Monday, April 20, 2009

Day 108, 4/19/09 Sunday, Year Five Dancer & Daedee: Gifts from our Eagles



Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a rainy day in the valley. Unlike the rain-spattered trout fisherman, I was covering the edges of the marshes and grasslands documenting the lives of eagles sporting a rain-soaked down jacket.

It looks like we may have lost our eagle pair on nest 5. 4 Days, no activity, no parents, nothing. I never could be sure if they even had eaglets, because I have to shoot from a half mile a way, but for the parents not to even be in their nest area that doesn't seem right. They should have eaglets that are almost 3 weeks old. They were the second pair to nest this year.

They are an old pair of eagles, likely 18 years or more so I will keep watching, documenting anything I see. I hope I am just arriving during times they switch off the nest. In my experience, the eagles don't leave young eaglets alone, usually one parent is on the nest until they are older, or very close to the nest. I'm hoping that is the case, I'm hoping mom or dad is sitting somewhere in the trees.

All the 2009 eaglets have hatched in Whitewater, except nest 6. I think they may have another one arriving. They have a 2 day old eaglet now.

The geese should be hatching tomorrow, and all week on the nests I'm watching. Which brings me to Hapless Harry. It took me awhile to find out what kind of duck was even trolling the marshes and back sloughs.

It turns out he is a muscovy duck, probably a feral muscovy, or someone's pet or 4-H project that was dumped. I hope that's not the case, because they didn't do this duck any favors by dumping him, if that is even the case.

Considering his tail feathers are stubs, like you see on ducks living in a small wire pens, and his flight feathers are few and far between, I don't think he flew in. He's living in an area thick with 3-4 foot in diameter snapping turtles, and a dozen bald eagles, coyote, and I should not even mention turkey hunters who my mistake his appearance on first glance for a turkey?

I'm actually surprised he has survived 4 days already. I met a couple men from Northfield, MN who saw two of the ducks and asked me if I knew what they were. I have not located the second duck, and fear the worse.

I've decided to do a documentary on this peculiar ducks life. I'm calling it, Hapless Harry The Minnesota Muscovy Duck Documentary. Wild muscovy ducks come from Central and South America, but most likely these are feral ducks from what I am finding out.

Maybe you know more about Harry? If so, I'd love to hear from you. Meanwhile, while searching for his identity I found a site, www.duckhaven.org, a muscovy duck rescue that needs donations of food, and other needs to keep their doors open. If you can donate, let them know Hapless Harry, The Minnesota Muscovy Duck Documentary sent you.

As for Hapless Harry? Maybe I got it all wrong, and maybe this is truly a "lucky duck" story. I'll keep you posted.

Also, wanted to confirm we have twins on nest 2. Bryan Ranger and The Sunshine Scout, these eaglets are named for our Military and their families this year. I shot this photo in almost total darkness, trying out the 3200 ISO on my new Canon camera. I don't like the grain, but that shot would not have happened without pushing the ISO.

Lisa

Thursday, April 2, 2009

4/2/09 Thursday, Day 92

Hello Everyone,

Welcome to Lisa's Bald Eagle Documentary. The eagles have been keeping busy all winter and are all sitting on eaglets or eggs. You can read all about their days in my Year Five Dancer & Daedee: Gifts from our Eagles, book.

Last night I had the opportunity to watch The Mayor, the nest 2 male, interacting with his and Judy's only offspring, Terry Gail, who will be 1 year old on 4/7/09.

Terry Gail would not let him out of her sight. She would chase after him, land on the top of his back, and he would fly off his perch and back into the air. However, while he raced through the sky, she flew above him on invisible air, and she would roll him across the sky. I got some wonderful shots of their time together.

If you have a few minutes, check out the video link below. It's my eagle story on Ron Schara's MN Bound.

Also, just wanted to let everyone know my eagle exhibit at the National Eagle Center will be moving to White Wolf Creek Gallery in Stockholm, WI, and will open the end of April.

With so many of my photos stolen last year from here, and my captions removed with new captions inserted giving entirely different stories to my work, I am not sure that I will add new photos here. I do hope you'll visit one of my galleries, and my Websites to see the work.

Thanks for all your support, too.

