Merry Christmas from the Northwoods. There are a few hours between all the gleeful madness on this special day. Thankfully during this ugly Pandemic, my daughter’s family was kind enough to self-isolate earlier such that they might safely visit us for Christmas. The morning started early with four grandchildren trying to insure the household was up at 6:00 am! Thankfully everyone was awake, and even with our Christmas Blizzard, Santa find his way to Duluth following Rudolph’s red nose.
During our blizzard winds topped out at 70 mph on the open waters of Lake Superior. The temperatures dropped to make for nasty weather … wind chills of minus 25 to 30F degrees. Believe it or not, once the snow stopped I went birding on Christmas Eve (plowed roads only in the countryside). I knew that birds would be hiding from the wind while trying to experience the warmth of the sun. My major surprise was finding this female ring-necked pheasant … far out of range in northern Minnesota. The pheasant was standing on the side of a road in a location where the wind was blocked with lots of sun.
Earlier in the day we saw “Hector” who was visiting out yard. Hector is a male Pileated Woodpecker … named thusly by my eight year old granddaughter. She knows the difference between male and female Pileated Woodpeckers. Do you?! (hint: moustache and crest next to beak)
Wishing everyone the merriest and safest of Christmas.
happy holidays! thanks for sharing. we saw a male pheasant- beautifully colored- in a yard along the north shore. a few years back we had a male pheasant in our backyard for maybe 3 days. do they escape from breeding ‘farms’? he just seemed so out of place and alone
There is a hunting club on Old Vermilion Trail north of Duluth which does plant live birds. These could be escapees.
thanks, rich
And Merry Christmas to you and yours. You are a year-round gift to my birding enjoyment. Thanks so much and here’s to 2021!
Jeannette Lang
What wonderful pictures – thank you so very much
for sharing with all of us!