tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53996324364817612072024-03-05T06:30:53.349-08:00Susan DruryI'm a fiction novelist, observer of nature and people, gardener, photographer, birder, and traveler. I'm a wife, mother, and daughter. I enjoy many outdoor activities such as camping, fishing, and x-country skiing. My blog is a sharing of my activities and interests and the experience of living in Yukon Territory in Northern Canada.Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-53769199757995859072013-02-21T10:32:00.000-08:002013-02-21T10:32:29.315-08:00Nature's PowerCanyon Creek is an ordinary stream in ordinary times. Flowing from Shilsky Lake nestled at the bottom of mountains, collecting water flowing down steep surrounding hills until rushing through a canyon and tumbling out to the Alaska Highway a few miles west of Rancheria Lodge. A large culvert guides the water beneath the highway and onward it runs over a wide rock-filled bed to the Rancheria River.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Shilsky Lake</td></tr>
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An ordinary mountain stream until Nature turned on her power.<br />
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In 2012, after a cool spring in southeast Yukon, warmer temperatures arrived in late May and a record snow pack melted fast as rainstorms continued to hit the area. Rivers were rising to flood stage.<br />
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On June 8, where the Alaska Highway snakes alongside the Rancheria River and where steep hills border the northeast side, Nature's power struck. Water gushed down the hills, and mud and rock collapsed onto the highway. Rivulets and streams grew in size and strength widening ditches, and spilling stone and wooded debris onto pavement.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Along the Alaska Highway</td></tr>
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At Canyon Creek, the raging water tore large trees from the creek bank, carried them downstream and dropped them along its path; it cut through the pavement, moved the culvert, and created a large boulder field where the highway once ran; it spilled from the creek bed and torrents flowed downhill along both sides of the highway.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Flood overflow from Canyon Creek that is behind me.</td></tr>
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The Alaska Highway was closed between Watson Lake and Teslin, and would remain so for four days while the water receded and a temporary culvert was installed. Boulders, rocks and trees were bulldozed off the highway. Transport trucks waited as grocery shelves in Whitehorse emptied and waited for new deliveries. A cargo plane was flown into Watson Lake to pick up the groceries from the trucks and deliver them to Whitehorse.<br />
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In Watson Lake, hotels and campgrounds filled up with travelers, and homeowners opened their doors to stranded tourists.<br />
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On the same weekend, four washouts were reported on the Nahanni Range Road north of Watson Lake. Running east from the Robert Campbell Highway, the Nahanni Range Road is a vital link for mines. Contractors rushed to install temporary bridges.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfdfQeArg11wFvjwHuPxDbZSUeipokcGaC1XeG6hfPhKzHK8TYoe6ZadHqhR6GfO_nju9RfN9w1EnuSw-VuCt7_gqAE1Ln618sAmhfXKUxQIri2dx8fuZsPhQWD7poKyQ_gBS9WLJXmT4Y/s1600/2551_10024-4.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="265" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfdfQeArg11wFvjwHuPxDbZSUeipokcGaC1XeG6hfPhKzHK8TYoe6ZadHqhR6GfO_nju9RfN9w1EnuSw-VuCt7_gqAE1Ln618sAmhfXKUxQIri2dx8fuZsPhQWD7poKyQ_gBS9WLJXmT4Y/s400/2551_10024-4.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Dolly Varden Creek - one culvert missing</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirZSmzhfdwkOhjjIJ8lWIu5l-syl2m3ZYCw5R-_bT2gOORGbm0VwCBHym-2Doih7vXwHaCWwrb06dQYAyjzqf-yjJqzGb0DLxyOXlYJrS4fGgKjv_mPPwepE6r-44Atjn28n0-wJQeCzZI/s1600/2551_10024-3-2.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="265" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirZSmzhfdwkOhjjIJ8lWIu5l-syl2m3ZYCw5R-_bT2gOORGbm0VwCBHym-2Doih7vXwHaCWwrb06dQYAyjzqf-yjJqzGb0DLxyOXlYJrS4fGgKjv_mPPwepE6r-44Atjn28n0-wJQeCzZI/s400/2551_10024-3-2.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Where damaged culvert came to rest on Dolly Varden Creek</td></tr>
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The rivers and creeks returned to normal water levels. Road and bridge repairs continued throughout the summer; however, a reminder of the flood's strength remained on the shores of the Liard River. At Whirlpool Canyon, a few miles east of Fireside, British Columbia there sits an enormous graveyard of trees piled and shoved together. Their bark peeled by the force of the river and submerged rocks.<br />
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For one brief time, Nature had shown her power and we were humbled.<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-68050849561570821702012-12-28T12:03:00.000-08:002012-12-28T12:03:49.986-08:00Spring Flood <br />
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The Liard River was rising. Would be a record flood year, the experts said, due to the cold wet spring and heavy snowpack in the mountains. On June 7, when I left Watson Lake on a trip, I stopped at the Liard River Bridge. The brown river had risen to within a few feet below the huge white sandbags placed on the riverbank after the 2007 flood. A backhoe worked behind the big sandbags, adding smaller sandbags to increase the height and pushing dirt in behind the bags.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjt7vTzEE9KB49YozT3qHMMKnPvjSWI0dT2_c25dRChpvCealo9IOApn435WVE9LwbfaqOe8PzjEVkhJHtXZgUJ5a4R7xhLxBCfvoiHMUnh_ZqcIeEfuVRd1R4COYHq5AlWoyYnyVaGJ-hE/s1600/flood+jukka.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjt7vTzEE9KB49YozT3qHMMKnPvjSWI0dT2_c25dRChpvCealo9IOApn435WVE9LwbfaqOe8PzjEVkhJHtXZgUJ5a4R7xhLxBCfvoiHMUnh_ZqcIeEfuVRd1R4COYHq5AlWoyYnyVaGJ-hE/s320/flood+jukka.JPG" width="212" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by J. Jantunen</td></tr>
