Saturday, February 23, 2008

Day 46, Saturday, 2/23/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles


Click banner to go to my host bio and listen to show at showtimes, Fridays at 11 AM EST, or to download archives anytime. This week is Pt. 1 Flashes of Hope, we will air Pt.2 next Friday.

For those that are going to my Lisa's Walk The Talk Show, this site is temporarily forwarded here.















Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was by far the nicest winter day we have had in at least a month. The temperatures reached 34 degrees while we were in the valley. Em came with me today and we had a wonderful mom-daughter day. Of course, her only request was that we had
to stop in the little town on the way to my eagle project and pick up a couple pickled eggs.

The clerk laughed as I brought our two $.50 ivory colored pickled eggs to the counter.
"Do you like pickled eggs?" I asked the clerk.
"No." But my daughter sure does," she replied.
"Well, have you ever tried them?"
She laughed, "Nope."
"I leaned over the counter where I saw Keith the owner sitting in back working on his paperwork, "I think they ought to make
every Saturday a pickled egg, taste-testing day for all the employees so you can up-sell the customers-how 'bout that
Keith?"

Keith laughed, "How you doing‘ Lisa?"

Well we said our goodbyes. As we walked outside there was a truck with a couple of old aged Irish setters sitting and waiting for their master. So we stopped to admire them and moved onto the eagle project.

I can't believe I carried those two eggs out to our post by the eagle nest area and didn't loose them in the snow. Em and me
took a shot eating our eggs while waiting for the eagles.

Every so often we'd toss a snowball at each other just to make the other laugh. Then we hiked out and moved on to the other nests. Em colored her animal book and helped spot the swans and other wildlife along the way.

The trumpeter swans stood up together when the eagles came in frightening up the mallards. It was no surprise they dove in front of the swans and landed. Those mallards almost always take cover next to the wings of the trumpeter swans.

The one swan laid back down on the ice and the other swan stretched his wings. Then Linda flew over and joined Dick on his perch and that's when I left. They must be getting close to mating again, and maybe, just maybe by next weekend they'll be sitting?
That's a possibility, but in all likelihood, it will probably be around the 6-10th of March before anyone starts laying and sitting.

We found what I think is a juvenile red-shouldered hawk. Let me know if I am wrong. The coloration didn't look right for a red-tailed hawk. He was hunting in an area that would support a red-shouldered hawk nest. Maybe I'll see him again and get some shots from his front side where I can see his coloration.

We found some mallards gathered together in a small opening in the ice. We looked for the cottontail, but didn't find him
today. I don't know if I'll ever be able to look at the cave of his and not try and at least envision his big feet scratching his ear, or his droopy eyes. I'm still trying to determine if he is the white-tailed jackrabbit, said to be here, or if he is a cottontail.

After seeing how large he was yesterday for the first time out of his cave, and seeing that huge white tail, I really wonder if
he is a cottontail.

We found all the nests empty today except for Nest 1, Dancer and Daedee's. Dancer was sitting up on the west perch watching
the river.

We found a small flock of robins drinking cool sips of melted water. There were about twenty birds in every shade of orange breast and brown and black. They were dipping and diving over that sunfish-filled ditch.

I only had a minute of video tape left, and just told Em, "Now we'll find something really cool because I'm out of tape."
Sure enough, not even a mile further I saw her. "Look-she's hanging by her tail!"
"What"
"Oh--she's going to fall in the river!"
"Mom--what is it?"
"That-there’s a . . . oh no . . . an opossum." I watched as this two foot opossum dangled with one paw holding her weight over the river. "What on earth is she doing?"
"I don't know."
"Here." I tossed Em the video camera, "Use the video tape up."

We watched the furry rodent scramble back up the scruffy tree and weave her way through vines, and chew through the vines before she scooped up a handful of dried grapes. "Look at her Em, she holds them in her hand just like we would."
The opossum smacked her jaws eating up the stems, the grapes and then started looking for more.

It was a great day in the valley.

I'm looking forward to Day 47.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Friday, February 22, 2008

Day 45, Friday, 2/22/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



















Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was awesome. The weather was 24 degrees above zero today, that's something to write about. The skies were blue and orange by the time I arrived, on the edge of dusk, I had all I could do to cover my beat and get back at a reasonable time.

