Sunday, March 27, 2022

March 27, 2022: Signs of Spring

You don't even need to look for them now - the signs are spring are everywhere.  The snowdrops are blooming,
Snowdrops, especially for you PP!

even though there are still snow remnants lingering here and there.


Cracks in the ice are widening, creating convoluted icebergs separating from the ice sheet as ice-out 2022 begins.


Where currents flows under the ice, all the lakes now have large openings, and waterfowl have already arrived and started to claim their territory.
The geese are staking out their nesting sites.


In addition to two pairs of Canada geese I saw a wood duck and a ringed-neck duck in the open expanse of water by the Lake Wicwas dam, just a sneak preview of the coming migration season.
The first wood duck of the year swims behind the geese.


A welcome sight is the color green on the ground.  Grass in the warmest spots is starting to show green as are clumps of moss where even a small ray of sunshine infiltrates the leafless branches overhead. 
Moss, green and photosynthesizing already.


It's been cold enough that we're pushing the bird feeder limit towards the recommended end date of April first, and with cold weather in the forecast, we might make it.  We continue to have a wide range of birds at the feeders including many very active goldfinches zooming in on the wing,
Incoming!


braking for the food stop,
Flaps down.


grabbing a seed and dashing away.  
Cargo secured.

 
Usually goldfinches sit on a perch and eat seed after seed, but sometimes they get aggressive in their behavior towards each other so they don't stick around.
Not sharing nicely, are they.



But their most rewarding trait is a certain sign of spring:  though looking a bit ragged as they molt, they are starting to show their yellow coats of the breeding season!
Yellow!

Spring can't be far off now!



Sunday, March 20, 2022

March 20, 2022: The Ever-playful Otter

I have been watching all winter for signs of river otters out playing in the snow and though I've seen some evidence of their presence around the lake, I didn't see the signs of them having fun out there until this week when a pair of them went across a marsh, all along the shoreline and up and down the banks of the shore where they could take a nice toboggan ride back down to the lake.

Two sets of tracks show a pair of otters travelling together.

They would take a few hops to get up some speed and then do a nice belly slide on the snow.


Note the large tail dragging in the snow.

The thin snow cover left some good imprints of their tracks.

Otters have partially webbed feet which helps their swimming abilities.  They also have five well developed toes which can be seen in the prints above.

In all I followed them for half a mile before they went out across the open lake where I lost the track on bare ice with the snow blown off.

Travelling along the shore,
before heading to the open lake.

Note the uniform 2 by 2 track pattern common to all members of the weasel family when they are moving along at a comfortable pace.

Several weeks ago someone sent me a link to a video of otters playing on a dock that was left in a lake last December.  It's not our lake, but it sure could be and it's great example of just how much these animals love to play.  You can watch it here.

Otters are rather secretive but I've had a few encounters with them in both summer and winter.  Here, a group of four spent some time frolicking in the lake.


On another day a lone otter was as interested in me as I was in him.


They seem more curious than other members of the weasel family.  A mink would be gone in a flash and a beaver would slap its tail and dive, though it then might swim back and forth at a safe distance waiting to access wherever it was going.  Only an otter would stick its head up and watch me in my kayak.   


It was a perfect late-winter day to be out tracking. 

 Maybe, like me, the warm weather has the otters excited for spring.


There was one other set of tracks left by a different four-legged animal out and about after the slightest dusting of snow.

The somewhat erratic track pattern, far different from the precise track of a nimble predator like a fox or a bobcat, indicate this is a slower, more plodding type of animal; in this case, a skunk.  

Skunks, racoons, and porcupines don't have the perfect linear track of, for example, a fox.

Like otters, skunks have fives toes, and if conditions are just right their toenails will leave a mark.


Skunks aren't true hibernators, but they do bed down for the winter, emerging from their dens in late winter to search for food and mates, and males can be quite aggressive fighting each other so they are rather bold this time of year - hikers and dog-walkers beware!


If you're looking for a nice spring excursion, the water is flowing strongly through the waterfalls in Shannon Brook at Castle in the Clouds.

Two of the seven waterfalls on the Brook Walk Trail.

But you'll need to go soon if you want to see the ice formations before they melt away (bring some form of traction for your boots).

I'll end with the moon setting behind a cloud bank on Thursday morning, three days before the equinox - spring starts today at 11:33am!


Winter tracking season is just about done for another year.

Sunday, March 13, 2022

March 13, 2022: Muskrat Lodge Revealed

Well, it was revealed - for a couple of days anyway before yesterday's snow came along and buried it again, but still, it's another sign of spring coming.