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At the nearby Albert Creek Bird Observatory, the spring work had ended. Ted and Jukka were taking their time removing the mist nets and packing up the banding equipment in hopes of catching some species that were late arrivals. The river is at least a kilometer from the site, but it's fed by creeks, marshes, a pond and a large lake located at the Observatory. When the water started rising in the river, it backed up to the Observatory. Ted and Jukka rushed to remove the equipment, but had to leave behind a few nets where the water had risen too fast.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEht_3HT11hO_b_1YRqTaJxjI_YVhA-0NolUNaE6vQwmnmGHZHOEqBLFRX3MSIm0XVA9E-z8J6LOF2fPgEvuZYdDqHxomRyS7tgMYsoNkeZKtDXfDJNxk1mboVTg78CfJIGE7WaXpULfwFFP/s1600/Ted+ACBO.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEht_3HT11hO_b_1YRqTaJxjI_YVhA-0NolUNaE6vQwmnmGHZHOEqBLFRX3MSIm0XVA9E-z8J6LOF2fPgEvuZYdDqHxomRyS7tgMYsoNkeZKtDXfDJNxk1mboVTg78CfJIGE7WaXpULfwFFP/s320/Ted+ACBO.JPG" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by J. Jantunen Ted walking down the road.</td></tr>
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After the flood peaked June 8, Ted and Jukka put on chest waders and waded through chest high water to remove the nets. The high water mark on the trees was well over their heads.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifHD32X_K5iHWEB_A3A8KNida98ijdKKfhTprCfUk4UkXVPwDlnBkjJ9DhpcMi8O0oPChYkLCDFoArN-g3OxnLJZItVNTGTJxsMOgYSEj3yFvkdau7RkhkrdITIxcSNAkpo6Wb95gRaE2m/s1600/flood+boards.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifHD32X_K5iHWEB_A3A8KNida98ijdKKfhTprCfUk4UkXVPwDlnBkjJ9DhpcMi8O0oPChYkLCDFoArN-g3OxnLJZItVNTGTJxsMOgYSEj3yFvkdau7RkhkrdITIxcSNAkpo6Wb95gRaE2m/s400/flood+boards.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by J. Jantunen</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiy35G9wBIiEk0N0MP-iNUlj9IfBgdmIeXP3b-wdRYOMmAcwuftiQ1lJjmKcTOSUxAkqE94PGHtPS0_CIaKK2iFiQQ4OaBDIB9Q9RUWFNdZqe-_B0dky1JQ_fGquGvSt2_XEjpLUYI5gM_w/s1600/flood+sandbags.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="213" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiy35G9wBIiEk0N0MP-iNUlj9IfBgdmIeXP3b-wdRYOMmAcwuftiQ1lJjmKcTOSUxAkqE94PGHtPS0_CIaKK2iFiQQ4OaBDIB9Q9RUWFNdZqe-_B0dky1JQ_fGquGvSt2_XEjpLUYI5gM_w/s320/flood+sandbags.JPG" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by S. Drury</td></tr>
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When I returned on June 13, the large white sandbags lay flat on the riverbank, a lake had replaced the fields on both sides of the highway, and buildings were immersed in water.<br />
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On the dirt road leading to the Bird Observatory, I stood at the top of the hill and watched knee-high water flowing from the pond and forest, across and down the road, into creeks, marshes and trails as it returned to the Liard River.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhmSrWftqFcP_a5pJE0ATGTHVdDTh_5RNanwiwsC_AXtKUVLVxjAUFKQT7ZgkLk3oMmCIjrIGdxhtF07Z_XSorhjwIGvzc1OwVsFTDGrdpKJMxigs7g4U0XBRgDyIHMZIUgQftzUN_wOiwv/s1600/flood+road.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="213" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhmSrWftqFcP_a5pJE0ATGTHVdDTh_5RNanwiwsC_AXtKUVLVxjAUFKQT7ZgkLk3oMmCIjrIGdxhtF07Z_XSorhjwIGvzc1OwVsFTDGrdpKJMxigs7g4U0XBRgDyIHMZIUgQftzUN_wOiwv/s320/flood+road.JPG" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by J. Jantunen Water from the pond flowing over the road.</td></tr>
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I returned to the Observatory on June 30. The stretch of road from the hill to the work station was clear of water, however, past this point, the road was covered by numerous rivulets and deep puddles. Forest trails, deepened by 12 years of use, were covered by standing water. Wooden planks used on the trails lay askew on top of bushes. Bridges that once spanned narrow creeks, sat in ruin along the banks. I splashed through the sodden forest, often jumping over narrow deep rivulets. Grass, brush and tree branches were coated with mud up to a seven-foot height.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-mCcingTkrmcy2nJNGCuima0PnVwAzwMKjGmQixooAH76GfNOJ6Omx5kYRpw_3__EMsomC3QDTTONJJLI-WMVilNl3GwXUBoa_1z0Ye259DXvoGt8-gOm1FiSfaSOGjrUgE9696mfDYx5/s1600/20120630_20.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="265" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-mCcingTkrmcy2nJNGCuima0PnVwAzwMKjGmQixooAH76GfNOJ6Omx5kYRpw_3__EMsomC3QDTTONJJLI-WMVilNl3GwXUBoa_1z0Ye259DXvoGt8-gOm1FiSfaSOGjrUgE9696mfDYx5/s400/20120630_20.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">photo by S. Drury</td></tr>
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A few weeks ago, this forest had been alive with birds singing and fluttering through the trees, squirrels scampering along branches, and muskrats preening themselves on the creek bank. Waterfowl swam in the pond or sat hidden on their nests in the long grass. Now, the forest was quiet, wet and dirty.<br />
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A sweet sound broke the silence. A familiar sound that I had heard every morning from the same tree for weeks during the banding season. I sloshed through the water to stand beside a tall poplar, where high above me, sang a white-throated sparrow. No matter what his territory looked like now, the sparrow sang to keep his claim knowing that life does return after disaster.<br />
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Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-56339255978362697442012-12-19T12:33:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:54:47.376-08:00Wettest Coldest Spring 2012I see that my last post on April 17 coincided with the start of the spring migratory season at the Albert Creek Bird Observatory where I volunteer. The Observatory was open every day except for wet weather, which meant that I spent most of my days there until June 7, when it closed. Most indoor work stopped in my house.<br />