Straight out of the truck I found a buck laying in the snow watching me, listening to something I couldn't hear. He didn't bother
getting up to run off. I don't think he thought I saw him.

I hiked out half way to Daedee and Dancer's nest, and I saw up on the nest sitting on the west perch looking towards the river.
I know I'm only two weeks, maybe three away from sitting closer, watching them incubate their year four babies.

This is about the time I started the second year project, back two years ago. I was thinking back to my starting early this year, wondering if it would be worth my time spent. I smile as I write--yes--it was worth every second.

When I think about all the creatures I've had the opportunity to study, document, and record I thank God for every second he
nudged me on and whispered, "For you child, I have plans to keep you busy, in a race with eagles in a field of many."

I took my parting daily shot of Daedee and hiked out.

Judy the nest 2 female was up on her nest arranging sticks again. No sign of The Mayor, her mate.

Further up the road I came up on a red-tailed hawk who bids his time sitting in the Nest 6 eagles nest area. Linda, the Nest 6 female eagle was sitting across the river looking down on it, and glancing occasionally at me. I kept hearing Dick, her mate, but at first I thought it was a lost cat, with such a hint of "meow" to the vocalizations.

Then I spotted him, he was sitting on the tallest tree at the foot of the bluff. He was watching every move I made. Maybe that is why Linda wasn't worried. Still, I have learned that all of the female eagles have a little higher level of trust in people, at least in me. Many times I'll walk right by them and not even see them, but the mates will call and let me know.

I then moved up to shoot the trumpeter swans that have been here 54 days now, and almost all the rivers are open in the valley, but still they seem to prefer this pond.

Then all of sudden I saw Dick fly past with a huge stick in his talons. I shot his image flying the forked stick against the blended purple, pink and orange colors of dusk. Then he did something I least expected, he dropped his legs down, looking down at the same time. I think it looks like an eagle skiing on the sky, take a look at the shot above--is he flying or skiing?

Nest 5 was empty, and as I approached the Nest 3 and Nest 4 area I found Sweetie, the red-tailed hawk perched high to catch the last sunlight of the day. Both eagle nests were empty.

No worries. That will change this next couple weeks as the snow turns to sleet and then that lovely rain.


I was hoping to catch a glimpse of the cave rabbit, but I wasn't expecting him to be outside sitting partially up on the hill.
He watched me as I snapped his pictures. I watched him, and his little nose rise up, sniffing the air, and twitching back and forth.

I finished the rest of my beat, and found an eaglet sitting where I used to see an adult eagle sitting, and it made me wonder if it was a nest 5 eaglet. Could be, but I'll never know.

By now the sun was long gone and those lovely slate blue shadows across the snow offset the creamy blue light that spread across a field full of twelve bucks, does, yearlings, and two year olds.

I took several pictures, and if you are a photographer shooting a fast-moving subject in low light, then you already know
how difficult it is to get a descent shot. I personally love panning the deer in low light. That shot above is two deer running from the herd.

It was already a half hour past dark when I figured I better get back before my husband started worrying. I always tell him, "Don't worry about me unless I'm not home an hour past sundown."

Then I saw this twinkling star in the sky, and thinking about it, I never even made a wish. However, it was blinking and flashing and I thought it might be a plane, or just a really bright shining star.

So I photographed it. I photographed it several times, and kept getting very unusual results. So, I slowed my shutter and shot a series, and sped up my shutter and shot a rapid series, and the star kept giving unusual results. It wasn't like shooting the lunar eclipse. The other stars didn't appear like this one. Then I found a couple long tube things going through space.

I got back home and Dave and Em were all worried, "What delayed you?"
"You don't want to know."
"What."
So I showed them my starry night shots.

Dave said, "It's probably satellite debris from the one they shot down from space with the missile yesterday."
"Maybe."

I'm going to keep my eye on that star. One eye staring through my celestial lens, the biggest one I can rig up with duct tape.
A poor girls night lens.

We added another radio station to our growing lists of radio station affiliates yesterday for my Lisa's Walk The Talk Show.

Which reminds me to give one more shameless plug for my eagle project: Rochester friends and eagle fans can listen in to my interview tomorrow morning on The Big Wild outdoor show aired on KOLM 1520 AM from 6-7 AM.

Here are their affiliate station times in other areas:
ESPN 1070 AM Madison, WI 
Saturdays 8-9 a.m.

