Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Listening Point - General Discussion :: Anyone see bird migration already?
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Bearpath9 |
LindenTree: "Bearpath9: "LindenTree: " Maybe a lttle off topic from the OP, but an interesting article on birds. " Could have been a Coopers. Little bigger than a crow, grayish color, heck of a flyer, low to the ground. I've seen it a few times, comes through the backyards, between trees and about 7-8 feet off the ground. As to my lack of birds, it occurred to me that my neighbor cut 4 trees out of his backyard. Big open spot now. |
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Bearpath9 |
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Ausable |
KarlBAndersen1: "On a drive to town this morning - I live in central Illinois - I saw a handful of geese chevrons that looked like they numbered a couple hundred birds apiece. I'm guessing over 2000 geese. And at extremely high altitude - maybe a mile? ...And they were headed north." I haven't seen geese flying north in my area (western suburb of Chicago), yet. |
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LindenTree |
Bearpath9: "LindenTree: " Maybe a lttle off topic from the OP, but an interesting article on birds. " Where do you live Bearpath, and in what kind of habitat are your feeders in? I am by no means an Ornithologist but it seems strange that a Marsh Hawk/Northern Harrier would come to your bird feeders. (Edit, I see that you said they were flying by your feeders in the back yard, were they simply flying near your feeders that may be in close proximity to open prairie or actually flying through/close to your feeders?) In my 15 years working for the US Fish and Wldlife Service I never heard of that avian behavior, but I was a knuckle dragging firefighter. I've seen Sparrow Hawks/American Kestrel's come in to harass and kill birds at feeders but they are much smaller than a Marsh Hawk. Marsh Hawk/Northern Harrier Sparrow Hawk/American Kestel |
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tumblehome |
I live in northern MN. Every fall the Junkos come through in late October for a few weeks on their way south. In the early spring I see them again for a few weeks as they head north again. This year however, I have had Junkos at my feeder this whole winter. I was looking at bird migration maps yesterday and my jaw hung open as I looked at the migration path of the Arctic tern. It migrates from the North pole to Antarctica and back again each year! Tom |
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jwartman59 |
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Diego |
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KarlBAndersen1 |
Diego: "Not geese...but I've been seeing quite a few Robin's around, which I've never seen around here (SW Iowa) this time of year before. But I don't think they ever really left. Very little snow so far and and a fairly gentle winter. I don't like it!" Many do not leave - they head for the deep woods. Being an avid deer hunter, I've seen flocks of robins in the cold dead of winter when there might be hundreds of them in a flock. I think they just head to the woods for protection and come out when things warm up. |
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KarlBAndersen1 |
And at extremely high altitude - maybe a mile? Local populations don't congregate in those numbers or at that altitude. And they were headed north. Are they telling us something? Any other oddly early spring observations? |
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LindenTree |
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Bearpath9 |
LindenTree: " Maybe a lttle off topic from the OP, but an interesting article on birds. " That could be what is going on here. While I do have a marsh hawk that flies through the backyard once in a while, it never seemed to slow the birds down. I might see one or two birds a day now, used to be I would fill the feeders twice a week in the winter. Had plenty of 'em this summer, now practically nothing. |