Owl Program

Owls – The Great Hunters      

Hoo Hoo Hoo
D                             C                 D
Is the sound of my call in the night

Woosh, Woosh, Woosh
D                           G                     D
Is the sound of my wing’s quiet flight

D
I eat mice and moles

C
I don’t eat kid’s toes

G            C            D
I am a great hunter

D
I have sharp ears and eyes

C
Ask a mouse they know why

G                 C         D
I am a great hunter

D
I am a bird of prey

C
I sleep only in the day

G                   C         D
At night, I am a hunter

Hoo Hoo Hoo

D                             C                 D
Is the sound of my call in the night

Woosh, Woosh, Woosh

D                           G                     D
Is the sound of my wing’s quiet flight

Great Horned Owl Dom Braud

Great Horned Owl
Dom Braud

Great Gray Owl Dom Braud

Great Gray Owl
Dom Braud

Great Gray Owl Michael Furtman

Great Gray Owl Michael Furtman

Michael Furtman

Michael Furtman

Barred Owl Lawrence Wade

Barred Owl Lawrence Wade

1snowy

CathyVanderBergSnowyOwl

 

Screen Shot 2014-09-11 at 11.05.54 AMScreen Shot 2014-09-11 at 11.09.31 AM\Screen Shot 2014-09-11 at 11.09.16 AM

Owl pellet Paul Kelly

Owl pellet
Paul Kelly

 

 

 

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Adios Monarca

“J” stage in caterpillar development

There wasn’t a big going away party last week, but there should have been! The monarchs have left for their wintering grounds in Mexico. It was a rough summer for the monarchs, probably due to the lack of rain here. Most summers, I see monarchs every day gliding on the wind currents, and moving from one flowering plant to another. This summer, I saw very few monarchs. In August there is usually a spike in the population before they migrate, and this summer it was not the case. I know I’ll see some stragglers or maybe a last wave of orange, but their great journey has begun. Continue reading

Posted in Insects, Summer | 2 Comments

Favorite Photos

I have posted my best photos at:     lawrencewade.deviantart.com

 

Below are two of the photos that are in my gallery:

Sphinx moth heading for a phlox flower.

 

Bald eagle in flight

 

 

 

 

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RidgePointe Phenology Trail

RidgePointe Phenology Data Sheet
To download a PDF click RidgePointeDataSheet

 

The inner loop phenology trail

 Basswood (ornamental) – When does it leaf out? When does it bloom? What do the flowers smell like?
Basswood1

Japanese Lilac – When does it leaf out? When does it bloom?

Japanese Lilac

Paper Birch – When does it leaf out? What is its blooming date? What is the name of birch flowers?

paperBirch

River Birch – How is it different from a paper birch?

RiverBirch

Tamarac – What is unique about this tree?
TamaracPhenology Trail – The outer loop

Poison Ivy – Just starting to emerge (5/21) – What will it look like in July?
PI

Lilacs blooming – Not on RidgePointe Property – but an important spring event (5/21)Lilac

Jack-in-the-Pulpit  – Possibly a hundred plants blooming (5/21)

Jack1

jack2
False Solomon Seal 5/21

FalseSolomonSeal

Basswood (native)– The green Bean Tree – Is the flowering date different from the non-native basswoods in the inner ring. What can you use the basswood flowers for?

BasswoodClump

basswoodleaf

 

Red Oak leafing out and flowering  (5/21)            Red Oak leaves in August (2013)

RedOakLeaf:flower

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Red Oak Bark

RedOakBark

White Oak leafing out (5/21)                                                   White Oak       (8/2014)
WhiteOakLeafOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Silver Maple

silverMaple

 

Weeping Willow
WeepingWillow
Crab Apple  – What date does it bloom?  (5/23/2014)

crabApple

Restoration Projects

Garlic Mustard Removal
Restoration

 

 

Nature is always surprising us!
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAwormswalnut

 

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Sounds of RidgePointe

 

chipping Sparrow

chipping Sparrow

Chipping sparrow

 

Female Cardinal

Female Cardinal

Male Cardinal

Male Cardinal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cardinal

 

Chickadee                                                       Fee-bee call of the chickadee

 

robin

robin

Robin

EhouseWren

House Wren

Blue Jay

Blue Jay

Blue Jay

 

 

Goldfinchgoldfinch

 

Song Sparrow

Song Sparrow

Song Sparrow

 

A chorus frog calling in early spring

A chorus frog calling in early spring

Chorus Frog

 

An American toad calling in spring

An American toad calling in spring

American Toad

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Spring Lecture

Spring Phenology

cardinal2

  First cardinal singing on January 15, 2014.

 

Chickadee

  First chickadee singing on January 15, 2014.

 

chipmunk2 First chipmunk on March 11, 2014.

 

Migrating Canada geese

Migrating Canada geese

First migrating geese on March 19, 2014.

 

robin

robin

First male robin singing, March 26, 2014.  Female robins return April 17.

 

 male red-wing blackbird calling in the marsh

First male red-wing blackbird March 27, 2014.