WNBI 980 AM Park Falls, WI 
Saturdays 8-9 a.m.

WKLJ 1290 AM Sparta, WI 
Saturdays 8-9 a.m. 

WSAU 550 AM Wausau, WI 
Saturdays 6-7 p.m.

WRPN 1600 AM Ripon, WI
Saturdays 6-7 a.m.

WQCC106 FM LaCrosse, WI 
Sundays 8-9 a.m.

WGLR 1280 AM Lancaster, WI
Fridays 3-4 p.m.

WMBD 1470 AM Peoria, IL
Sunday 7-8a.m.

KRWC 1250 AM Minneapolis, MN 
Saturdays 7-8 a.m.
WNFL 1440 AM Green Bay, WI
Saturdays 9-10a.m.

3WI 95.9 FM Brainerd, MN 
Saturdays 7-8a.m. 
Sunday 7-8p.m.
WYRQ 92.1 FM Little Falls, MN
Saturdays 7-8a.m.

KAUS 1480 AM Austin, MN
Saturdays 11a.m.-12p.m.

KOLM 1520 AM Rochester, MN
Saturdays 6-7a.m. 

KATE 14.50 AM Albert Lea, MN
Saturday 5a.m.
Sunday 6 a.m. 

WPVL 1590 AM Platteville, WI 
Fridays 3-4 p.m. 

KHUB 1340 AM Fremont, NE
8-9 AM Saturday



I'll be speaking at The National Eagle Center March 8 and 9th, Saturday and Sunday at 3 PM, hope you'll come visit!


I'm looking forward to Day 46!

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Day 44, Thursday, 2/21/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles













Click banner to go to my host bio and listen to show at showtimes, Fridays at 11 AM EST, or to download archives anytime. This week is Pt. 1 Flashes of Hope, we will air Pt.2 next Friday.

For those that are going to my Lisa's Walk The Talk Show, this site is temporarily forwarded here.


Hello Eagle Friends,

I dedicate today's blog to The Big Wild and their radio listeners. TheBIGwild.com I Hope you'll check back from time to time and catch up on the stories.

Today was a fantastic day to explore the valley, even if my time was limited. The temperature was 2 above when I arrived and it was minus 15 with wind chill. The skies were blue-friendly with a white washing from clouds who could only veil the surprises that laid ahead.

I found three young bucks. One was a yearling, the other two looked to be almost two years old. They were guarding each other, or so it seemed. I enjoyed watching the little guy who was spunky, watchful, and faced me bravely while eating the ends off the tree saplings.

The largest buck surprised me when he stood up on his two hind legs to reach the higher branches, biting off a deer-sized mouthful of branch tips. I got the impression he was doing this as a favor to the yearling buck so he could feed from the height he could reach.

I moved on to Daedee and Dancer's nest, but didn't find them in their nesting area. By the time I hiked out and was unloading my gear into my truck I looked back to their nest area once again, and this time I could see an eagle flying the back valley above the river.

Judy was up on her nest, Nest 2, arranging her nest sticks. I am sure the eagles are as anxious for spring as all of us, and perhaps one symbol of spring they notice is the return of man in their fields. From winter trout fisherman, to hunters, to horn hunters, and to observers, like me.

As I traveled on I found the trumpeter swans on the backside of their pond, and I thanked God for another day with them. I know I'll arrive one of these days and they'll have left.

No activity on Nest 6 today. Their nest just seems to be a mess. It keeps dropping and sinking on them, spilling out the west side. They have some major work to do on it before they begin nesting in their high rise, "private heights" eagle condo.

My next surprise was so unexpected and what followed that I hope you enjoy this little story.

There I was heading up to check Nest 5 when I saw a large brown and black-masked bandit up to his chest, and with another step, his neck in snow. When I stopped the raccoon froze, not from the cold, but because of my presence. I video taped him, and he had his right arm out in front of him and from my position I didn't even see him blink, and I was close.

I lifted my still camera and shot three or four shots, and that's when he made a break.

I laughed at his choice of hiding spots. Three scraggly, old trees were going to hide this little character? I stepped out of my truck, certain I'd get a shot of him at the top of one of those trees, that is if they didn't blow over in the next wind.

I followed his tracks under some brush and I stood there amazed. "You're a pretty smart coon, huh?" I thought. The fresh, little footprints went under some grasses and hollowed stump buried under the snow.

