Then the real action started....
Out from the blue and coming in from the west, was the Merlin-still chasing the crow! The hapless crow maneuvered downward into a nearby half bare tree as the Merlin overshot its strike and landed in a tree to the north. Far to distant and well covered for a decent shot. Not for long.... The pint sized falcon fired out from its roost at the crow, flushing it out of the tree, making a loop in the process. The chase was on again! Zooming towards me, I literary had a bird's eye view of this life and death struggle. The action was so fast paced that I couldn't even get my camera ready. "Get 'em, get' em, GET 'EM !" I screamed, silently cheering for the raptor. I was amazed how diligent and small the Merlin was compared to the crow. It was about half the size of its prey! Must be hungry... The crow swerved to right and landed on a tree behind me while the Merlin landed in another nearby tree. This was an opportunity for a picture. I made off with three quick snaps before the chase resumed. With lightning speed over my head, the crow dipped down into another tree and Merlin overshot again! This time, it just flew off to the north and headed towards the lighthouse.
Merlin Shoop Park Racine WI 10 24 2012 |
It's not the greatest picture I had ever taken, yet I feel lucky and honored to even get this shot. The field of opportunity was quite small and I had to utilize whatever resources I had for a pic. My Sony DSC-H2 camera isn't the the most wildlife friendly one around. No high speed shutter, no interchangeable zoom lens and focusing it can be a pain. Yet, I've gotten some great pics off it. It's the opportunity to be out there and being able take these pics that drive me. It's just like hunting, except I'm bringing home a picture instead of a carcass.
Just how did I get started with this birding anyways?
Growing up, my grandparents used to have this cottage along a lake in the boondocks of Northern Wisconsin. A big platform bird feeder was perched about six feet tall outside our picture window in the kitchen. A potpourri of birds came to the feeder-Blue Jays, White Breasted Nuthatches, Black Capped Chickadees, Dark Eyed Juncos, Downy Woodpeckers, House Finches, Indigo Buntings, Morning Doves and occasionally Northern Cardinals. If we were real lucky, Evening Grosbeaks.In the lake there would be Mallards, Common Loons, Great Blue Herons. Sometimes an Osprey or a Bald Eagle would snatch a fish from the blue waters. I'd sit there for hours with a field guide and stare... That is, till my mother kicked me out into the woods.
In the woods was another paradise. I remember family excursions in our '64 International Truck. The engine would be ticking away through the muddy fire lanes. 4 x 4 snow tires dug deep in the ground, insuring that we would never get stuck. We would shine a spotlight on an American Woodcock, Ruffed Grouse, Snowshoe Hare, Ermine or a White Tailed Deer that happened on our path. If we were lucky a bear.
Canoeing on the creeks and bogs nearby were quite an experience. Painted Turtles basking in the sun on the logs. Cedar Waxwings and Belted Kingfishers perched on trees, looking out for their prospective preys. Beaver slapping their tails on the water alerting others on the oncoming danger. Paradise.
Then there were family vacations to the national parks out west....Yellowstone, Glacier, the Badlands, Crater Lake, Rocky Mountain, the Grand Tetons and more... Roosevelt Elk, Pronghorn Antelope, Black Tailed Tailed Prairie Dogs, Mountain Goat, Moose, Pikas, Yellow Bellied Marmots, Western Tanagers, Clark's Nutcrackers, Mule Deer and a slew of other creatures we saw... This is about time I started my wildlife photography...on a Vivitar Pocket Camera.
Yellow Bellied Marmot Rocky Mountain National Park Colorado 1983 |
It was a start of a new hobby, something Tender Heart and I could do together as loving couple. As the summer approached, our interest bloomed as we swapped the camera back and forth, now taking pictures of wildflowers along with the wildlife. A team we became... We began to "discover" hot spots, hitting the woods, trails and beaches of Samuel Meyers Park, Shoop Park, Smolenski Park, Nicholson Wildlife Refuge and Trout Ponds Conservatory. We even spread our wings towards Richard Bong State Recreational Area, Chiwaukee Prairie Nature Reserve and to the crown jewel of Wisconsin, Horicon National Wildlife Refuge. Along the way, we managed to identify (as of this posting) 126 species of birds (Photographed 105 of them, including an unconfirmed sighting of the endangered Whooping Crane) and 120 species of wildflowers and plants. That's a lot! And we have just begun....
Winter is coming around real soon. Flowers are shriveling up and drying, The birds are migrating southward. Soon the lakes will ice up and the snow will fall. Yet, it doesn't mean that we'll be hanging up the camera. It just means that we will be preparing for spring and rest of the 2013 season. We will be spreading our wings even further.....Never where the trail will leads us....
Eastern Bluebird Petrifying Springs Kenosha WI 4 29 2012 |
Tree Swallow Trout Ponds Conservatory Caledonia WI 528 2012 |
Great Egret Smolenski Park Mt Pleasant WI 8 25 2012 |
Red Tailed Hawk Hwy 47 between Keshena and Shawano WI 7 1 2012 |
Red Knot Shoop Park Racine WI 5 26 2012 |
7 comments:
What a great story along with your pictures. Thanks Drew and THB for sharing.
Wonderful, Wonderful, Wonderful.
About the crow:
Crows are one of the most intelligent and resourceful of birds.
Rarely is the speed of any predator bird sufficient to overcome the ever vigilant and shrewd crow.
That is true, legal. Crows are known to mob predatory birds like hawks, eagles and owls. Such behavior can be dangerous for the crows, for a raptor can easily kill its instigator, that is, if it gets a hold if it. Most of the time, the raptor just flies off somewhere else. One theory in this Merlin case was and is one pissed off Merlin whom had enough of the crows that were around..
Thanks Toad!
Beautiful pictures and prose. Thank you, drew.
Very nice, drew. Thanks for sharing with us. I've yet to see some of those birds in the wild.
KK, you'll be surprised in what you can find around here. All is needed is a pair of binoculars and a field guide.
The only "rare" bird that is mentioned here is the Red Knot. I stumbled upon three of these guys in a flock about 15 Ruddy Turnstones (another "rare" visitor). Red Knots and Ruddy Turnstones are commonly found on the Western and Eastern seaboards, along with Iceland and the British Isles. It seems that this particular flock may have made a wrong turn somewhere and ended up here for a couple of days. Talk about luck!
For more data on the Red Knot and Ruddy Turnstone, click here on eBird. It an excellent site for information on bird sightings.
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