 

Mourning cloak
Mourning cloak

April 7th  first 60° day
Mourning cloak butterfly. One of the few butterflies that over- winter.

 

A calling wood frog with inflated abdominal sacs.
A calling wood frog with inflated abdominal sacs.April 12th
The chorus frogs started singing two days ago. If you listen to the recording, you will hear the chorus frogs and the “clucking” of the wood frog.

Toads1American toad calling April 16, 2017

 

 

First turtle  April 10, 2017

First Dandelion   April 14, 2017

 

monarch1First monarch

Nature Club

1. Create a Nature Guide At RidgePoint
Identify and photograph trees, plants and creatures that live at RidgePointe
2. Give tours around the campus
3. Create a phenology trail – highlight 10 plants and follow their changes through Spring/Summer and Fall.
Signs of Spring
AnimalHomes
ObservingGeese
Butterflies copy
Finding Balance in Nature 

WalkingPoles

Hiking Poles

 

Bur Oake

Bur Oak

 

Cloud1

WaveCloud

Sundog

Sundog

 

Trillium

Trillium

 

Bloodroot

Bloodroot

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Signs of Spring

Phenology is the study of the seasonal changes found in nature. Below are my weekly notes which I began taking on March 10th, 2012. If you want to post some photos on this site, please visit and post them to the Old Naturalist Facebook page. Don’t forget to add any comments of signs of spring you have seen.

Illustration by Jeanette Dickinson        Photos by Lawrence Wade.

April 8. 2012

  1. Many yellow-rumped warblers in the cottonwoods and willows.
  2. First cabbage butterfly.
  3. First dandelions blooming on the south side of buildings.
  4. Red bud is blooming.
  5. Dutchman’s britches (spring wildflower) is blooming
  6. Wild leeks are full grown in the forest
  7. White oaks are flowering and leafing out (about 3 weeks early).
  8. June berries are blooming.
  9. Wild plum are in full bloom.
  10. Rue anemone, a spring wildflower,  is blooming.
  11. Male turkeys are gobbling and displaying.
  12. Wild ginger is blooming.
  13. goldfinches are turning yellow after being gray all winter.
  14. tree swallows
  15. Great blue heron
  16. water lilies emerging above the water
  17. First dragonflies
  18. Migrating vultures
  19. Migrating marsh hawk (harriers)
  20. turtles on a log
  21. bloodroot is blooming (spring wildflower)
  22.  Saw my first ground hog of the season, even though they have probably been out for a month.

 

 

 

Don’t forget to add anything new that you have seen or heard….

 

 

March 25, 2012

  1. Chorus frogs heard in large numbers in pond
  2. Wood frogs “cackling” in the ponds
    wood frog calling with inflated body sac
  3. Jim Ikhaml reported seeing a green heron
  4. Hooded mergansers on Lone Lake
  5. first thunderstorm of the season
  6. 1/2 inch of rain this week
  7. First Spring wildflowers blooming: Hepatica and Virginia bluebells
  8. crocuses blooming in neighbors yard
  9. harvested first dandelion greens of the spring
  10. honeysuckle bushes are totally leafed out
  11. First lawn mower
  12. red-bellied woodpeckers displaying
  13. “green tinge” of flowering trees covers the landscape

March 17, 2012

  1. Male robins calling
  2. Male red-wings in the marsh may be in peak numbers.
  3. Song sparrows are singing
  4. nuthatches are making their “peinting” call in the woods.
  5. Broad-wing hawks are calling continuously, as they fly around the woods.
  6. Many trees are already blooming including: box elder, silver maple, and cottonwood trees. The catkins flowers on the aspens are fully grown.
  7. The maple syrupping season is over in the Northland
  8. Red elderberries, are blooming about 3 weeks early.
  9. This evening I saw three spring butterflies: a mourning cloak was feeding on the sap of  a box elder. I also saw a milbert’s tortoise shell and an anglewing butterfly.
  10. Red elderberry is budding out (about 3 weeks early)
  11. Heard a few chorus frogs in the pond today.
  12. My dandelion patch is already starting to come up.
  13. Pussy willows are just opening up in the marshy areas.

March 16th, 2012

The record heat has continued all week. Yesterday, it was 80° in the Twin Cities. The number of birds calling  has increased 10x since last week. Leading the charge are the usual suspects: cardinals and chickadees.

I not sure what is happening to the weather in this part of the world, but I am already worrying about might happen here in the  summer, since we are seeing such warm weather in March.

March 10, 2012

What has happened to the silent world of winter that I have been walking in for so many weeks? Within hours, I have gone from hearing a few lonely chickadee calls to a throng of sound on the land including: “cheer-cheer”  calls of cardinals fill the air; “feebee” calls of chickadees are heard in multiple areas.  With the warm south winds, the temperature rocketed from a high of 34° on Friday (3/9/2012) to a record 66° on Saturday. The shift of the winds and the increased daylight has turned our native world upside down.