I found this medium-size muskrat lodge in a marsh near Chemung Road after a few warm days melted away a lot of snow cover in areas exposed to the strong March sun - we're only a week away from the vernal equinox now.  A muskrat family built this lodge over time in much the way beavers build a lodge, but they differ in their construction materials.  Beaver lodges are built primarily of sticks and branches held together with mud from the bottom of the lake, while muskrats use mostly vegetation in their lodge.  Both start as small mounds which are enlarged until they're well above the water level at which point they excavate their home from the inside.  (Both beavers and muskrats are rodents.)

Muskrat lodge in greener days.  Lodges are built close to a plentiful supply of food sources.

A muskrat lodge may start with only one or two rooms, but as the family grows the lodge is expanded and additional rooms added.  The rooms are above the water level so they have dry living quarters, but the entrance is always under water to foil some predators, though mink are excellent swimmers and are the most tenacious predator of muskrats.  Muskrats are active all year; their winter diet consists mostly of the roots of aquatic plants such at cattails, reeds, and arrowheads but they will also eat clams, mussels, snails, and other small animals.  Maybe they'll find an appetite for Chinese mystery snails!

I don't often see muskrats but on occasion I'll find one swimming in the lake in the early morning.  On one occasion, while riding my bike along the road, a startled muskrat ran in ditch beside me for a dozen yards before darting into the safety of a culvert.  Unless there's a point of refence to judge its size - which is considerably smaller than a beaver - or I can clearly see its tail, I have a hard time discerning a muskrat from a beaver.  But, as the name suggests, a muskrat has a thin, rat-like tail rather than the large paddle of a beaver's tail.

The rat-like tail shows this is a muskrat.

Poking around the muskrat lodge this week made it clear that the days of walking on the lake are coming to an end.  There's open water at the shore line wherever the March sun warms a south-facing bank or where a stream runs into the lake.

Anyone trekking onto the lakes now must know where the weak spots are.

There's still 18" of ice in the center of the lake but that consists of only 8" of solid ice with 10" of soft, porous ice that's cut through with just 10 or 12 revolutions of the ice auger.  The recent snowfall will make it even more treacherous to be on the ice - we already had one snowmobile go through the ice on Wicwas, requiring a rescue of the rider.  (Thank you GP for the notification!)  With a forecast of multiple days in the 40s and 50s for the coming week, my lake activities may be done until kayak season arrives.

These gaps will soon enlarge enough to launch a kayak.

And as of this afternoon, those holes are concealed by fresh snow, as was the muskrat lodge.  And look - there were turkeys strutting past the lodge just a short time before I was there.
Turkey tracks at the freshly decorated muskrat lodge.



We had been out in Steamboat Springs last week enjoying a week of Colorado snow, sun, and skiing.  (Thanks for a great visit VP!)

Plenty of snow at 10,000' in northwest Colorado.

I usually try to find wildlife on trips out of New Hampshire but this time I only came across a few birds - no moose, elk, coyote, not even a fox.  But there were plenty of signs they were out, searching along the Yampa River over night for a meal.

A popular place along the Yampa River for Steamboat's predators.

There's a wonderful boardwalk and Peace Pavilion built by the Steamboat Springs Rotary Club along the Yampa River.  I'll close this week with an optimistic yet hopeful sign for today's world which stands at the pavilion.



Sunday, March 6, 2022

March 6, 2022: Suddenly the Lake is Busy

Deep into a winter of not seeing many larger mammals out and about, this past Tuesday was an active day.  First I caught a coyote running across the lake right at sunrise, taking the shortcut to its favorite hunting grounds - or perhaps returning to its den following an overnight mission of hunting mice.

A coyote in the wide open at sunrise.

It was pretty cold over night; if I were a coyote I would wait until the sun came up, but it's possible that father coyote is hunting both night and day now, as it's mating season.  It's still a little early for giving birth, but the male coyote does all the hunting while the mother remains in the den during whelping and early raising of the new pups.  I will add that I'm not 100 percent sure this was a coyote - it could have been a fox.  I didn't have my telephoto lens on the camera so I didn't get a good picture of it as it trotted across the lake.


The fuzzy photo, thick winter fur, and pink morning sun affecting colors all add a degree of uncertainty, so I reached out to some of my colleagues (thank you!) and the consensus is coyote.  

Two hours later, another furry quadruped took almost the exact same path across the lake.


This time I was prepared, and was able to clearly see it was a bobcat.


I was able to watch it stride calmly across the lake for a while without it noting my presence.

But soon enough its keen senses picked up on the fact that it wasn't alone.
Caught me!

And as soon as it decided it was being watched, it was off to the races.

In a flash it sprinted across the lake and safely into the cover of the forest.



I hadn't seen a bobcat since early winter and I still wonder why they don't spend more time hunting squirrels under the bird feeders - maybe it's their instinct to avoid the human activity around the house.  As fast and ferocious as they are, I still find it impressive that a single bobcat weighing 30 to 40 pounds can take down a full grown white-tailed deer.    

I love seeing these beautiful felines; I think bobcats are the most elegant and poised of our woodland mammals.