Lisa

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Saturday, November 15, 2008, Charlie Daniels Presented Eagle Portrait




Hello Eagle Friends,

Just wanted to let you know it looks like I'll be starting year 5 with Daedee and Dancer in January 2009.

Saturday night, November 15, 2008, I had the opportunity to present Charlie Daniels with his eagle portrait of Daniels Charlie. He also gave me some names for the year 5 eaglets, if we have any this year.

If you get a chance to visit The National Eagle Center in Wabasha, MN, my year bald
eagle documentary is on display along with my Winter Bugs! exhibit collection 1 of 2.
The National Eagle Center will also have the honor of displaying the second of only three Limited Edition prints, numbered and signed by both Charlie and myself. The remaining print will be on display, rotating between my galleries in Stockholm, WI, and Rochester, MN.

See you on the journey--

Lisa


Read Press Release

Charlie Daniels Presented Bald Eagle Portrait by Lisa Loucks Christenson, Wildlife Artist-Author and Host of Lisa's Walk The Talk Show

To make good on a promise, Lisa Loucks Christenson, Wildlife Artist and host of Lisa's Walk The Talk Show presented Charlie Daniels a Limited Edition, number 1 of 3 giclee prints titled, Daniels Charlie to the country legend just before a stellar performance Saturday night in Wisconsin Dells, WI. The Eaglet was named for Charlie to honor him for his work and support of our troops.

(PRWEB) November 19, 2008 -- Just before a stellar performance at the Crystal Music theatre in the Wisconsin Dells, WI, on Saturday, November 15, 2008, Charlie Daniels posed with Lisa Loucks Christenson, author-wildlife artist and host of Lisa's Walk The Talk Show after she presented him with her signed, Limited Edition, giclee print, titled "Daniels Charlie" from her bald eagle documentary project, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles. Charlie was given the first giclee print to sign or leave unsigned, and then Charlie signed the remaining two giclee art prints. One will hang on the walls of her Rochester, Minnesota gallery and rotate to her Stockholm, Wisconsin gallery next year, the remaining print will be on display at The National Eagle Center in Wabasha, MN along with her Bald Eagle Documentary and Winter Bugs! Exhibits currently on display there.

During an interview for her year two season premiere, Support our Troops broadcast, she promised Charlie that she would name the firstborn eagle after him during the next nesting season if she continued the eagle documentary a 4th year, except all eagles on that nest started with the letter "D" so his name will be Daniels Charlie to honor him for all he has done for the world and our troops with his music. In April 2008, after almost 100 days of waiting through blizzards, snowstorms, and nest building, incubation, Daniels Charlie was born during a sleet storm in the minus 30 degree temperatures. The oldest twin of two eaglets, Daniels sibling eaglet was named DODEE Brian Michael, America's eagle, who represents our servicemen and woman serving and an eagle to be a messenger of love to families who had lost a loved one.

Lisa Loucks Christenson said, "They say, eagles are messengers of Heaven, and after four years and watching over 15 eaglets fledge, I'm convinced they are. I learned while speaking at the National Eagle Center's Deck Opener this past November 1, 2008, that even the Lakota Indians believe that the eagles fly the highest of all our birds, and bring back messages from beyond."

Lisa asked Charlie to bestow names beginning with the letter "D" for the Year Five Dancer & Daedee: Gifts of our Eagles project eagles, if any are born this next year they will be given the names he selected. Lisa will begin her year five documentary in January 2009. The eaglets names from her eagle pair Daedee and Dancer, mother and father, will be announced on her blog: www.LisaLC.com.

Lisa's Bald Eagle Documentary has been featured in local and regional news, television and papers, and her private lives of bald eagles exhibit is on display at The National Eagle Center. Lisa has written four books on the eagles and has recorded over a million images, and 400 hours of bald eagles private lives from nest building, to courtship, rearing and the relationships after the eagles fledge. Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles will be released in January 2009.

About Lisa's Walk The Talk Show Lisa Loucks Christenson, the host of Lisa's Walk The Talk Show brings to the listening audience heart-to-heart stories on real people and places that reach deep inside the lives of those she interviews by way of her easy, approachable, down-to-earth style that is classically, "Lisa." Lisa delivers what has been described as "honestly-real", life stories on the lives of celebrities, entertainers, authors, artists as well as various untouched topics, and overlooked travel destination hot-spots. Every song, every author, every person or place have a story. Join Lisa each day as she brings you an inside look at the stories behind the songs, people and places. Come and meet the authors, business owners, entertainers, celebrities, songwriters and artists who have played major roles in history and the traditions of business, music, entertainment and the arts - from indie artists, first-time authors, new leaders, to legends.

