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| Female Merganser stretching after mating |
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| Merganser couple looking pleased with themselves |
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| Mr. Bufflehead and the Mrs. below |
Lazy start this morning as temps dipped to about 29 last night. It has warmed up fairly nicely this afternoon but temps are about 12 deg cooler than yesterday but still a beautiful day for the end of January. I was getting things together to go out for a bit this morning when I heard the hawks calling, Following was the alarm honking of the geese on the pond and the fussing of birds and squirrels.
I went on to the park after these shots where I had an outstanding birding morning. Nothing really out of the ordinary but lots of activity and some pretty decent duck shots. There were Buffleheads, Mergansers, Grebes, Ringed- Necks, Mallards and the always Canada Geese out this morning.
Back in October, the beavers began increasing the size of a small dam they had across a creek. Steadily since then, the dam has increased in length as water routed around and they attempt to stop the flow. By November, you could begin seeing a significant impact on the marsh area. Previously dry areas were now flooded and more waterfowl were beginning to use the area.
I went back and looked at shots from Oct, Nov and compared to today. Almost the entire back marsh is now flooded and work continues on the dam. The difference was quite amazing to see. The damming is changing the entire ecology of what was a marsh area. The destructive nature of beavers is beginning to show with the loss of trees. The small ones were the first to go but they have moved on to more impressive tree sizes. I saw this one and had to wonder did the beaver just decide to call it quits on this tree? Many more trees are being girded which I am sure will lead to their demise.
There were probably 10 mallards and a dozen Canada Geese that had taken up residence in the now flooded marsh. Far back I could also see the Great Blue Heron wading.
Update on progress of merganser decoy. Going very slowly but I am trying to be careful. One thing for sure, you can easily take wood off, you can't put it back on. Months to go...unknown. These are the photos from after class #3 and 4.
Monday night I started working on the head a bit. Getting a little more duckish looking after each class.
It has been another dreary day with a chill that cuts through to the bone. My only journey out was to pick up a couple of ingredients to make some suet cakes and a new thistle sock. The finches swarmed in early and finished off what was left of one and I felt very bad as they would fly to the empty searching.
The last suet cakes I made I chopped some cranberries and blueberries very fine and mixed with some applesauce that I added to the mixture. They all definitely like it. Visitors on the suet feeder today have been Carolina Wrens, Bluebirds, Cardinals, Chickadees, Titmice, Downy WPs, B. Thrasher, WT Sparrows, Juncos, finches (both gold and house), 1 male Purple Finch, 1 Brown Header and a Red-Bellied Woodpecker. It has definitely been a hotspot of activity.
Long ago I gave up on growing grass in the highly shaded back yard and keep it natural. No grass to cut but leaf mulching is required. I usually wait until closer to spring when the sight of a copperhead sends me running for the mower but with the warmer winter, went ahead and mulched early.
A cold front that moved through Thursday night brought howling winds and cold temperatures. Early in the morning I was awakened by the sound of a crash on the roof. Fortunately, no real damage from the rather large limb.
After three weeks off, then back to work for two weeks straight including weekend, the adjustment has been....to put it nicely, difficult. This past Saturday was beautiful and it killed my soul to not be out.
Cold weather arrived with a front that moved through Monday. It has been hard to take after above average warmth up until then. Cold temps finally killed the summer annuals that had flourished up until now.
Just before dark tonight, I looked out the kitchen window and could see the deer wandering behind the fence. They have been arriving before dark since the cold. I took a large bag of acorns out of the freezer in addition to the scoop of corn/deer chow mix I spread out.
All the creatures were looking for food tonight. Several raccoons scurried about trying to get to the deer chow and then the fox came by. I am always amazed when I see the deer, raccoon, and fox all together at the same time, same place, and manage to get along with each other.

Tomorrow it is back to work after three weeks of vacation. The time has gone by in the blink of an eye. If only time working went that quickly. While I am extremely thankful for a job, it is with much dread that I have to go back to the office we have knicknamed "The Tomb". It could be a primer on poor design for every architectual and design student on what NOT to do. No natural light (then battleship gray furniture to boot), pitifully poor layout, loud and absolutely no privacy what so ever. All combine to create an extremely poor work environment. From about 0530 to 0730 is your only opportunity to get any productive work done. Yes, the thought of returning brings a nervousness rolling back in like a thunder storm.
I spent some time this morning doing searches on photo sharing sites looking at photos and downloaded quite a few to create my storyboard to help in the anatomical study of the duck. I think it is great that so many are willing to share their pics and allow them to be downloaded. I am sure it will be a couple of weeks before we start carving. I believe you start at the very beginning of squaring up the lumber, gluing up, rough cutting out then finally start carving.