All I had to do was drop to my knees and I knew I'd be face to face, with the raccoon. The problem was I started thinking of Keith, up at the grocery store, I remember the great detail he went into when he and a friend went and checked out this big old cave. He told me how he went in this cave and a mother raccoon came out and attacked his friend, she almost chewed his face off, and he all his clothing in shreds.

I sure didn't want to go back to my truck face-less. So I stood for a few moment, listening for any sound at all. I was ready so I bent down slowly, looking into the darkness of the hollowed log. Nothing happened. No screams, howls, growls.

I switched my video camera to infrared. I zoomed into the hollow log looking for two eyes reflecting back into my viewfinder. No raccoon. Nothing there at all, that's what I filmed.

I walked back out of the brush, and looked back at the tracks, thinking maybe he had been here earlier, and then ran off an entirely different direction. Maybe I missed it when I stepped out of the truck?

No. Raccoon are not that fast. I was sure I would have seen him if he headed back to the woods where he came from.

I went back to that hollowed log, and I looked up and one of those scrappy trees, then a light flash came down and I just knew that was one tree I wanted for my tree book I'm finishing up this next month. It had something on it that made the tree say, "take this shot." I thought, "Wow, if that raccoon hadn't showed up I wouldn't have even found this tree." That coon brought me right to that tree.

Well, this is where I'd like to say, I took the picture of the tree and left. However, this is where the story unfolds:

So there I was standing over by the hollow log, and that's when I looked down at my right foot and noticed another hollowed log. I suddenly had this terrible thought that the raccoon was right in that second hollow log, ready to jump out and gnaw off my foot. I'd scream, and get myself all tangled in the underbrush, fall into and then under the snow and no one would find me for days.

I took a step and I went through the snowbank, to what I hoped was the ground. That's when I realized this coon had an entire underground maze of connecting tunnels. If I had the gift of smelling through 24 inches of snow, I could have walked to that tree with a little less apprehension of going through, and stepping through all that snow and onto the back of a coon.

I thought light thoughts, and I tread lightly, tip-toed really, to that tree. I put my hands on it looking at a hole in it. "This would make a good squirrel tree" I thought, and I walked to the south side and found some tracks, raccoon tracks just two. Then I got all worried I was going to step on the raccoon and he'd jump out of the snowbank and bite my knees.

I put my hand against the bark and I saw fur poking out of the hole. I found the raccoon. He was in that opening on the tree the entire time watching me. I didn't bring a small lens, nope. I brought my big guns, my 75-300mm, and my 1000mm. I never expected to find him at eye level.

I looked up in the hole and could see him flat against the wall, holding on for dear life. I walked back around to the smaller hole on the north side. I thought I could shoot a couple seconds of video with my infrared on. A view into the raccoon den.

I walked back around to the north side of the tree and quietly lifted the camera into the hole, flipping my viewfinder down so I could see inside.

There was nothing there but chewed up wood. This was not even possible. No raccoon at all. I tilted the camera down and I could clearly see outside the big hole below. I had some good coverage of the coon den complete with walnuts in the corner. Maybe he shared his den with a squirrel? Maybe he just borrowed it on short notice?

I wondered, did that raccoon run out the hole while I walked to the north side? I went back around and looked inside, and sure enough, there was no raccoon. So I went back to the north side, and I lifted my camera out of the hole and that's when I noticed a furry ear and black mask inches away. I was just pulling out the camera when I felt its tail brush against my hand. Oh no, he was going to come at me chew out my eyes, blind me--that's what I deserved for poking my face
in a coon den!

I froze waiting for him to jump out and chew my ear off, I knew I should have worn two hats, I just knew it! I slowly put my hand down, leaving the camera. Then his tail fell out the hole and I knew he was just trying to climb up inside the tree higher.

I took my camera down and told the coon he was safe. I walked around some other trees to throw off my tracks and send any animals that may be following mine to find the coon. I know one tree I'll be checking back on from time to time, that scraggly, old tree holding up the underbrush and vine, hiding the coon inside from the outside world, a smart-thinking coon who prefers daylight to the long, boring nights.

Up the road I saw Sweetie the red-tailed hawk fly past me above my truck. I found nests 3-5 all empty again too. I found my cottontail rabbit subject sitting in his cave. He has become accustomed to my visits. Today he dozed off while I clicked his pictures again.

