just see a snowy owl, but to also get to see one fly.

I tried to take pictures, but 1) need a much bigger telephoto lens, and 2) need to improve my technique of photographing a white bird against white clouds and/or snow. (Let's just say my pictures didn't turn out.) Oh well, maybe that means I need to go back and look for more snowy owls...

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Merlin Bird ID: Great Birding App

Normally in this blog I talk about the things I see around me in the natural world. Observation is a skill I'm always working at improving. One way to get better at recognizing what I see is through the use of field guides and 21st century tools, like apps. Cornell's Lab of Ornithology recently released the new app they've created for identifying birds. From their website:

"Information overload is the bane of the beginning bird watcher—as anyone knows who has ever flipped through 40 species of sparrows in a field guide. What if an app could quickly tell you which birds are most likely based on your location, date, and a brief description? Not just which birds theoretically could occur near you, but which birds are actually reported most often by other birders. That’s what Merlin Bird ID does. And it's free—because we want to make bird watching easier for everyone.

Merlin Bird ID covers 285 of the most common birds of North America (with more on the way). In addition to help with ID, it contains expert tips, more than 1,400 gorgeous photos, and sounds for each species. It’s available now for iPhone and other iOS7 devices, and it's coming soon for Android."

I downloaded the app to an iPad - it took awhile but the wait is worth it. You provide information about the size and color of the bird and in which habitat you saw it. Then a list of names with pictures comes up. Click on the bird you think you saw and learn more. There's information about the bird - where it lives, what it likes to eat, what it sounds like. I've downloaded several other bird apps (the free versions) and they usually give you a limited number of bird species as a way to get you to pay for the full version. But Merlin Bird ID is thorough and, in my opinion, very useful. Learn more about the app at http://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/  Check it out!

Monday, January 6, 2014

Life in the Cold

During the winter, the nature center teaches a class about how animals deal with winter. Life in the Cold helps students understand that all approaches to surviving winter come with challenges. No approach  - migration, hibernation, staying active - is better than any of the others or is a guarantee of survival.

I saw that firsthand today. The overnight low temperature hit -23F. The daytime highs (high? ha!) were about -12F. Winds were gusting around 20 mph so windchills were 30-40 below. Cold, cold, cold. Too cold for schools to be open. Too cold even for animals.

Yesterday, one of the naturalists was at the nature center caring for the raptors. She noticed a young squirrel huddling up against one of the buildings, digging under leaves. She assumed it was trying to get warm, so she put a bucket filled with some fabric and left it in the area hoping that the squirrel would use it for shelter.

If you've read my more recent posts, you know I've been having trouble with squirrels getting into my feeders at home. Squirrels don't rank high on my list of favorite animals. But I don't wish them to suffer or die. Unfortunate for the young squirrel at the nature center, the weather was too much for it. This morning , while caring for the raptors, the other naturalist and I found the young squirrel. Dead. Frozen.

I know that yearling animals aren't likely to survive their first year. It's what I teach the kids during Life in the Cold. With the temperatures that we've been experiencing, I'm sure many animals died or will die as this polar vortex smothers us in bitterly cold temperatures. It's just hard to deal with when you see it firsthand. RIP Mr. Squirrel.