West Marsh, late last Friday afternoon |
Common Goldeneye enjoying the newly thawed estuary |
As anticipated, we have concentrated on a lot of the "inside priorities" that I alluded to in my last post . . . now over a month ago, somehow. We have made good headway on a variety of fronts. But amazingly, until last Friday, it had been since before Christmas that I had set foot on the property. That's way too long.
Trail cameras displayed little activity other than solitary coyotes, rabbits, squirrels, cardinals, and a stray cat. Literally no deer on camera since the first of the year except for a couple does and a couple yearlings by the bunkhouse -- one time. The only other thing of note on camera was the -16 degrees Fahernheit recorded a couple times in early to mid January. That's real cold, and activity was down.
All that changed last week. Snow was replaced by rain (my nemesis during winter months); winds shifted southwest and brought temperatures into the fifties. A couple consecutive nights stayed well above freezing and the combination of all these factors not only put an end to ice fishing on Lake Erie, but even to reliable ice on the inland waters that the kids and I enjoyed several times together.
But I have to admit, the sunshine felt good on my face on Friday. I found myself breathing deeply, trying to suck in as much of that spring-like air as possible. My long underwear was too much. My plans to close out the day in the tree stand (archery closes this week) were altered by both the lack of activity on the trail cameras and the near constant flow of geese overhead (also still open through this coming weekend). I audibled from my bow to a shot gun, a camera, and a walk down the dike.
Here are a few of my favorites from the more than 250 that Roy and I took Friday afternoon:
Several hundred geese were basking in the glory of mid-winter sunshine in the millet on the West Marsh |
Somehow, these northern honkers are so much more majestic than the golf course variety we see for so much of the year |
Bird identification when they are bunched like this always reminds me of Where's Waldo |
Cool to see these mallards crashing into last year's millet; note how they are concentrating on a band of vegetation within the millet (cattail? softstem bulrush? nut sedge?) |
Don't know why, this scene just jumped out as a favorite |
We may be thawing, but winter isn't over yet; it will take a while for this bay ice to disappear -- particularly with sustained cold back in this week's forecast |