I was going to call it a day, and skip that last couple miles, but something urged me on, and I never ignore those leadings. I found him just as I took the last bend. The red-shouldered hawk had gobbled up my belted kingfisher, and stole his perch--no--I'm kidding, but he just looked too big for that little perch to be my belted kingfisher.

I have seen three different birds use that exact branch. The sun shines down at such an angle that it must give the best, clearest view of the little sunfish in the pool below. He was watching the fish swimming around.

I was less than twenty five feet from him, eye-level, and he didn't seem to mind me there. I filmed him first, then shot my stills. I took several of him looking up and around, but I am posting the one of him looking down just as he noticed a fish. Can you see that excitement in his body, in his eyes?

It was a wonderful day in the valley. I picked up my daughter from school and we went home to make meatballs, potatoes, green beans, and apple cinnamon muffins for dinner. Then we watched Wild America, a wonderful family movie, a classic.

If you get a chance to listen tomorrow at 8 AM PST, 10 AM CST, 11 EST I have the first part of a two part show on my Lisa's Walk The Talk Show, www.voiceamerica.com, my featured guest is FlashesofHOPE.org. They go around and photograph children who are terminally ill, and make their final portrait, sometimes their only portrait, and give this as a gift for the families. If you get a chance listen, or download the MP3 at your convenience.

Don't forget, I'll be on THEBIGWILD.com radio show all weekend, so check their site for stations in your area.

I'm looking forward to Day 45.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Day 43, Wednesday, 2/20/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

























Hello Eagle Friends,

I dedicate today's blog to my dear friend, Alan F. from Green Bay, Wisconsin. Thank you Alan for all you have done for us, and for giving me a heads up on the lunar eclipse tonight, an astrological wonder that is still going on as I write this.

What a day this was. I was short on time today, however, I am a believer. I believe that whoever God calls up, he equips and orders the steps for. I can't claim that the animals came two by two, no, but the animals and birds came solo, one at a time, keepin me so busy that I had my flash card almost filled in two hours.

I know when God is covering the details of my day, and today He was showering his blessings down on me. Today, he was there with me, guiding my every moment, nudging me along, and from what I could tell he was there guiding his creatures great and small. Today was the kind of day where I felt perfectly in-sync, in his timing.

It was -33 below with the wind chill and -8 air temperature when I started my day. But the skies were blue and the air so crisp
it scratched my throat, choking me at times.

I didn't find Daedee and Dancer at their nest today during my short stay. Instead, I was amused by a little downy woodpecker
who kept circling me, letting out little calls. I only have a handful of photos of him, but they were worth stalking him.

Then as I hiked out, a little blue and white nuthatch flew into view, so I did what I knew to do, I photographed him just as he
looked up at me.

As I moved on I found Judy sitting up on her nest tearing apart a white animal. Something that looked like a duck with a white breast, maybe it was a goose? Maybe a white snowshoe hare. I photographed her as she gobbled down baseball sized chunks of "wild, another white meat." Actually, the meat was red. I was just kidding.

As I traveled to nest 6 a coyote leapt onto the road, paused, then ran full speed ahead into the deep snow covering a marsh.
It looked like it was a pregnant female, assuming tha the belly bulge was pups inside her, and not from a gorging on a good feeding. When the coyote reached a thick stand of grasses she turned and looked back to me.

For a moment, in her blank stare, I tried to imagine what it must feel like to be the valley's most wanted, most hunted, and least valued. That's what I saw in this beautiful creatures stare. Then she moved on with her nose to the snowy ground and sauntered up a bluff. It is rare indeed to see a coyote out in the middle of the day.

The trumpeter swans were alone on the marsh, except for a few Canada geese, and one white-breasted duck, a duck that looked a lot like a bufflehead. There were at least a dozen crows harassing a hawk. Finally the hawk flew off and landed just below Nest 6.

I moved on and found a female hooded merganser swimming against the fast moving current of the river. She brought my memory back to the little merganser ducklings from 2005 that me and my dogs stumbled on. Ducklings that had just hatched and were running everywhere. The mother flew close to the ground drawing attention to her and away from her little ones.

