migratory birds

Red Winged Blackbirds Return

For me, the two most welcomed sounds of spring are that of the Red Winged Blackbird and the croaking of the frogs. No frogs yet, but I heard my first Red Winged Black Bird Thursday, March 22. If anyone around here has heard them sooner than that, please let me know. 

Few sounds are more welcomed than the Red Winged Black Birds "o-ka-leeee," which has multiple translations. It translates into English as "spring is here!." In Red Winged Blackbird language it means "This is my territory. Stay out!" It is helpful to…

Few sounds are more welcomed than the Red Winged Black Birds "o-ka-leeee," which has multiple translations. It translates into English as "spring is here!." In Red Winged Blackbird language it means "This is my territory. Stay out!" It is helpful to be bilingual if you live in a neighborhood with these fellows. 

We are fortunate enough to have our house perched on the edge of a wetland, the primary habitat for the Red Winged Blackbird. And anyone living in proximity to them knows that they are the most territorial of creatures. 

The males arrive before the females so they can stake out their nesting territory. The females arrive several weeks later. Her brown colors camouflage her when she sits quietly on her nest.

Female Red Winged Blackbird (photo by R Hays Cummings, Miami University)

Female Red Winged Blackbird (photo by R Hays Cummings, Miami University)

One of our more heart-pumping activities in spring is to walk by the pond on our farm here, only to have the males strafe us. It is never the female, as she stays on her nest. The male makes a distinctive hissing sound as he comes very close to one's head. I have never been touched by them, but I have often felt the wind from their flapping wings as they strafe. One of our neighbors wears a hat and carries a stick with him to fend them off. 

From this vantage point we watch the Red Winged Blackbirds defend their nesting sites around the pond in the distance. They do so by strafing unsuspecting passersby (I won't say dive-bombing because they are not dropping a payload; it's more like th…

From this vantage point we watch the Red Winged Blackbirds defend their nesting sites around the pond in the distance. They do so by strafing unsuspecting passersby (I won't say dive-bombing because they are not dropping a payload; it's more like they are firing machine guns). They are very intimidating for those of us on the receiving end. 

Sand Hill Cranes Return

One event that marks the seasons around here is the return of the Sand Hill Cranes. They've been coming to our farm for over ten years now. This year my first sighting of them was on Sunday, March 11, though Jeff, an employee, said her saw some in St. Joseph on March 6. This, so far that's the earliest sighting this year in these parts. If any blog readers in this earlier have seen them earlier, please let me know. 

This is a bit of a "Where's Waldo?" photo in that the cranes are inconspicuous. Indeed, I hope you can spot them (hint: through the triangle made by the tree branches). But that is partly the point. When one lives on an open landscape, a habit of sc…

This is a bit of a "Where's Waldo?" photo in that the cranes are inconspicuous. Indeed, I hope you can spot them (hint: through the triangle made by the tree branches). But that is partly the point. When one lives on an open landscape, a habit of scanning the horizon ensues. One never knows when we'll catch a glance of a deer, coyote (which is rare, but we hear them and so know they are there) or, in this case, a pair of Sand Hill Cranes. 

Their arrival does seem early, probably because of the snow. But, because I have not written down their arrival times in the past, I can't be sure (which is, in part, the point of this blog).

They are migratory, spending their winters in Texas and along the Gulf Coast. Their migration route takes them through Nebraska, where they gather for awhile on the Platte River. Chris Helger tells us in his blog, The Prairie Ecologist, that they arrive in Nebraska around Valentine's Day. And so a month later they arrive here. 

Sand hill Cranes on the Platte River (photo by Evan Barrentos, The Prairie Ecologist)

Sand hill Cranes on the Platte River (photo by Evan Barrentos, The Prairie Ecologist)

They nest down in a wetland pond on our property, where they are difficult to spot. After they've hatched their eggs, they like to come up on the prairie, which we usually burn in the spring. They seem to like the openness of that prairie, perhaps because it allows them to see their predators, who are after their young. They also like to eat the succulent shoots of a recently burned prairie.  

Sand Hill Cranes grazing on our prairie where it meets the wetland.

Sand Hill Cranes grazing on our prairie where it meets the wetland.

They are very large birds, with a wing span up to six feet. But their signature is their sound, which is difficult to describe. One thing that can be said is that it sounds primeval. It sounds like how I image those dinosaur birds, the Pterodactyl, would have sounded, just before they sweep down and snatch me up in their jaws. Thus when I hear them, I instinctively look to the sky. 

That they have chosen our wetland to nest and raise their young every year is truly an honor for us. They are more than guests, they are part-owners in this 73 acre farm, along with the other insects, plants, birds, and human and non-human animals who dwell here.

Just as many Minnesotans have their "summer homes" on one of Minnesota's 10,000 lakes, these Sand Hill Cranes have their "summer home" in Minnesota. I imagine them on the Gulf of Mexico in January being asked by the other cranes what they'll be doing this summer. And they say, "Oh we spend our summers on a wetland on a farm on the edge of St. Joseph. The water's clean and the fishing is good. But don't tell anyone. We don't want to see it over-developed." 

 

One of our Sand Hill Cranes crying out in the wetland on a previous snowy arrival.

One of our Sand Hill Cranes crying out in the wetland on a previous snowy arrival.