May the 4th be with you. Of course, that was yesterday, but it was a busy day, starting with checking on the possible need for a building permit for some specific repairs (no), waving at local union strikers, getting my super-short haircut before upcoming surgery when I won't be messing with it for a few weeks, and getting my spring oil change. OK, clowns, the car's oil change!
In the middle of all that I took a friend up to Crex to check out which critters had returned, what changes had been made since last time, and just taking a few hours to relax. I drove, she made lunch: chicken salad on a bun, swapping some kind of tater topper for boring mayo. Yummy!
Our first stop, as always, was the information center. It's always good to talk with staff and find out what's unique this day, as well as hit the restrooms before a couple hours without any access to them. Photos were different from last month's visit, of course, with different cloud cover, high winds most of this visit, roadsides starting to sprout the tall grasses soon to lower visibility of water birds, and a very recent controlled burn of the oaks sprouting up so the needed prairie/marsh habitat could be maintained. It needs to be stable for certain birds, including my favorites sandhills, among others, and an increasingly rare butterfly, the Karner blue. (No. I've never seen one.)
If the background isn't unusual enough to make the photo, sometimes just the water is.
Somehow I never use the energy to follow the path in the first photo as far as it goes. I save it for driving and shooting as much of the rest of the 30,000 acres as I can, and by the time I near the end I'm both out of energy and time for the day. Or maybe just hungry and needing to pee? TMI. This view is always different, from the vegetation to the water, and I try to catch as much variety as I can before the block walk back to the car.
Weather can make a ho hum photo different, if one takes a second to look when weather doesn't seem to even be a factor, even if it includes a very boringly common pair of birds as the assumed subject, Canada geese. It's not the sky reflections that give this water its color. It's the fact that this little pond has been so churned up by the wind that the water is all a creamy orange tint, visibly impenetrable with the mud churned up. Ripples try to reflect sky, at least for the camera, while the naked eyes just catch the muddiness. The color lines up on either side of the wave ridge as each has different sky it faces.Out on dry land, in the neighborhood of Dikes 4 and 5, there were clumps of sandhills hunting for whatever they can eat, which, being omnivorous, is practically everything. Most are too far from the car for my zoom, but we counted perhaps 40 in this general location, after having already passed pairs here and there and widely scattered clumps. Photos with a better bird count swap birds for dots: pointless pictures. You will notice browns and greys in their coloration, an indication of how much of which color dirt they had preened through their feathers to rid themselves of hungry mini hitchhikers before settling on a nest. Those we that did see nesting were so brown that one was actually mistaken for a deer in tall grass with her fawn, until its head poked up from the grasses. Yes, they are that big.
I did mention locations in the refuge by the number of a dike. The water levels are managed over the years by opening and closing the dikes at junctions with streams. Occasionally an entire area is allowed to drain almost completely, while other places are flooded as much as the weather and a pumping system allow. I asked once in my early visits why that happened. Phantom Lake that year was mostly mud, with sandhills strolling around where lake had been. Not that I minded the sandhills, but usually it's full of geese, swans, loons, ducks, and so forth. Even occasional strays arrive for a bit, like an ibis one year, while everybody with a tripod supporting a huge lens clogs all the shore space around for unrepeatable shots. That dry summer there were eagles, herons, and ospreys strolling through the mud or perched on branches formerly underwater. I was told the purpose was basically a change of habitat, mimicking natural processes when nature doesn't cooperate. Apparently the same old same old for too many years isn't healthy enough for the variety of plants and critters needed in the long term.
That's why this sight surprised but didn't shock me when I saw it. In early April it was a well flooded lake with beavers moving in. Most of the area trumpeter swans have collected there the last couple years, enough off the beaten path though managed by Crex, that numbers were way down in the usual locations. As such a big draw, especially with cygnets in tow, I expect numbers of visitors were down, meaning donations were also down. This is the view yesterday morning from Grettum Dike Road, a few miles south of Grantsburg, and west of the highway. Strips of water remain, mud flats stick up here and there. Most years it's been solid blue water plus rushes from next to the dike road to the trees way in the background, with the swans way back against the trees, little white dots on the landscape, so far away that nothing entices photographers to show up. The two beaver lodges I saw last month were missing. Water was still flowing rapidly out of the lake to the point where a usual blue heron hangout across the road and lower, a stub of land where a gentle stream curved where it could stand eying passing small fish for its next meal, was flooded and washing out. No heron in sight. That was a dependable photo op. I'll have to be checking back later. I've seen deer watering there as well.You might think those relatively close large white birds are the swans still choosing to be here and be closer to the road. It may be hard to tell the shape is wrong, the bellies too thin, the necks too short. As more birds flew over, some settling in, some passing, I didn't manage to get much of a decent shot of the several I tried for. Once cropped it was easier to know what they were, even more so when I had to turn the car around a bit down the road where a nicely filled pond exploded around me in startled birds, white, black, and pinks, chaotically filling and setting off the clear blue of the sky to the northwest at that moment. Actively driving through that turn, I had no chance to capture them, a major disappointment. I memorized in my mind the image missed forever, grieving the lost chance as I drove on.
I will be heading back to try to locate breeding swans, however. Maybe next month when I'm legal to drive again and Steve is more independent after his surgery. Ever notice how things flip after retirement? Before, you have bosses who pay you for things needing to get done. Afterwards, we pay the docs for things needing to get done.