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I returned to the raven's nest a few times. I didn't want to visit too often, for although I could view the nest from a distance and stay hidden on a path in the forest, the male raven knew when I arrived and would call out a warning to the female at the nest. I timed my last visit when I thought that if there were any hatchlings they would be big enough to see and ready to fledge. The forest was quiet as I stood on the path looking through binoculars at the nest. No warning raven call. No ravens flying around or sitting on other trees near the nest. The nest, itself, was also quiet. Had the babies fledged? Had the nest been abandoned for some reason? I'll never know, however, next spring I'll visit the location again in hopes of seeing that the ravens have returned to use the nest.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Ted Murphy-Kelly, Manager/Head Bander putting up nets</td></tr>
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This was the 12th spring season for the Albert Creek Bird Observatory and its busiest, wettest and coldest. A record 4,133 of 57 species were banded. A record number of American Tree Sparrows were banded, 571, up from the previous high of 345 recorded in spring 2007. We were close to breaking records with a few other species.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Banders Jukka Jantunen and Ted Murphy-Kelly</td></tr>
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The cool, wet weather, which included some late snowstorms (May 16-19), meant that the birds stayed longer in the area to feed and renew their energy to fly farther. Shorebirds migrating in mid-May landed to escape the wind, rain and snow. Birds, that may not normally visit Yukon, arrived with the strong winds. One such bird was a Gambel's white-crowned sparrow banded in 2011 at Fort Klamath, Oregon. The majority of our song birds in southeast Yukon come from the east through the prairies.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Busy day - birds are brought from the nets in a bag</td></tr>
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One of the records we take with birds is the fat content. This is done by examining an indentation hidden by feathers at the base of the throat. The bander blows on the area to move the feathers to expose the spot and determines how hollow or full of fat it is. This spring, we saw a large number of sparrows with low fat levels. This meant that either the birds' migration path contained poor feed or that flying conditions were so bad, that all the stored fat was used up faster. As the weather continued to be cool and wet, people began finding dead sparrows in the forests.<br />
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Visitors and volunteers at any skill level are welcome. For more information about the birds banded or observed at all Yukon bird observatories, visit <a href="http://yukonbirdobservatories.blogspot.com/">yukonbirdobservatories.blogspot.com</a><br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">View from the banding work table</td></tr>
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<span style="background-color: white; color: #009933; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: x-small; line-height: 15px;"><br /></span>Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-21116597976004576512012-04-17T11:15:00.000-07:002012-12-21T15:55:14.702-08:00Raven's NestYesterday, I visited the raven's nest. The snow on the snowmobile trail was hard and crusted on this warm mid-April morning, and after a five-minute walk through the boreal forest, I reached a straight stretch in the trail and stopped. Ahead, in a clearing, was the raven's nest high in a towering poplar. From here, I could study the nest while remaining hidden in the trees.<br />
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I had discovered the nest in early March while x-country skiing on a snowmobile trail that cut through the old logged site. Willows and alders poked through the snow while towering thick poplars, bare of lower branches, dotted the landscape. At the far edge of the clearing, where the track dipped back down into the spruce and pine, I found the snow-covered nest of sticks built where the tree trunk divided into multiple branches. Fifty feet from this nest, in another poplar, was a second smaller nest. Why so close? I had read that ravens don't nest close to each other. Had a nesting pair built one, abandoned it and built another?<br />
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A few weeks after my discovery, I ventured up the snowmobile trail to the clearing. The snow had melted off the nests. Ravens flew high overhead and passed out-of-sight. From the edge of the clearing, I focused on the larger nest. No movement. As I lowered my binoculars a raven flew past the nest. Darn! Had forgotten to look at the smaller nest. I waited for the raven to return. A big raven flew toward me and landed on a tall spruce behind me and proceeded to cry out his deep territorial <i>quorks</i>. The female returned and settled onto a spruce near the nests. The male flew to the female and sat on a branch above the female. The male's wings trembled; the female's wings trembled and her tail wagged. Then, the female flew down the clearing followed by the male. The birds didn't return.<br />
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Early April and I returned for another check. As soon as I stepped off the road and onto the trail, I heard the male's deep voice calling. When I reached the clearing, I saw the female sitting in a spruce across from the nests. After a moment, she flew away followed by the male.<br />
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Near me a deep-throated tiny buzz sounded and two red squirrels scrambled down a tree and onto the crusted snow. They sped across the trail and, with one squirrel following close behind the other, the pair zig-zagged over the snow and into the forest. Silence. <i>Buzz, buzz</i> - I swung around and spied the squirrels racing towards me before veering off to sprint down the trail. As the squirrels disappeared, the female raven flew back and settled into a spruce. She didn't move, so I walked down the trail into the forest and turned around. In the poplar tree, the female sat on a branch beside the smaller nest. She sidled down the branch, stepped into it and settled down until her body disappeared. The pair was nesting!<br />
