Frozen River

Morning hike – a little unsure of the new formed ice

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Hidden beauty, frozen in time

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Memories of a summer long gone

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The inner space of a frozen river

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Elaborate art installations litter the river walk

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 Unexpected gifts of life

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Posted in Nature Notes, Nature Poetry, Photography/Art, Winter | 8 Comments

Adaptations of Mammals

Cual es una adaptación
A-dap-ta-ción
Un cuerpo
de un animal
Cambia
Para ayudar
a sobrevivir
En su entorno
El zorro
puede oler bien
Para encontrar su presa
(sniff)
El tejón
cavan agujeros
Con su garras grandes
El murciélago
puede volar
Para agarrar los mosquitos
Eso son adaptaciónes.
A-dap-ta-ción

 

 

 

What’s an adaptation?
A – dap – ta – tion
An animal’s body
Changes
To help it survive
In its environment
A muskrat swims in a pond
with its webbed feet
A bat flies in the sky
To catch mosquitoes
A badger digs in the ground
with its sharp claws
Those are adaptations!
A-dapt-a-tion

Posted in Mammals | Leave a comment

Our Little Red Dragonfly

My sister, Carol Izad, submitted this story about her relationship with a little red dragonfly.

Screen Shot 2013-11-06 at 4.57.48 PMDuring the summer months I have my two granddaughters for the day once a week. One of the activities we do together is swimming; usually for a couple of hours. They like to play with water guns; shooting streams of water at the waterfall that flows from the Jacuzzi into the pool. The first week of June while they were shooting their water guns a little red dragonfly showed up and danced around the water that came out of their guns. “Did you see that?” we all shout with delight. He continued to play with the girls the rest of the afternoon. We were amazed how he entered our world of play and seemed to

Our art project honoring the red dragonfly

Our art project honoring the red dragonfly

have as good a time as we did. How can this be? Week after week all through the summer he showed up when ever we were in the pool. He dance and dove around our heads and loved it most when the girls would shoot their water guns. Sometimes he would bring a friend… not for a drive by but to play. Who would believe?

Posted in Photography/Art, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Las Rocas Glaciales de Minnesota

Bienvenidos a nuestro laboratorio de las rocas glaciales. Minnesota tiene una rica historia geológica. Por eso vamos a estudiarla.
Que es un geólogo?
Un geólogo estudia las rocas y la historia de nuestra planeta.


La mayoría de las rocas estudiamos hoy, son de esta área.
Encuentre la roca que está mostrado abajo. Diga un hecho sobre esta roca. Porque está importante?

sciencebuzz.org

Morton es una pequeña ciudad, a una hora al oeste de aquí, donde hay algunas de las rocas más antiguas de la tierra, las cuales se formaron hace más 3 mil millones de años.

world-visits.blogspot.com

world-visits.blogspot.com

Ahora, vamos a avanzar en el tiempo. Hace mil millones de años habían volcanes en la costa norte del lago Superior. Encuentre una roca de esa época y diga un hecho.

serc.carleton.edu

Hoy en día, se pueden ver las rocas de lava en la costa.

fossilsandotherlivingthings.blogspot.com

fossilsandotherlivingthings.blogspot.com

Ahora vamos a avanzar en el tiempo,

Hace más de cuatrocientos millones de años un gran mar se formó dentro de la mayor parte de América del Norte, y cubrió una gran parte de lo que hoy es Minnesota.  Encuentre una roca de esa época y diga un hecho.

ocean.si.edu

Squid – ocean.si.edu

 

Hoy en día, se pueden encontrar fósiles de las criaturas que vivieron durante ese tiempo.

http://ledgardjespsonarchaeologyrebrand.blogspot.com

Trilobite – http://ledgardjespsonarchaeologyrebrand.blogspot.com

cosmographicresearch.org

La época glacial fue hace solamente quince mil años. Los glaciares tenían más de una media milla de altura, y estos se movían solo unos pocos metros por año, moliendo la tierra y trayendo rocas con ellos. La mayoría de las rocas que estudiaremos hoy, estaban en glaciares.

commons.wikimedia.org

commons.wikimedia.org

jesse.usra.edu

jesse.usra.edu

Cuando los glaciares se derritieron, formaron colinas, también formaron lagos en nuestra área incluyendo el lago Minnetonka, Lago Lotus, Lago Shady Oak y diez mil otros lagos.

kruger.photoshelter.com

kruger.photoshelter.com

basementgeographer.com

basementgeographer.com

¿Has visto enormes rocas en tu barrio? Esas rocas estaban en la parte superior del glaciar y nunca fueron molidas en el hielo del glaciar. En inglés se llaman “glacial erratics”.

www.mymagicelves.com

www.mymagicelves.com

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Poetry Haiku

Haiku
Is a way of seeing the world.
Each haiku can capture a moment of an experience
An instant when the ordinary
Suddenly reveals its inner beauty.

