Picture of the Day for April 23, 2014

The Killdeers have been back for several weeks but hopefully they haven’t laid their eggs yet since a rainy/snowy stretch is coming up. A shorebird, who rarely spends time on a shore, but instead is found in pastures, fields, sandbar, driveways, gravel rooftops and golf courses. Course gravel rooftops are dangerous for the young when the adults lure the babies off the roof and at the cheese factory, we would try putting cushion material down when they started to jump off the roof.

I generally see them in the pastures and watch their broken-wing act to lead me away from their nest, which is often in a dry cow pie, but the broken-wing act doesn’t keep the cows from from stepping on the eggs so they will use a different tactic. The Killdeer will fluff itself up, display its tail over its head and then run at the cow to attempt to make the cattle change its path.

Killdeer get their name from the shrill, wailing kill-deer call they give so often and were also called the Chattering Plover and the Noisy Plover.

Noisy Killdeer

Noisy Killdeer

Picture of the Day for April 22, 2014

The frog were correct, spring is here or at least the snow has finally melted off the lawn. And it is fitting that the snow left so you can see the ‘earth’ again for Earth Day.

Earth Day began in 1970, with a federal proclamation from U.S. Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, when 20 million people across the United States (one in ten) rallied for increased protection of the environment.

Nelson recounted in an essay shortly before he died in July 2005 at 89. “The American people finally had a forum to express its concern about what was happening to the land, rivers, lakes, and air—and they did so with spectacular exuberance.”

Earth Day

Earth Day

Picture of the Day for April 21, 2014

According to the frogs, spring has finally arrived as they have been croaking up a storm. It is amazing how a tiny frog an inch long can make a noise that carries so far. I was expecting to find some big frogs making the ruckus down at the pond and it with so many singing, it was hard to find the individual noise makers, especially when I discovered most of them were little critters who double their width when they ‘croak’ and their vocal sac distends outward.

All the noise in the spring is to attract females and it is said that female frogs prefer males that produce sounds of greater intensity and lower frequency, attributes that stand out in a crowd. The rationale for this is thought to be that by demonstrating his prowess, the male shows his fitness to produce superior offspring. I heard a large range of sounds and some very high pitched ones that hurt my ears so hopefully the females will hurry up and pick their mate so the noise level goes down.

Click on the play button to hear the frog choir at the pond!

Noisy Frog

Noisy Frog

Picture of the Day for April 19, 2014

With the sun out yesterday and no new snow, the birds could land on the ground again like these Northern Flickers. Although it can climb up the trunks of trees and hammer on wood like other woodpeckers, the Northern Flicker prefers to find food on the ground. Ants are its main food, and the flicker digs in the dirt to find them. It uses its long barbed tongue to lap up the ants.

Spring is also the time when birds are finding mates and Northern Flicker rivals face off in a display sometimes called a “fencing duel,” while a prospective mate looks on. Two birds face each other, bills pointed upward, and bob their heads in time. It was interesting to watch but I wonder what the female thinks of the males “fencing duel”.

Fencing Duel

Fencing Duel

Picture of the Day for April 18, 2014

Mother Nature has been rather cruel to Northern Wisconsin this spring since when there is even a hint of spring arriving, more than a foot of new snow blankets the ground again. And Duluth, MN has set the fifth snowiest winter and with more snow predicted tonight, they might make number four.

I don’t know if spring will ever come before winter starts again and even my ducks must have headed south again as they didn’t like the snow.

Will Spring Come

Will Spring Come

 

Winter’s Strong Grip

Winter's Strong Grip

Picture of the Day for April 17, 2014

I am having trouble finding any color this spring as there are no flowers blooming yet, even if I could find them under the snow. About the only color I can find are some leaves from last year which are under the water in the pond. At least the melting snow has filled the pond with clear water so you can see deep into the pond to where the leaf was resting on last year’s cattail leaves.

The refilled pond also had visitors the other day as a pair of mallards and a pair of wood ducks were enjoying a swim but I didn’t try to get pictures of them as I wanted the wood ducks to nest in the duck house.

Color Under the Water

Color Under the Water

Picture of the Day for April 16, 2014

My niece had an early wake up call when one of her cows was calving this morning. And calving wasn’t late enough this year since the ground is white again with a fresh new layer of snow and so I didn’t even walk to the barn in the cold weather to take a picture of the new calf. The calves two years were enjoying green grass and dandelions in April but not this year. And no warm sunshine to take a nap outside either.

Sleepy Time Calf

Sleepy Time Calf

Picture of the Day for April 15, 2014

April 15th is dreaded by some since today individual income taxes are due in the United States and April 15th has had other tragic events like the Boston Marathon bombing, the sinking of the RMS Titanic and Abraham Lincoln dies from an assassin’s bullet. And a ‘blood moon’ seemed rather eerie in the early morning hours especially when the moon totally disappeared when I was trying to take pictures of the eclipse. The moon disappeared and the owls stopped hooting so it looked like the world was ending, at least when a lone cloud covered the moon from sight for a few minutes.

The first lunar eclipse of the tetrad (a series of four consecutive total eclipses occurring at approximately six month intervals) today was when Mars was also the closest to Earth in years. The 21st century will see frequent tetrads but during the three hundred period between 1600 to 1900 there was no tetrads so Abraham Lincoln never got a chance to witness a lunar tetrad.

The red of the ‘blood’ moon actually comes from the Earth’s circumference, which is a fiery ring of sunsets and sunrises around the world (except for where some of us were standing out in the night in below freezing temperatures taking pictures). The red light entering the atmosphere is bent towards the Earth’s surface and it is bent again when it exists the other side and the double bending beams reddish light into the heart of Earth’s shadow and the coppery glow transforms the moon into a great red orb or bloody moon.

Blood Moon

Blood Moon

Picture of the Day for April 14, 2014

The Two Harbors Light is the oldest operating lighthouse in the US state of Minnesota. Overlooking Lake Superior’s Agate Bay, the lighthouse is located in Two Harbors, Minnesota. The lighthouse construction was completed in 1892 and the first lighting of the Two Harbors light was on April 14, 1892.

The tower is made of red brick and the head keeper’s residence is attached, it towers 78 feet from the lake level to the top with an octagonal lantern room originally equipped with a fixed, fourth-order Fresnel lens.

The Keeper’s Quarters of the Lighthouse have been restored to the early 20th century era which the Lake County Historical Society operates as a bed and breakfast.

Two Harbors Lighthouse

Two Harbors Lighthouse