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Yesterday when I returned, the nest was quiet. No ravens called or flew. Were they still there? The male appeared and with flapping wings and spread-out tale, he landed on the branch beside the nest. The female hopped out, grabbed something from the male's beak, and hopped back into the nest while the male flew away. She must be incubating!<br />
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Incubation is for twenty-one days and I've calculated roughly when the eggs could hatch. Hatchlings stay in the nest for 6 weeks where they will reach adult weight. When they leave the nest, they stay with their parents for another 6 to 8 weeks as they learn to forage. <br />
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Nature has given me a gift as I watch the progress of the nesting ravens.<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-55771654616860742612012-04-03T17:40:00.000-07:002012-12-21T15:55:33.958-08:00Love is in the AirBoss Squirrel must be in love. He's allowed another squirrel into his territory (my front yard). While he sat in the wooden bird feeder eating the sunflower seeds, a second squirrel was across the yard eating at a platform feeder. Instead of immediately chasing the trespasser as he's done all winter, Boss Squirrel seemed not to care. Later, the two squirrels were sitting in the willow tree inches from each other with no show of hostility.<br />
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Hairy woodpeckers are the territorial bosses these days. While they ignore the Downy woodpeckers, my resident pair of Hairy Woodpeckers don't like other Hairy intruders. A new female showed up one day and the older female Hairy showed her displeasure by vocalizing high-pitched 'keeks' and following the newcomer from trunk-to-trunk, branch-to-branch, cage feeder-to-cage feeder. The newcomer finally had had enough and flew off down the street closely followed by the resident female.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Resident female top right does not like newcomer bottom left.</td></tr>
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While this female drama was going on, the resident male Hairy was happily feeding alone at a tree on the other side of the yard. After the females left, the male left. A few seconds later the females returned to the yard with the resident female still chasing the new female. They flew across the yard and disappeared behind the house. Hours later, the new female returned to the suet feeder, but the resident female quickly arrived and chased her off. The newcomer has never returned.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">The escape.</td></tr>
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Spring also brings on a wider variety of song notes by the winter feeder birds. The Common Red Polls add extra trills to their songs, the Pine Grosbeaks jabber away in low and high 'finchy' rubbery tones, and the Blackcap Chickadees call out their sweet mating notes including a sharply pitched 'sweetheart' 'sweetheart'.<br />
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Love is certainly in the air.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Time to Sing</td></tr>
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-7885565750775948982012-03-01T19:00:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:56:08.903-08:00Raven PredatorsThe evidence was in the snow. Dark feathers scattered in the driveway under the window from where I looked. Running outside, I followed the trail of feathers to spilled tree buds on the ground. Around the corner on the side of the garage was the predator - a raven feasting on a ruffed grouse. The large black bird flew away at my approach. The grouse's throat had been torn open to expose the tree buds it'd been eating. It's breast had been plucked bare, and was cold and soft. Not yet frozen.<br />
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Had the raven killed the grouse? I'd never heard of ravens actually killing something. Didn't they eat only carnage? I disposed of the grouse carcass and feathers.<br />
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In the past two weeks, six ruffed grouse had returned each day to feed on the buds in the willow trees in my front yard. From beneath the low spreading branches of the large white spruce in the neighbor's yard, the birds crept out on the snow, flapped up to the fence, and walked along the round metal pole until they reached the first willow. After flying up to a heavy branch, the birds walked along this bridge that bent close to the next willow. Another flap and hop and the grouse would spread out in the big willow tree to feast on the buds. Branches bent as the heavy birds reached the thinner tips.<br />
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The grouse had appeared as usual in the late morning of the raven attack. In the afternoon, after I cleaned up the evidence, I went out to the willows to replenish the black oil sunflower seed in the bird feeders. Beside the snow trail through the lawn to the willows, I found more evidence - a hole in the snow the size of a grouse and imprints of raven feathers in the snow around the hole. I eyed the distance of the hole from the willow branches. If a raven had flown in from the street and attacked a grouse feeding out on a branch, the target would have landed in this area. Darn... wish I'd seen it!<br />
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After telling friends about the raven attack, I heard stories of ravens attacking live animals. Common observations were of ravens picking songbirds out of the sky. One friend had seen a cat surrounded by ravens in the street. Then, I remembered an incident when I lived in Old Crow, Yukon. On a chilly fall day, I stood on the riverbank high above the frozen Porcupine River and watched four ravens peck continuously at a seagull they had surrounded on the ice. The large black birds jumped closer. The seagull flapped its wings, yet, no sound came from the birds.<br />