My dogs were only puppies, they didn't know to follow her. My one shepherd ran and snapped up a duck in her mouth, the other dog couldn't care less, Dani, my female brought a duckling back and dropped it in my hands, wet, but unharmed. I grabbed one that was running up a bluff and I held them until the mom returned. When she came back I set the babies down and they ran off and joined their mom. I documented them for another week, until the pond dried and she moved all the babies about a mile over to another pond.

She still had all twelve last I saw her, which was doing really well for these woods and marshes.

Nests 3-5 were all empty. I only saw one large bird, which looked like a great gray owl. I have to check my photos, the bird
was so far away I couldn't tell. But it had a wing span longer than a bald eagle, a white and brown belly, and more of a charcoal
grey and white wing coloration. I thought it could be an osprey, but the colors didn't match their coloration.

Then I found little one, the cottontail sitting in his cave opening. I have to tell you he touched my heart when he started to doze off right in front of me. I think rabbits are so precious but to see a wild one sit right by you and fall to sleep in your presence is a rare gift.

When I backtracked I found the Nest 6 eagles, Richard and Linda, perched above their favorite bend on the river. One thing
I have learned from the eagles is opportunity always comes to those who check their daily posts, daily.

Tonight my husband got back from filling my gas-guzzling truck and said, "You better get out there if you are going to
film your eclipse." So I went out and Em wanted to join me.

There the eclipse was rising above my old studio across the street. I laid down a couple blankets across my hood of my truck
and lifted Em up and swaddled her in some camouflage coats, jackets and more blankets, then gave her a pillow so she could lay down and watch the eclipse.

I was several shots into the eclipse when my brother stopped by and watched the eclipse with us.

I close out today thankful for so much opportunity, my wonderful family and friends, fatherly helpers, and so many blessings coming down from the Heavens I wanted to share them with you.

I'm looking forward to Day 44.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Day 42, Tuesday, 2/19/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles


 
 
 
 
 





Hello Eagle Friends,

I dedicate today's blog to Kenny T. of N.J., who sent me a letter, an inquiry on my Winter Bugs! exhibit and book today.

Today was so cold that you would freeze to the ground if you stood too long so I kept moving.  It was minus 9 degrees below zero when I left Rochester, but warmed up to minus 8 degrees by the time I hit the valley. It was minus 27 below zero with wind chill, but those blue skies invited me outside anyways.

I brought my field dog Dale with me today. I couldn't resist how he parked himself at my back door and whined when I was leaving this morning. Dale is still very much a puppy and needs to feel like he is working at all times.

Once in the field, he has tried carrying my bags, he even carried a ten foot pole the DNR (Dept. of Natural Resources), let me borrow during the first nesting season. He drug that pole through 6-8 foot tall grasses. 

He is obedient to my commands, unlike his sister. Usually I have to tell him "Go get Dani" because of her "selective hearing"problem, she won't come on command half the time. But Dale will go over to her,  bark at her, give her a nudge.

He does keep her in line though.  That's why I like him with me. He knows the field, the noises and what should be there and who shouldn't. He alerts me to approaching trouble and will sit as quiet as a field mouse.

Last February we had some wolves surround us, but I have to say they were coyote, because I don't have photo proof. Only a short video clip of four of them howling--no yips. We crossed a territory line coming in and Dale urinated on another's urine marking.

I will find those wolves, right after big foot.  

I saw Dancer at the nest area when I was parking, but he was gone before I even left the truck. My guess he was gathering sticks for the nest. 

Dale was so preoccupied with diving in the deep snow drifts, he didn't even realize how cold was. I  didn't stay out long, only because he was with. 

He gave me a high five, one of his favorite winter games. He likes to knock the snow out of my hand and catch it. 

By my old marsh project I noticed a pair of eagles on the wing pair hunting. One dove one way, the other eagle came at the opposite angle. I watched these eagles for about ten minutes before they both paired up in a tree. 

My guess is it was an otter, or muskrat they were after. I could hear mallards alerting each other but none of the ducks left, which told me it was a fur-bearer. It couldn't have been a rabbit or they wouldn't have dove at the river.

From their tree post they both looked back at me, peering behind the tree branches. I think they believed I couldn't see them. I think the close up shot shows how private they are. 

After a few minutes the one eagle went back to hunting. It was likely Nest 3 or Nest 5 eagles.  It was Daedee or Dancer, and it wasn't Nest 2, Nest 4, or Nest 6 as those eagles were all accounted for.