Each poem is 3 lines
Line 1: 5 syllables
Line 2: 7 Syllables
Line 3: 5 Syllables

Try to follow these guidelines –
BUT it is better to write a haiku from your HEART
than it is to have a perfect 5-7-5

 

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Some hands caring for nature
Others destroying

 

CathyVanderBerg     SnowyOwl

 

Photo by Steve Barnier

Eagles patrol the creek

Wolf spider
Lorie Regenold

Wolf spider
Lorie Regenold

 

 

Posted in Connecting to Nature, Nature Poetry | Leave a comment

Poetry-Cinquain

Cinquain

Line 1 One word that names an idea, a feeling  a thing

Line 2  Two words that describe it ( what it looks like or feels like)

Line 3  Three words which tell what it is doing, has done or will do

Line 4   Four words telling how you feel about it. An observation of it

Line 5 One word which sums it all up; a synonym  to the title;

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Fungus
Spongy Soft
Death and Life
Surprised to See Beauty
Decomposition

monarchMigrationMonarchs
Orange and Black
Preparing for Migration
Magical wonder in Flight
Beauty

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Posted in Nature Poetry, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Poetry Day 1 – Metaphor, Simile, and Personification

Metaphorfigurativelanguagetime.weebly.com

Metaphorfigurativelanguagetime.weebly.com

 

similewww.glogster.com

 

Personificationmskyriazis.weebly.com

 

bass poetry

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Listening, looking, and wondering
Blades of tall grass reach for my foot
And a gentle breeze ruffles by hair
My spirit soars like the hawk gliding overhead
A fern beckons me, like nature’s hand
And bird’s nest called me into the woods
The falling fog uplifts
A wonder to behold
My life and perspective is forever changed
.
Jackson Risser

 

Posted in Nature Poetry | Leave a comment

Flood Rescue – A Guardian’s Tale

                  Article by Linnea Palmstrom

In May 2013, a wild turkey made her nest near Nine Mile Creek.
In May 2013, a wild turkey made her nest near Nine Mile Creek.

I like to take frequent walks around Nine Mile Creek by Edina High School. In early May, I saw a turkey mother sitting on her nest. On May 17-18 a big storm hit and the whole area was flooded. After the storm, I checked on the nest and realized that the mother had disappeared and the eggs were floating in the creek water. I found eleven eggs and carried them home. The Wildlife Rehabilitation Center will not hatch eggs so I put them in my bearded dragon’s cage to keep them warm.  Information I found on the internet said to keep them at 99 degrees F and to turn them at least three times a day to keep the developing poult from sticking to the egg shell. A week later, I put them in an incubator I bought at Mills Fleet Farm.  Turkey eggs are supposed to take about 28 days to hatch.  In the beginning of June, I thought I saw the eggs moving a bit. I started to hear some peeping noises, too.

On June 4, the eggs hatched—all on the same day! Out of the eleven eggs, only one failed to hatch. However, nine of the turkey poults were unable to walk or even stand up properly. With a little research on the internet, I discovered they had spraddle leg, a condition in poultry that occurs when an egg experiences extremes in incubation temperature, such as floating in cold creek water. With this condition, a newly hatched bird’s legs splay outward and it can’t hold them together to be able to stand up.  If it isn’t treated in the first few days after hatching, the bird will never be able to walk. One way to cure this condition is by putting hobbles on its legs so that they don’t splay out. The legs then develop in the proper position and the bandage supports them so the bird can stand up and walk. These hobbles can be made out of Band-Aids and are easy to put on.  Within five minutes after putting the hobbles on, the poults were standing up and very active.  They enjoyed eating the mealworms and dandelion greens that I offered them. The hobbles needed to be kept on for 4-14 days.

The day after the turkeys hatched, I brought them to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center so that they could have the best care. I checked up on them and found out that half of them were put to sleep because of the severity of their spraddle leg, but the other half were very healthy and growing quickly. Those five poults were released in a nature preserve in Inver Grove Heights so that they could join the wild turkeys there.

When Nine Mile Creek flooded, the turkey nest was a foot deep in water and the mother turkey had abandoned it.  In this photo, I was checking the nest site to see if I had missed any turkey eggs.
When Nine Mile Creek flooded, the turkey nest was a foot deep in water and the mother turkey had abandoned it. In this photo, I was checking the nest site to see if I had missed any turkey eggs.
My bearded dragon seemed quite proud of the turkey eggs when they were put in her cage.
My bearded dragon seemed quite proud of the turkey eggs when they were put in her cage.
A turkey poult seconds after hatching.
A turkey poult seconds after hatching.
When the poults dried off after hatching, they were fluffy and beautiful.  This was the only one that did not have spraddle leg.
When the poults dried off after hatching, they were fluffy and beautiful. This was the only one that did not have spraddle leg.
Here the turkey poults are getting ready to go to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center.  The hobbles made out of Band-Aids can be seen on some of them.
Here the turkey poults are getting ready to go to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center. The hobbles made out of Band-Aids can be seen on some of them.
Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments

The View From My Deck – A Photographic Essay

 A Special Interest Article by Paul Gagner

I like to be outside…. a lot. Photography is my way of connecting to the wonder and beauty of nature.  The majority of these photos were taken from my deck. Step onto the deck, take four steps and shoot….