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An old man stopped to watch with me. The seagull was weakening under the attack. The elder and I walked on to let mother nature take her course.<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-4803360806697583572012-02-19T11:28:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:56:44.383-08:00Rainbow TrailWalk on a rainbow trail; walk on a trail of song, and all about you will be beauty. There is a way out of every dark mist, over a rainbow trail.<br />
- A Navajo Blessing<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Double Rainbows at Boya Lake Provincial Park on the Stewart Cassiar Highway in B.C.</td></tr>
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-70467052720718014462012-02-09T10:25:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:57:07.830-08:00Raven Antics<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhET7s-C9IolQtHDgVcZEzoS1LHIIXNF3NWsHko1KAqwq_AM8O2hi4UdBf2Dyo-Yz7hhNm7DHSHiNK9YZKZgxAwLYixIUG8We8D5qy9NYi4AAdww8ixSn38JctMA8Mm1uBBBQYP9c5lhatt/s1600/raven+wings+forward.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="225" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhET7s-C9IolQtHDgVcZEzoS1LHIIXNF3NWsHko1KAqwq_AM8O2hi4UdBf2Dyo-Yz7hhNm7DHSHiNK9YZKZgxAwLYixIUG8We8D5qy9NYi4AAdww8ixSn38JctMA8Mm1uBBBQYP9c5lhatt/s320/raven+wings+forward.JPG" width="320" /></a>My ravens don't do antics. They don't slide or roll down snow-covered roofs or hills as reported elsewhere in news stories. Instead, they land in the driveway or under the feeders and pig out on sunflower seed. At one time, I counted 24 of the big birds in the driveway. But, I have trained them. When they see me moving at the big living room window or opening the front door, they know to leave. Of course, they're back within minutes. One day, when I was in the back yard putting out seed in the feeders, a group of 18 or so, flew lower in the sky as they passed by, and when they saw me, they continued on to bother the dogs down the road. If the ravens can't eat seed, they'll eat dog food.<br />
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They are smart survivors. Leave any garbage out, and within seconds, the black birds have found it. We've all seen instances of pick-ups parked at the grocery store, and ravens tearing open boxes and bags to get at food. Happened to us, but not from our vehicle, but from a boat. My husband and I, with some friends, were boating down the Yukon River from Dawson City to Ft. Yukon when we landed outside of Eagle, Alaska and walked into town. No ravens were around; never gave a thought about the cardboard boxes in the boats that contained groceries. When we returned to the boats, at first we were puzzled at seeing the top of the boxes torn, but, when we discovered a bread bag missing, we knew who the culprits were. The robbers had disappeared to eat their prize.<br />
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Ravens are fun to watch. In Whitehorse, there are clay cliffs bordering the town along the river, and ravens are always riding the thermals. In cold temperatures, they fluff out their leg feathers as they walk in the driveway. A raven will also fluff out its neck and throat feathers when annoyed at another raven. I've watched ravens using their big beaks to dig through sea weed or pick up sea urchins. And they are beautiful birds. When the sunlight shines on their feathers, the solid black becomes iridescent purples and blues; the feathers layered in intricate patterns.<br />
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I have seen one antic, and not with my driveway ravens. When driving this winter past a parking lot, I spotted two ravens on the ground. One lay sideways; the second one sat close by poking at a black rope or wire that the first raven lay on. When the bird stood up, the wire/rope stayed under its feet. Were its feet caught in the wire/rope? I stopped and watched. The second raven tugged again at the wire/rope; the first raven lay back down and rolled around while holding onto an end of the wire/rope. The second raven flew away, and the first raven stood up triumphantly holding a stiff wire in its beak. It flew off with its prize.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEine4nMIY0o6A3JSwxtDAgEtax2ufH4NlUCdCkBGrACqROyZT_adCw7KtsK8DP_Ol374KmR4MBxYw_ikCzXXfwhpEiWkZhPNyXc_RJXE2xbSpnVoanx2h_yxJbuTEm2wivXCJLRThXUfFvq/s1600/P1010308.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEine4nMIY0o6A3JSwxtDAgEtax2ufH4NlUCdCkBGrACqROyZT_adCw7KtsK8DP_Ol374KmR4MBxYw_ikCzXXfwhpEiWkZhPNyXc_RJXE2xbSpnVoanx2h_yxJbuTEm2wivXCJLRThXUfFvq/s320/P1010308.JPG" width="320" /></a>There is one behavior that ravens do in Watson Lake that I've never seen anywhere else. They ride on vehicles! If someone is parked at the gas station or grocery store, there's a good chance that the raven sitting on the hood of their vehicle will hitch a ride. Like a hood ornament, the bird sits still and faces into the wind as the vehicle travels. After a few hundred yards, the raven flies away.<br />
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In the North, the Common Raven will always be part of our lives.<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-67926871278755511972012-01-28T10:33:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:57:34.170-08:00Surviving the Cold-47C! Brr! Put more wood on the fire and keep close to the heat!<br />
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I think of the poor birds so cold outside, yet when I pull back the curtains at 9 a.m., when there's enough light to see something in the yard, there's a great deal of bird activity at my feeders. Common Red Polls in the driveway, on the shoveled snow mounds around the feeders, in the trees - busy eating the high protein black-oiled sunflower seeds. A Downy Woodpecker clings to the log suet feeder pecking at the peanut butter suet mix; a Hairy Woodpecker climbs up the poplar tree trunk. A few Pine Grosbeaks mingle with the Red Polls at the feeders; most sit on the tree branches shivering to increase their metabolic rate to warm up. All the birds are speckled with frost.<br />