  1. Drumming and mating calls of downy woodpeckers
  2. Numerous “Cheer-up” call of cardinals
  3. Numerous “Feebee” calls of chickadees
  4. Mating calls of house finches
  5. Multiple flocks of migrating Canada geese
  6. Active chipmunks
  7. “Pump-handle” calls of blue jays
  8. Mobbing of crows and mating calls
  9. Killdeer calling and flying over head
  10. Male redwings calling from cattails
  11.  Geese setting up territories along Minnehaha Creek
  12.  A few male robins calling from the trees.

Add anything you have seen or heard to my list above.

I wonder what is the effect of this cacophony of sound on the land? I can feel the darkness lifting from my own spirit and the energy increasing in my body as the amount of sunlight has increased. I feel certain that the increased sound and light has created stirrings in the land as well.

 

 

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Animals in Winter program

I am Just Hungry   by Billy B. (billybproductions.com/)

That fox is mean!
  I am not mean, I’m just hungry
G   Hungry as can be
A   That squirrel looks cute to you
But it looks like food to me    D
So I’m going to catch him
G     An eat him if I can.
   If you’ve ever been hungry
Then maybe you can understand    D
G    Why the fox is the predator
D    And the squirrel is the prey.
E   Fox wants to get that squirrel
A    But the squirrel just wants to get away
Get-away – get away- get away

Adult Great Horned Owl

Barred Owl
photo by Celeste Rouse

Kill site of an owl

Owl pellet
Paul Kelly

Fox Tracks crossing the creek.

Squirrel Tracks

Raccoon Tracks

Pileated

Male Cardinal

Male Cardinal  (El Cardenal rojo)

Downy Woodpecker

Downy Woodpecker

Chickadee

Chickadee (Carbonero)

White-breasted Nuthatch

White-breasted Nuthatch (Trepador azul)

Red Bellied Woodpecker

Red Bellied Woodpecker

Blue Jay

Blue Jay (Arrendajo azul)

Saw-whet Owl

Saw-whet Owl

Great Gray Owl (Strix nebulosa).

Great Gray Owl eating a mouse (Michael Furtman) (Gran buho gris comiendo un ratón)

Great Gray Owl (Strix nebulosa).

Great Gray Owl (Michael Furtman) (Gran buho gris)

Snowy Owl Búho nival photo by Lawrence Wade

Snowy Owl
(Búho nival)
photo by Lawrence Wade

Posted in Birds, Winter | Leave a comment

Snow in Raleigh, NC

Alli Wade and her dog Maya take a 7 mile hike in the snow in Raleigh, NC.  The two are originally from Minnesota, so they were one of the few that were loving the experience.

 

Alli and Maya

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Nature Guardian

What is a guardian? I am not sure. It sounds like it could be another reality TV show that I don’t want to watch. My thesaurus says that a guardian is a “protector, sentinel, or keeper”. I consider myself a nature guardian, but none of those words describe what my feelings are. Last week, I scraped a dead squirrel off the road and buried it. Last summer, I let a dragonfly out of my car. I found a bunch of cans in the park and recycled them. Everyday I have many opportunities to express what I think is a guardian. During the school year my guardianship shifts to children and I try to stay connected to them, I am caring and encourage them to do their best everyday. My desire is to act on my student’s behalf, so they can take their place in the world, and contribute in a positive way.

I believe everyone expresses his/her guardianship in a unique way. I try to stay connected to the Earth and be caring, by physically doing something for the Earth on a daily basis. This is something I want to do, and in many ways, it is a type of food that sustains my spirit. I am not trying to save the world, and bragging about what I am doing for the Earth. But I feel blessed to live here, and I am trying to remain true to myself.

Fifty things you can do every day to be a nature guardian.

  1. Take a hike and be open to the beauty that is around you.
  2. Spend time outside every day
  3. Learn 10 common sounds
  4. Learn 10 common birds
  5. Go camping
  6. Go biking and appreciate nature that is around you
  7. Pick up your dog’s poop
  8. Pick up cans and trash in a local park.
  9. Pull out buckthorn and other invasive weeds
  10.  Do a volunteer project to improve the land
  11.  Go canoeing, kayaking, or swimming in a lake
  12.   Reduce your electrical usage: turn off lights; reduce heat; air dry your wash
  13. Reduce the number of trips you take in your vehicle
  14.  Bike to work once a week
  15.  Don’t use herbicides or pesticides on your lawn or plants
  16.   Plant a vegetable and butterfly garden
  17.   Keep a nature journal
  18.   Make a “fort” out of natural materials and spend some time in it.
  19.   Take photographs of nature
  20.   Write a poem or prose about something you saw in nature
  21. Adopt a vacant lot and plant it with native trees, shrubs or prairie (depending upon what was once on the land).
  22. Learn 10 common trees and shrubs
  23. Create a compost heap, and recycle your kitchen waste
  24. Reduce the amount of trash you put into the landfill each week

Still working on the other twenty-six…..

Help me out.     Add to the conversation and say what you think a nature guardian is.    Add to the list above.

Posted in Connecting to Nature | Leave a comment