I got tired of staying at home and decided to pack my camera and see what Crex had to offer at this point in spring. Trumpeter swans were all over the place, but not nesting yet.
For some unknown reason, this swan just sprawled over the water, mostly motionless, moving just often enough to remind us both is was still alive. I did see others nearby doing the same thing, looking just as weird.Most of them looked like this, busy grooming themselves, but somehow not managing to get the dirt off their necks. Otherwise they were upended in the water, feeding off what they could find on the bottom of whichever lake they were on this soon after ice cleared.
I did see one sandhill crane, but through the windshield, which makes for a terrible photo since it's lightly tinted. There was one coot, two loons, one each in different lakes, and only one of which was calling. The Canada geese are there in small numbers, along with a smattering of several of other duck species, too far away to identify. I also saw two different dark furry heads pop up and dive again, in one lake possibly either a muskrat or otter, the other likely a beaver.
It's early yet, most vegetation being brown from last year, so the real camera action was sky and water reflections. Clouds were a mixed bag, being between systems at the moment, with the last one much further south carrying hail and spawning four twisters. Something is expected in another couple days, but different voices call for different results and disagree about where exactly they'll land.
On a positive note, this was a day when windows could be left down while driving slowly through, making it a shorter project to get a camera aimed, and the only bugs trying to enter the car was a single swarm of gnats. Flies and skeeters must not hatched yet. In places along the banks there are a few of last year's grasses still poking up, but mostly the winter has nearly flattened them.
Most of what got shot was scenery. On the south end of Phantom Lake one spot between the road and a strip of island had flat smooth water where the tiny strip of land made a windbreak, and instead of the water being covered by lily pads and white blossoms as it will be all summer, it mirrored the various forms of the branches with a perfect sky backdrop. I spent a lot of time there shooting, looking for the perfect shot. I still haven't decided but this one is close.
Later I started passing patches of pussy willows. Some were just opening, white catkins on red branches. Fully intermixed were patches of fat yellow catkins with branches starting to go yellow.Knowing they do change color through the season, I presume they are both the same kind of plant at slightly different places in their cycle.
Once I got south of Grantsburg, in a place called Gretham Flowage, the swans were mixed in with all kinds of other migrants. I even managed to get some video of the tin toy trumpet sound of that bunch of the swans recently disturbed by somebody getting too close. The visual part sucks, but....
They were the tiniest of dots in the distance, either white or black, though some were still close enough to catch with a good zoom. Other places along the road they gathered much closer. A passing couple had just spotted pelicans way back where my camera couldn't distinguish dots from other dots. I in my turn pointed out where I'd just seen a beaver head on the other side of the road and noted that the last couple of summers a great blue heron hung out at the same spot. They backed up to have a look on that side.
Before I left, however, I also noted where some dumping had occurred over the winter.
I'm not sure of the species, and didn't choose to get close enough to disturb them. I think from the length of the fur, it's likely either coyotes or wolves, both of which live in the greater area. The heads were missing, and ribs and spines were somewhat attached to the skins. These two were close together with a third a bit further away. You can see that something or things had lots of time to clean the bones. I think I'll call the Crex office tomorrow and see what they have to say about the dumping. It is area managed by them.