Lisa's Walk The Talk Show Guests: (partial)

* Aaron Neville

* Aaron Tippin

* AMILLIONTHANKs.org

* Ann-Marita

* Ansel Brown

* Asleep at the Wheel

* B. J. Daniels

* Beverly Swerling

* Billy Gilman

* Bobby Bare

* Brad Avery / Third Day

* Bryan White

* Captain and Tennille

* Carnie Wilson

* Charlie Daniels

* Chris Gray

* Chris Jones

* Corb Lund

* Crista Lynn

* Dee Dee Phelps (Dick & Dee Dee)

* Dennis Morgan

* Dick Pralls

* Dr. Toys/ StevAnn Auerbach

* Duane "Dog" Chapman

* Eddie Money

* EverLife

* Flashes of Hope

* Jack Witteveen

* Jim Owen

* Joanna Wayne

* John Tigert

* Jordie Lane

* Kathy Ireland

* Kelly Brock

* Kim Anthony and Midnite Rodeo

* Kirk W. Boland

* Lee Brice

* Lenny Leblanc

* Mark Bego

* Mark Hall (Casting Crowns)

* Miko Marks

* Moot Davis

* Pam Tillis

* Paul McCormick

* Pete Anderson (Little Dog Records)

* Porter Wagoner

* Ray Stevens

* Rhonda Towns

* Richie Mcdonald (Lonestar)

* Rivers Rutherford

* Rush of Fools

* Rustie Blue

* Shauna Fleming /AMILLIONTHANKS.org

* Shelly Kalnitsky

* Stan Silver

* Terry Lee Bolton

* The Bellamy Brothers

* The Statler Brothers

* Tom Wilson / creator of Ziggy

* Van Preston

* Way Cross

Agents, Artists, Authors, Labels, Foundations, Businesses, and Publishers who wish to be considered for upcoming broadcast can submit to send a review copy, email, to:

Lisa's Walk The Talk Show

C/O Lisa

3125 Wellner Drive NE

Rochester, MN 55906

Email: Lisawtts ( @ ) gmail dot com

Telephone: (507) 536-4082

http://www.lisaswalkthetalk.com

http://www.LisaLC.com

###

Saturday, October 18, 2008

END OF YEAR FOUR

Hello Eagle Friends,

The eagle project officially ended last month, and I'm busy putting this years book together, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles.

I'll be speaking at The National Eagle Center November 1-2, 2008 on my bald eagle documentary.

Many have asked, "Will there be a year 5?"

I sure hope that is what God has planned for me.

I hiked out to the river last weekend, but only found the coyotes at dusk, that and my monster bucks that hunters would give their eye teeth to shoot.

Thank you to all my family, Dave and Em especially, and my friends, strangers who stopped by to encourage me on, the news stations, papers, and media who ran articles, the eagles stories.

Thank you Nikon for your solid gear, lenses, equipment. Thank you Sony for your video equipment that ran through the bleakest weather conditions.

I especially want to thank you Michelle at Canon for your extraordinary help in keeping my Canon cameras and printer working, cameras that endured over a million impressions.

Thank you Mary, Barb, Jack & Anthony for all your help so I could continue on.

Thank you to The National Eagle Center for your support and belief of this project and encouraging me to go on and do a year 5.

Thank you to all of you, my faithful readers who have stayed with me this year.

Lisa

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Day 190, Wednesday, 7/16/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

I arrived in the valley late today because we had to put a new radiator in my truck.
We had a choice of a used one from a recall, or a new one. That was a no brainer.
Luckily, they were able to get the truck in and out in the estimate two hour wait that leaked into four, but I got my truck back before late afternoon and made it to the valley just as it cooled down to the low 80s.

The humidity was another story, but maybe the storms will come in tonight as predicted and cool the area down.

I hiked out to my west post and found no eagles on the nest. I waited for any trace of a call of an eagle so I knew what direction to go. Finally, I heard the eagles crying out and from what I could tell they sounded like they were down on the sandbar.

