Showing posts with label water fowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water fowl. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

2 Mile Walk


Found a trail along the Little Muddy River. It's a mile from start to finish, making it a two mile round trip. An easy walk when dry. Not so easy during high water. A good walk none the less.

Wild Chicory
Common chicory(Cichorium intybus)
Mid-July and the wild Chicory is in bloom. Chicory is used for salads, coffee and greens. It's  a non- native species  from Europa.






Double-crested Cormorants

The dead Cottonwood tree that is used by the cormorants as a preening tree is the half way point of the walk.  Turn around here for a short one mile walk.

Cormorants drying feathers in dead Cottonwood tree.
 Double-crested Cormorants(Phalacrocorax auritus) sunning.




Painted Turtle

I encountered a couple Painted Turtles taking a stroll in the meadow, a ways from the water. Why ? Maybe its turtle making turtle season.
Painted Turtle (Chrysemys picta)


Wood Ducks!

Common to the river and marsh are Wood Ducks(Aix sponsa) A perching duck that nests in tree hollows. A day after hatching the baby ducks climb to the opening and jump to the ground, sometimes from a height of more than 100 feet. Once the ducklings are on the ground, mama duck leads them to water. 
Male and female Wood Ducks(Aix sponsa)

July is the time for Eclipse. The adult ducks shed and regrown their feathers and until the flight feathers grow back the ducks can not fly.
Drake Wood duck in eclipse.

Male and female ducks look similar because the brightly colored feathers of the males are dropped and the males are brown and gray like the females.
Wood Ducks

The white eye patch will help identify the female Wood Duck.
Female Wood Ducks

A cattail marsh surrounded by woods is the preferred habitat of the Wood Duck.
Cattail Marsh

Well, this is the 1 mile point. Now I turn around and finish the 2 mile walk.  
(If you would like to see enlargements, just click on photos.)

Friday, August 27, 2010

Nature Studies Cover



 

 Be the first to buy the 20 page 

or

from GarnieM.wordpress.com

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

No Place Like the Bayou




















A couple/3 weeks ago, after Ranger Dangers yearly vet visit, we headed down to
Lasalle Fish and Wildlife Area for a walk and a swim in the Bayou. If we're lucky there will be a few migrating waterfowl using the bayous, resting before they continue their flight to Canada and all points north, east and west.

Ranger's on the lead, the cameras are packed, and we're ready to hit the dirt running. Before I go any further, I must warn you that this time of year, March thru May is Turkey season. Hunters are in the woods hoping to bag Big Tom Gobbler. So before you start stomping around at a Fish an Wildlife Area, go to the Headquarters and ask about their restrictions and rules at that property. If there are turkey hunters in the woods, I would not enter. Give the hunters the woods, the seasons only about a month in most states.


Three Little Turtles
















Three little turtles,
in the afternoon sun,
this is their message.
Don't worry ,
everything is going to be all right.

Sunning on a log are three Painted Turtles (Chrysemys picta) . These pics are taken mid to late April, still fairly cold. Low temps at night may fall to the mid 20's, day time highs may reach 50 degrees. But as the sun rises higher in the sky each day, the sunrays warm the plants, logs and mud in and under the cold water. Turtles being cold-blooded, spend the winter hibernating in leaves and mud under the water so they don't freeze. The warm sunlight wakes the turtles from their sleep. On a sunny day the turtles will congregate on a toasty log, soaking up the spring sunshine.


Big Old Tom Gobbler




















What on earth is this! This is what the hunters are after, a 20 lb Tom turkey. The Eastern Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) are a native bird, but the turkeys we see now were reintroduced to most of their original range because the original turkey population was exterminated from most of the Eastern United States.

This bird has a "beard" consisting of modified feathers that stick out from the breast. His beard is about 9 inches (230 mm) in length, about average. I know, hard to see this turkey in the straw, well click on the picture and you'll see an enlargement. Maybe you can make out the beard, it hangs from the front of his breast.


Can a 20 lb Turkey Really Fly?
















You betcha! Here's a couple pictures that demonstrate that a Wild Turkey is a strong flier.
If they see you coming they'll hold still and be virtually invisible,
get to close they will flush(jump up into the air) and fly away at full speed. It will scare the bejebees out of you!


















Seeing a large flock of Wild Turkeys flying through a dense oak woods is an amazing sight.

The Baker Unit, Lasalle Fish & Wildlife Area



















We're facing north, looking over a flooded corn field. This is a part of the Baker Unit. Corn will be planted at this site (if the ground ever dries). The corn will provide food and cover for the migrating waterfowl next fall and winter. In this unit there are three duck hunting blinds. Hunter get up in the middle of the night, just to stand in line, way before daylight. Hoping to be lucky enough to get the opportunity to duck hunt the Baker Unit.