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In this extreme cold, I don't see the Chickadees feeding in the morning. Either they've already eaten and will return near sunset or they are still snuggled together with their lowered temperatures in a cozy place. I won't see the Gray Jays until the temperature rises.<br />
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Cold days mean blue skies and intense sunshine. Between feeding, the birds sit high in the treetops where the sun rays reach. Their bodies are round balls with feathers fluffed to trap air creating insulating layers. As the Red Polls hop around the driveway feeding on seeds, their legs are hidden by the feathers, and it looks like they're hopping just on their fat bellies.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9UbtCrImMFW5tYKU816sPi5H92OSx5o0UmiMxkcfyFpLdq3t1c3WeKr6pb9SEo9jMs877xwNeRIinJVUrcb1mQPbzzedfnVuqzwOp_ONblql1014Xm_681sbGXJve1fgTRg-YU28BjzoM/s1600/20120117_1+-1.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9UbtCrImMFW5tYKU816sPi5H92OSx5o0UmiMxkcfyFpLdq3t1c3WeKr6pb9SEo9jMs877xwNeRIinJVUrcb1mQPbzzedfnVuqzwOp_ONblql1014Xm_681sbGXJve1fgTRg-YU28BjzoM/s320/20120117_1+-1.jpg" width="320" /></a>Then, the ravens come. They settle on the ground in the driveway and under some of the feeders. The smaller birds fly up to the tree branches or move to other feeders. Today, the ravens have frosted white caps and cheeks, and as they move around, their 'pants' are fluffed to keep their legs warmer. As I move in the window, the ravens fly off to find another source of food, and the other birds return to the feeders.<br />
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I put on my thick snow pants, parka, toque, neck warmer, mitts and big boots, fill up a bucket with seed and venture into the cold. My breath floats as a cloud before me; my boots scrunch on the dry snow. The birds fly into the trees and wait for me to fill the feeders and throw some on the ground. I return to the warmth of my woodstove and watch the busy birds through the window. What better thing to do on such a cold day?<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-9192870801823147002012-01-05T08:59:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:58:19.642-08:00Happy New YearWhen the New Year arrived many greetings were exchanged through emails, Facebook, Flickr, blogs and forums that I participate in. People were posting quotes meant to encourage others to think positively, follow their dreams, help others, etc.. There were links to motivational sites. The majority of folks that I communicate with, I've never met face-to-face, don't even know what they look like, and for the most part, only snippets of their lives, given in posts about a bird, hiking, traveling, a hobby, are known to me. This is probably the case with the majority of folks who participate in on-line communication. Yet, we consider our fellow communicators as Friends as soon as we 'meet' them.<br />
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I joined Facebook a year ago, mainly to see photos posted by my daughter and relatives, and I've been surprised that all comments in Facebook that I read are very encouraging. The Like button also makes it easy to give fast positive feedback. In forums, as soon as a new person joins everyone is welcoming and continue to give positive thoughts to all posts. In Flickr, many comments about photos are single words - people taking time to send off an encouraging word. Blogs have buttons readers can click to give feedback. I rarely see a negative comment in these communication sites. If there is one, it's part of a chat when opinions are shared.<br />
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The news is filled with doom and gloom. Individuals are feeling the weight of money issues, family and personal problems. There are those who are concerned about adults and youth who are continually communicating through instant messaging. There are those who are concerned about society losing face-to-face communication. But if people are communicating often in an atmosphere of sharing, encouragement and support, wouldn't positive thoughts and actions become the norm in everyday life?<br />
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And if this is happening worldwide across cultures and races?<br />
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So, in this new year, I sent out a positive quote to my Friends.<br />
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"<i>Use what talent you possess, the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best."</i><br />
<i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Henry Van Dyke</span></i><br />
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<span style="font-size: large;">Happy New Year</span><br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Winter Sunrise over Wye Lake, Watson Lake, YT</td></tr>
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<span style="font-size: large;"><br /></span>Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-40201663372987741662011-12-27T11:10:00.000-08:002012-12-21T15:58:46.278-08:00Winter DayYesterday I went x-country skiing. Fresh snow had fallen the day before on old hard-packed snow, and I was eager to ski on the snowmobile trails through the forest. The sun was bright, the sky an intense blue, and the temperature only -2C - quite warm for this time of year. The trail I choose was packed by a snowmobile, yet the snow was soft and as I skimmed along, it whispered beneath my skis.<br />
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Fresh wolf tracks were pressed into the snowmobile tracks, and I followed them as the trail descended gradually, twisting through the forest. In three minutes I was past the last turn and onto flat ground and soon reached a large abandoned gravel pit.<br />
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I was a half mile from the Alaska Highway and the centre of Watson Lake town, but the only sounds I heard were from my skis and surroundings. The wind shook bushy tops of spruce and pine and snow cascaded down the trees. Two gray jays fluttered across the sky. A pine grosbeak called from the forest. Ravens flew on their air path from the garbage dump to the sewage lagoon, and at times circled downward to check on this creature on the trail.