Could have been a migrating pair. 

Dale and me moved up to Nest 6 and I loved listening to the two eagles calling each other.  The mate had brought in some food, and the two eagles were crying over who got to eat first.
The male left and gave the female the food. 

As she fed, tearing at what looked like a fish, the male returned to the nest area and scared up the canada geese. 

The geese all took flight to an adjoining pond, and the swans stood up looking around, but went back to preening and drinking from the pond.

I tried my super spotting scope, and I'm convinced after only two days that this piece of glass
really is not much use at all. 

As I remounted my big lens the male came back into the nest as the female ducked down and over the fish, letting out some loud vocals so her mate wouldn't steal her portion.

Further up the road I found Sweetie, the red-tailed hawk on a perch looking back at me. I couldn't find the rabbit today, the cave cottontail, and I keep hoping I am just missing him.

Two eagles were in the air locking talons by the bluffs near Nest 5, they rose 1000 feet or more and would circle each other locking for a second and by that time they'd be at the height of the bluff and do it all over again. 

On my way to Nest 3 and 4, Dale came up to the passenger seat next to me crunching on something. "Whatcha got there?"

He dropped a pack of saltine crackers in my hand, perfectly crushed by his square canines that he wore off chewing cement blocks as a pup.

Then he went in back and I kept smelling BBQ, and I thought it was dog gas, then I thought I was just thinking too much about making that BBQ chicken tonight, per Em's request. 

That's when I looked in my rear view mirror, and there was big Dale, meeting me in that little rectangular mirror. This time however, it wasn't the big, dopey expression that stole my heart. No. This time it wash his smiling right back at me with a bright yellow corn cob pithed sideways in his mouth.  I was laughing so hard I pulled over and stopped the truck.

That's when he dropped it, thinking he was getting out, and I turned just in time to see it rolling across the back seat.  Of course, by now Dale was woofing down a cheeseburger he pulled out from the magic-burger-maker I must have in the back of my truck somewhere--thank you Ford, after-which he went right back to licking out the newly, licked-cleaned, white doggie box-- our left overs from Famous Dave's BBQ. 

I guess the sausage biscuit from McDonald's this morning wasn't enough.

We left the valley and I got home early enough to pull some chicken out, that I later BBQ'd and cooked up. Dale had to sit through the wafting scent of BBQ chicken, along with the blueberry custard, red-skinned potatoes, and broccoli with six cheeses.

I thank you God for this wonderful day. Even though we have -35 and worse weather moving in tonight I don't mind. I don't even mind the new snow, or the newly posted wind chill advisories. I wouldn't even doubt they cancel schools again tomorrow. This is Minnesota after-all, and by golly, I'm proud to be a Minnesotan.

I'm looking forward to Day 43.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, February 18, 2008

Day 41, Monday, 2/18/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles


  
 
 
 

Hello Eagle Friends,

Winter is still here with the appearance it will cling to our borders at least another day.         The air temperature was only 1 above today, and with wind chill it was easily -15 to -25 below  zero. Schools that weren't closed for President's Day, were closed due to the wind advisories.

The drive down was snowy, but the plows had done a great job at keeping the roads cleared. 

When we arrived I immediately noticed an eaglet circling above our truck. I looked closer and found out it was Damain Danielle, our 2007 oldest twin. I looked everywhere for Dorothy, his sister, but didn't see her. I couldn't get my lens mounted on the camera fast enough and by the time I did, he was gone.

Then I saw Daedee, his mom, flying around just behind where he had just been. I took a few shots of her but these weren't anything but documentary shots. Then as I was turning around I caught sight of an eagle-shaped silhouette perched up at the top of tree on top of the bluff.

So I photographed him, and sure enough it was Damian. I waited for Dorothy, his sister, but she never arrived.

I still wonder if Dorothy is okay. I still question if that was positively her in that photo I took back in January. Maybe I was wrong. I kept asking, why in 41 days have I not seen them both together? I saw David and Donny, I saw Ditto each year, it only seemed natural to see Damian with Dorothy; considering how bonded they were to each other.

I questioned why I they weren't hanging around the nest area. If only I saw them close together, both in their eagle nest area, I would have the peace of knowing she survived. I have this memory written in  my heart that I can't erase. It was from the last time I saw her. That piercing stare she gave me, now I believe that stare into my soul was her way of saying good-bye. 