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Red Polls

They are handsome fellows with their red caps. The males are feeding on niger seed and the females are feeding on sunflower pieces. They always seem so peaceful and not quite as edgy as Goldfinches and they do not mind being photographed. I have had as many as thirty at one time !

Red Bellied Woodpecker

Red Bellied Woodpecker

 

Red Bellied Woodpeckers are skittish and wary when feeding. Beautiful ladder marks and a fiery orange cap! He is eating a custom mix, but is selecting the sunflower hearts and peanuts from the mix. Red bellied woodpeckers fly in a cool staccato flight pattern (a characteristic trait of woodpeckers). I see a lot of these all year round.

 

 

 

Pileated Woodpeckers

Pileated Woodpeckers

Pileated woodpeckers:  I thought that this might be a parent teaching a youth to forage. More than likely they are a pair?

Anyway , they had a grand time playing hide and seek around the base of the oak. They would circle the tree upward and then move to another tree. We have 12 oaks in the back yard, so no shortage of play and forage area for the birds. The Pileated, like a number of other birds, seem to  pick out another bird’s stash under the bark from time to time (perhaps, they stashed it themselves). With the bright red crest and white hood they become striking, majestic and appear to be somewhat prehistoric.

Wood Duck

Wood Duck

I had never seen a wood duck perch on such a thin branch. I do know they nest in boxes on trees but found it amusing to see him perch like that. Again, I was standing on the deck when I took this photo! We are very fortunate to have such a great area to attract all these birds and animals. The male wood ducks are incredibly beautiful. Vibrant colors, green , brown, buff. They seem to be very proud of their “clothes”.

He flew away as soon as I snapped the picture. The wood ducks in this area start  their lives at small woodland pond in Evergreen park (as far as I can tell). I suppose they really could be from anywhere around here though.

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A scene to the south of our house.

8:00 a.m. seems to be a great time to get good light for photos. I wanted to get the light on the trees and timed it from the previous morning so I could achieve that.

 

Tom Turkey displaying

Tom Turkey displaying

 Tom fluffed!

 We have had as many as 24 turkeys cruising through our yard at once. They have a pretty broad range and are very prevalent throughout the area. All you need to do is look. This shot was taken in mid-spring and later in the day. I was standing off the deck for this photo (It was exhausting having to walk ten more feet!)

 

Turkeys Feeding

Female turkeys Feeding

 

Ladies brunch

Not sure if they were eating gravel or bugs.

 

 

 

Red Squirrel

Red Squirrel diggin’ the sun.

 

Doe

A doe, 2 years old? She was feeding on the violets on the ground and looked up when I made a small peep. We have had many, many deer come through. When the time is right, I can always count on a fawn photo, as well.

barredOwl

Barred Owl

This owl was watching my cat very intently. I retouched the eyes as they had “red-eye” that actually looked as though the owl was burning a hole through the cat.

 

GrayTreeFrog

 

A tree frog.  He was hanging out in my “Mother-in-law” plant  (yep, on the deck) . He sat there for a “looong” time.

 

 

 

Anglewing Butterfly

Anglewing Butterfly

 

 

The actual name for this butterfly is Anglewing, but I call them “angel wings”. No better name applies. A stunning butterfly. At the edge of our yard on the fence warming up .

 

 

 

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” A Great Blue Heron and a dragonfly – the Story”

 We were in a canoe scattering a pal’s ashes in a lake that my pal and I would escape to for many, many life-long adventures. The heron seemed to have an injured leg and was standing thus, when we paddled slowly by. He swiveled his head as we glided past. As I dropped the last few ashes into the water, the dragonfly perched and stayed on my bride’s paddle while I reflected on the ceremony. I attribute the dragonfly’s presence to my friend.

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 Good Night !

A beautiful , crisp October night. The halo around the moon and the oaks lend a “Sleepy Hollow” effect to this photo. I can almost feel the air on my face as I – yeah, I know – stepped out onto the deck !

 

I take most of my photos with a Nikon D50 and a Nikon DX 55-200 zoom lens.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Photography/Art | 4 Comments

Grasshopper Program

There are two basic groups of grasshoppers:  Long horned and short-horned

Long horned Grasshopper

Long horned Grasshopper

Short horned Grasshopper

Short horned Grasshopper

Parts of a Grasshopper

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Head of a grasshopper – showing scissor-like teeth.

 

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Predators on Grasshoppers

frogs and toads

frogs and toads

Garter Snake

Garter Snake

 

 

 

 

 

Birds

Birds

Spiders

Spiders

Posted in Insects | Leave a comment