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The gravel pit opened up before me and snowmobile tracks led off in numerous directions. Do I ski an hour longer down to the Liard River? Do I go upward on a snow covered road to circle back to my pickup? Or do I continue through the gravel pit where the wolf had gone? I follow the wolf tracks. <br />
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Other animals had left signs of passage. Snow hare prints were in the soft snow and disappeared into willows and brush. Tiny paw prints stopped where long feather marks were spread out on each side of the snowmobile tracks. An owl had found a meal.<br />
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The open gravel pit allowed me a wide view of the sky and landscape. Clouds floated lazily through the blue expanse, often changing shape from elongated pools to swirls and spirals created by a master artist on a canvas. Sun rays dressed poplar and birch trees and spread as fingers across snow covered side hills.<br />
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As the sun lowered, the sky and clouds turned purple, rose and deep orange. Time to leave the wolf tracks and return to my pick up. A squeaky chirp from the forest stopped me and I 'cheed cheed' back to the boreal chickadee. It chirped back. We continued the conversation until the wind shook the trees and the bird flew away.<br />
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When people ask me how I deal with northern winter cold and darkness, I smile and remember a day such as this, and reply, "Oh, I survive."<br />
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<br />Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-26089703815349014582011-12-06T13:09:00.001-08:002012-12-21T15:59:13.238-08:00Boss Squirrel<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I have holes and tunnels in my yard. Mind you, there's two feet of snow on the ground, and the holes and tunnels are in the snow, made by the Boss Squirrel of the front yard. When I watch the birds at the feeders, there is Boss Squirrel with his head poking above the snow for a look around. His head disappears and seconds later, he reappears farther down the lawn. He rushes to the trees and runs up the branches - here and there - chasing the birds from the trees and feeders. More birds are arriving every day, more birds spread out in 10 trees, but Boss Squirrel is persistent.<br />
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Even the large Common Ravens don't escape Boss Squirrel's wrath. As they feed on the fallen sunflower seeds, they hop into the air to escape this crazy creature running amok in their midst and escaping into the brush or up a tree. From the tree, Boss Squirrel will jump down into the flock of ravens, making them scatter. Eventually, the ravens leave to eat in quieter surroundings such as the garbage dump or grocery store parking lot.<br />
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Boss Squirrel has a difficult life. On the house roof, I blocked the narrow space between two roof lines where Boss Squirrel was squeezing through to cache his pine cones. Our truck repair centre cleaned out his huge nest that he had built behind the glove compartment by crawling through the truck engine. I took away the small towel that he had pulled out from under the garage door (that was filling a space caused by ground imbalance) and was tearing apart for bedding. Some of his holes in the snowbanks along the driveway were covered when I shoveled snow. Once, he barely escaped me stepping on him when I stepped off the snow path through the lawn. His squeak and rapid movement warned me to tread carefully. <br />
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There's Boss Squirrel now, eating on the sunflower seeds that I scattered far down the driveway. Closer to the house, also eating on sunflower seeds, are two juncos and a common red poll. Oh, no - Boss Squirrel sees them and he's charging over twenty feet to scatter the birds. He settles down to eat the seed, content that he's the boss of the front yard.Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-65484682927154601682011-08-17T23:21:00.000-07:002012-12-21T15:59:32.842-08:00BirdwatchingI love birdwatching. It's a new hobby developed since I retired and moved to our current house in April 2007. The first winter, I threw out some black oil sunflower seeds and before I knew it I had these robin size birds with red on their heads and chests (Pine Grosbeaks), and smaller birds with red tops and pinkish red streaks on their breasts (Common Redpolls). Then the black cap chickadees and gray jays arrived. That was easy.<br />
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Once I knew my winter birds I moved onto the sparrows in the spring. As numerous birds hopped around the yard, I frantically scribbled notes and took photos. But that yellow bird flittering through the trees wasn't in the sparrow section of my bird guide. Finally found it - in the warbler section. Time to learn about warblers. There are so many pages showing warblers.... <br />
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Fortunately, there is a bird observatory station in my town and each spring and fall the station nets and bands birds. I volunteered to help and I learned how to take the birds out of the nets without injuring them. I could actually hold the bird and feel the softness and warmth of its body and its tiny heart beating in its chest.<br />
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Now my seasons are marked by the bird migration. Spring starts April 23 when the station opens and the nets are put up to band for the spring migration. We may be walking with snowshoes on two feet of frozen snow around the nets, but by golly, it is spring! The pond at the station is still covered by ice, but it's spring!<br />
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The bird station opened on July 23 for the fall migration. In my garden, the vegetables are still growing, the tomatoes are green, and many flowers haven't blossomed, but the fall migration has started! Time to band the parents and juveniles moving south. Birds arrive in my yard with their juveniles and the air is filled with the constant chirping of young wanting to be fed . The pine siskins are flocking in larger groups and invading birch trees to dangle from the catkins as they eat the seed. Waterfowl are arriving on the small lake nearby to rest and feed on their journey south. Birds are moulting and ravens fly overhead missing feathers on their wings and tail. <br />
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Bird watching has made me observe nature more closely: the tiny flies that hover around leaves where the ruby crowned kinglet catches and eats them; the tiny squeak that tells me I've surprised a boreal chickadee in the trees; a rustling sound in the brush where a fox sparrow is hopping and pushing leaves with its toes as it lands. Bird watching makes me stop, listen, watch, relax and feel nature. <br />
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May we all have a hobby that gives us well-being. <br />