Em and me bundled up and hiked only a little ways out. Just enough to breath the cool air, take a few shots, and leave. My hopes for our first photos for  our "Winter Tea," another children's book we are working on was just not in the "tea leaves" for today.

Or was it? "Hey Em, I know a tunnel, a cave, a place we could go and get out of the wind and still have our party. You in?" 

She wasn't. So instead I had her unpack the holly leaf bread that I cut out with the cookie cutter before we left, and gave her the honey and said, try some holly leaf honey bread. I decided to skip the chicken noodle soup that I was going to heat up on the sterno can during our tea, but the truck was just not the place for that. We skipped the tea (apple juice) too, and the fruit cup.

I couldn't even get a crumb from her because she enjoyed that holly leaf honey bread so much that she ate all four pieces and  still wanted more. This is the same daughter that I can't even get to eat bread.  So in preparing for the Winter Tea, I learned a new trick: cut the bread with a cookie-cutter. Good-bye ugly, dry, brown crusts. Hello--honey.

We moved on and found one Nest 6 eagle perched above the half frozen pond. The swans and geese had their heads tucked under their wings. Then those noisy mallards came quacking in. 
Stirring up the entire pond. The swans lifted their heads, and opened his beak at the sudden, close approach of the mallards, and the other swan went back to resting.

However, when I looked back for the Nest 6 eagle he was gone. He must have been fishing for 
a duck again. 

No sign of eagles on any of the nests today. It's just the weather I tell myself. It will all start changing in the next week as we enter the prime courtship week. I hope I am there to document each pair. That is my prayer. I also keep praying that we don't have a spring flood. There is so much snow out there just like last year and we have our snowiest month coming right up.

No sign of little bunny, the cottontail today. Em said, "Maybe he got eaten up?" 
"No. He can squeeze into that cave pretty tightly."  

Maybe he'll be back tomorrow?

"Hey Em look up ahead, there's Sweetie, the red-tailed hawk."
"Where? I don't see him."
"Right there, 11 o'clock on that tall tree, see his silhouette?" 
"I see him now."

I pulled over and said, "Hi Sweetie." and the hawk stretched his head looking down at us. 
I took a handful of pictures. "Thanks Sweetie, see you tomorrow."

We drove off and I could see Sweetie still watching my truck as we took the bend to nest 4. 
I drove up looking for the red-shouldered hawk from last week, but maybe he has moved on. 
Instead I thought the pine trees and pine cones were something to photograph today. Tree's that were planted by the Winona County Highway Dept. over 50 years ago, finally, today get their 15 minutes of fame.

It was already 4 P.M. and it hardly seemed like an hour had passed. We slowed down by the spot we found the river otter yesterday, as Em said, "Mom, that was probably our one in a million chance yesterday, wasn't it?"

I chuckled, "Yes, but I'm going for a second chance--you in?"
"Yeah!"

We slowed, but the otter wasn't there, not today anyways.

We hit the road to home and I was just amazed at the snow drifts these winds had built.
In some places there were eight foot drifts that formed up against walls,  buried fences, and I said to Em, "The animals must be stranded in the woods. How could they walk or run through those huge drifts in the open fields? How could they outrun a predator?"

We looked up and down the fields and couldn't find even one set of deer tracks. Then as we
looked back to the sky a circular rainbow presented us "ROYGBIV" or red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.  

As I pulled up to my gallery and turned off my truck I sat thinking off all the neat things we
saw today. From Damian flying with his mother, Daedee, to the winter tea party in the truck, 
the swans, the laughter, the snow drifts we both gave each other a high five as I said, "Day 41--well done--kiddo."

Tonight I made us some sloppy joes, red-skinned potatoes, the chicken noodle soup we skipped from the Winter Tea, and some garlic cheese noodles. "These are the best sloppy joe's I've ever had," replied Dave. I handed him a plate of dessert.

"That looks great, what is it?"
"Apple pie." I smiled.
"Oh yum, I love apple pie." said Em."
"I didn't have any apples though, so I had to improvise."

They both burst into laughter, "What did you use applesauce?" Dave questioned.
"Yep."
We all laughed and ate up our "applesauce pie."


I'm looking forward to Day 42.

I'll see you on the journey--

Lisa