Category Archives: Year 9

The Fine Art of FireWood Stacking

Yesterday I was playing hooky from chores, and chasing Moose and Birds in the Pine Island State Forest. This morning I am paying the price, and practicing the fine art of firewood stacking. In two days family and friends will descend upon our small northwoods cabin. While it’s warm this morning, by Saturday morning at sunrise the mercury will be in the low 40’s! While I love those types of temperatures, others including my young grandchildren may desire a fire be lit in the wood stove (our source of heat) as pancakes are cooked and consumed for breakfast. This is 30th year that the “Same Time Next Year” has met at “Hoeg Hollow” for Labor Day Weekend.

However, as noted, I am presently stacking firewood. I just took a delivery of firewood from a friend last night. Here in northern Minnesota where wood is an important source of heat, one purchases wood by the small truckload (not by the cord). Jeff now has a automatic dumping system on his small flatbed truck. Thus, he just dumped and drove off. Now my job starts. I took this photograph on my phone 15 minutes ago. One may finally get back into the bunkhouse which is extremely important for tomorrow’s late arriving guests.

Back to birding … here are some bird photographs from yesterday morning. The NW winds have started the southern migration with a vengeance. The top migrating species that I saw were cedar waxwings and yellow-shafted flickers, but the forest was full of birds … a fact very much appreciated by both local and migrating hawks … food aplenty.

Sunrise Strutting: Two Ruffed Grouse don’t know winter is coming, and are worried about dominance! The larger grouse easily tells the small guy to “bug off”!

Let the battle begin!

Sharp-Shinned Hawk (2 to 3 minutes after sunrise)

Broad-Winged Hawk (note how the pines are loaded with cones … should attract lots of birds, particularity crossbills!

Cedar Waxwings (juvenile on the left)

Time to go back to stacking firewood …

Magnificent Bull Moose Morning!

In the Summer I like to explore forest areas which I have never visited before. In early June I introduced myself to the Pine Island State Forest near Big Falls, Minnesota. I immediately fell in love with this wilderness area. The Boreal Forest Bog habitat is fantastic. There is even a 20+ mile dirt road loop which allows me to explore its remote reaches at a very slow pace. I found bog, varying aged forest, open meadows, cattails and lots of deadhead perches for hunting perches. I can’t wait for the Fall / Winter owl season.

Regardless, shortly after sunrise this morning Mr. Moose and I surprised each other. I gave him the right of way. I watched Bullwinkle for almost five minutes.

Sax-Zim Bog Birding Bonanza

Birding had been slow over the past week. Weather conditions just had not encouraged birds north of Minnesota to start south, but did that ever change around noon yesterday when the winds rose to 30 mph out of the NW. Just like when bicycling, you realize how much easier it is to ride with a strong tailwind. Birds understand wind and how to make migration much easier … tailwind good | headwind bad. Man alive, were there birds in the Bog this morning when I arrived just after sunrise. However, I was expecting to see lots of birds due to BirdCast! This real-time tool from Cornell and other organizations monitors migration data for one’s specific location in the continental United States. Here is the map for today, Tuesday, August 30th. NE Minnesota was a migration hotspot last night.

When I entered St. Louis County in BirdCast, in which Duluth and Sax-Zim Bog (my home) are located, it yielded this data … two screenshots of what happened last night! Over 10 million birds flew through my county last night! Uff dah!


Want to learn more about BirdCast? See my post from last year on this superb birding service. I explain how to use BirdCast with detailed examples. Regardless, I saw lots and lots of birds this morning, but that fast did NOT surprise me. The biggest migrating bird species I saw were Yellow-Shafted Flickers. On the raptor front, I saw an amazing number of Northern Harriers … in fact five in just one field south of Meadowlands (Andrews Road).

A few pics from this morning …

Broad-Winged Hawk

American Kestrel

Canada Jay

Black-Billed Magpie

Merlin

Yellow-Shafted Flicker