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Common Redpoll landingSusan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-61298062126314594642011-04-15T09:00:00.000-07:002012-12-21T16:03:11.420-08:00Moose ExcitementThis past Sunday, on a sunny day, my husband and I drove up the Robert Campell Highway which runs north from the Alaska Highway. Just a short drive, 30 kms - past lakes and ponds that slept under deep snow blankets, past swamps where pussy willows decorated the willow branches, past where I saw the great grey owl alongside the road last November, past Tom Creek where small pools of flowing water surrounded by ice glittered in the sunshine. Nine snow buntings burst into the air from a patch of open ground, swirled as a flock a few feet above ground and landed farther up the road to start the search again for fallen seeds hidden amongst the dead grass.<br />
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We followed the ribbon of pavement that lay between wide snow-filled ditches that stretched to the edge of the forest. A quiet drive: no traffic, no more birds flocking upwards, no foxes walking on the frozen snow in search of mice; then we saw the moose.<br />
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At the 24 km mark of the highway, an old gravel pit sits on the side of the highway and at the far edge of this clearing is an opening that signals the start of an old road that leads into a logging site, now abandoned. Willows and brush have narrowed the road to become a trail used by animals, and in winter, we see tracks in the snow from the old road, through the clearing and onto the highway. As we drove by the clearing, I looked back to peek at the trail and to my surprise, moose were standing at the far edge of the clearing having stopped to watch the vehicle noise they heard on the highway.<br />
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"Stop, stop. There's moose there."<br />
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My husband backs up the truck and I grab the binoculars. "There's three moose standing there."<br />
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As Barry looked through the binoculars, I slowly, quietly left the truck and took photos from the highway. The moose ran into the forest and disappeared. We drove up the highway to our turn-around point, and on our way back, we slowed at the gravel pit to see if the moose were there. No moose; no fresh tracks . We drove onward, and after two kms and seeing no tracks coming out of the ditch, I had resigned myself to not seeing the moose. We rounded a bend, and there they were. All three of them in the ditch heading for the highway. The moose stopped when they saw us, and we stopped to watch from a distance and take more photos. They seemed frozen in the snow. The spell was broken when a vehicle came toward us, and the moose rushed back into the forest. We saw them bunched together in the trees, but they seemed unwilling to move while we watched them, so we drove away.<br />
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This was the first time we'd seen three moose together, and the sighting was unexpected, which made the moment more exciting. I feel the same excitment when an unexpected twist happens in my story, and I'm on an adventure unforseen. One of the reasons why I keep writing.<br />
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Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-14840631386811486872011-04-12T08:11:00.000-07:002012-12-21T16:00:48.760-08:00Tempermental CharactersMy characters are bothering me again - so demanding! <br />
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Here I am writing a great emotional scene between my two ladies and in the middle of it, Shayla, stops co-operating and looks at me.<br />
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"I do <em>not</em> wring my hands. I'm not the type of person to do that. And I don't cry. I may sniff a bit or wipe my eyes, but I do not cry. Nadie does all that." She raises her chin at me and I know she's in one of her stubborn moods. Perhaps not a good time to remind her that I've seen a few tears on her cheeks, or that Kris held her in his arms while she had a good cry.<br />
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Okay, okay. You're right, Shayla. <br />
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Nadua frowns at her cousin; then looks at me. "Don't make me wring my hands. I'm not that weak. I may be more patient and sensitive than Shay, but that doesn't make me weak. I have inner strength."<br />
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I'll be true to you, Nadua.<br />
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Another woman's voice floats into the conversation. "Why are you so sensitive to them? I want you to fix my character. You're making me look shallow."<br />
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Lady Louisa, you're not even in this scene. <br />
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"I'm not in any scene. I don't even appear in your first novel, so I can't even defend myself from what Kristjan is thinking about me."<br />
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Too bad. Get over it.<br />
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"Lady Louisa?" Shayla's green eyes narrow. "Kris didn't tell me he was engaged to <em>Lady </em>Louisa. Where is he? I need to talk with him."<br />
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He's not in this scene. You'll talk with him in the next chapter.<br />
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"I want to see him, now." Shayla stamps her foot.<br />
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Stop hijacking the story, Shayla, or I'll make you wring your hands. <br />
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I click on Save, and sit back in my chair. Ah, peace and quiet.Susan Druryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09124638589240259013noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5399632436481761207.post-41699577717877100442011-04-06T22:34:00.000-07:002012-12-21T16:01:23.554-08:00Caribou in WinterStarting in October, the caribou move from their summer mountain range to their winter range around the community of Watson Lake, Yukon. We see them on the highways as they eat the salt that's mixed with the sand spread on the highways during the winter. When vehicles come along the highway, the caribou usually dash into the ditches and trees; most often they'll return right away to keep eating salt. At times, when driving along the highways, if you look carefully into the forest, you may see grazing amongst the trees, caribou cleverly disguised in the same white and brown tones as the snow and trees. Or you may see caribou crossing a frozen snow-packed lake in single file. This winter while skiing on a trail a few kilometers from the highway, I saw fresh caribou tracks in the snowmobile tracks, so I knew they could be near. A warm breeze was softening snow mounds on the tall spruce and pine trees, and around me snow was cascading to the ground bouncing off branches as it fell. The cracking sounds reminded me of caribou walking through the dry bush in the fall, and I would stop, listen and look in hopes of seeing the animals, but nothing. When I did see a caribou, it was walking through deep snow in the forest 50 feet from the trail. The animal had seen me before I saw it, and it was walking quickly through the snow to reach a second animal that I spied through the trees. The two of them rushed away from me - not making any sounds - silent ghosts of the forest.<br />
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