That was a good thing. It's much easier to see an eagle on the tan colored sand than in a tree where they blend into the shadows.

I hiked over to the river quietly because I didn't want to scare them up. They cried out and I thought maybe Dancer or Daedee was near but I never saw either pass me.

As I brushed through the nettles on the sandy embankment, challenging myself to create the first chigger sensor that lights up if you are in the company of them, I heard the eaglets cry again.

I folded the grasses that loomed several feet above my head off to the side and when I did Daniels turned his head right to me. He watched me from his perch, then he signaled to D'ODEE who turned and looked at me too.

"Well if you both know I'm here, there's no sense hiding behind the grasses." I thought to myself. I moved into the opening I cleared just the other day.

For the first time since the Twin Tree blew across the river I found a purpose for now it held the twins of 2008, the once eaglets now eagles I have slowly allowed myself to love.

I try not to get too attached because in a blink they are gone, or so it seems.

They will be 14 weeks old this week and that means our time left is short, maybe a month, maybe 6 weeks and as I looked down on the eagles, and for the first time they had to look up at me we all met again, and I think they sensed my desire to be close to them for they didn't fly off, but simply went on with being newly fledged eagles learning to fish from a fallen tree.

It was obvious from how wet D'ODEE was that he had already fallen into the river. Still, he tilted his head down as his eyes caught the shimmering silver fish passing past him. Catching him was another story.

After awhile Daniels moved back to the lowest branch of the Twin Tree, which is still growing peacefully, sideways up and out of the river. I told Dave, "What if the reason the tree fell there was so when the next flood came it created a dam, and changed the course of the river? I think God loves those eagles so much that he would change a river to spare one nest. The river will bend around the tree and wash out, carve the east side of the bank away sparing the west bank where the tall cottonwood waves its leaves like a flag.

I got the shot that I had waited over 13 weeks for. I got a shot of the two eagles
sitting together fishing the river with all the summer yellow flowers painted into their story at dusk.

As I through my bag over my shoulder and turned to leave, D'ODEE lifted and flew off to the south. I knew that meant Daniels would follow, and I just aimed my camera and followed him, following D'ODEE's path all the way to where the river ended in my viewfinder.

Then I heard the two of them crying out because they were together again.

That was a perfect ending for today. Every time I think of the 2008 twins, Daniels and D'ODEE I'm going to recall that flight I saw tonight. I'm going to remember their cries and how peaceful it was to know they had one another to play with, to fly with and to share a fallen tree or sandbar, or just sit and watch the river running by.

Nest 2 was empty. I have to admit that it was hard to see the nest empty again after spending the last two days with Terry Gail.

I found the mother white-tailed deer with her fawns. The filed had been plowed under but they were still scratching for the delicate greens that grew there.

The mom ran half way up the bluff and turned watching me. I could hear one of the twins wrestling with some heavy brush to the left. I moved on as the mom walked deep into the neck high flowers on the clearing of the bluff, pausing only for a moment to see if her fawns were following.

Nest 6 eaglets were not visible.

Nest 5 eaglets were not around.

I found no activity on nest 3 or 4.

However, as I back tracked the full moon was rising and I stopped to photograph it's path over the steep bluffs behind nest 5 and I could hear the eaglets crying out.

Then I saw a large bird passing, and another, and then two more. With each large bird the twins cries pitched higher and I would guess they may have thought they were their parents coming in with food, because the great blue herons fooled me too as they flew across the back marsh in the last second of daylight.

I photographed the moon in several places on my trip back and then I pulled over roadside to listen for the calls of the coyotes or wolves that never came. That made me even more sure it had been wolves the other night.

I looked up the road, and remembered how that little red fox ran up to me, and I wished I could see him again.

I'm looking forward to day 191.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Day 189, Tuesday, 7/15/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a hot, humid day in the valley with temperatures topping 90 while I was in the field.

I found no activity on nest 7.

I hiked out to nest 1 and found the nest completely empty and that was a lonely feeling when I have been with one eagle or another since the start of this project out her daily.

I stood there in the silence looking up to the clear blue skies and found my eye drifting back to the dark empty nest. I hiked down to the river with a trail of chiggers following me.

I found myself in a silent prayer, "Lord, give me all the nettles and thistles you can grow, but please keep the chiggers for yourself."

Those invisible little bugs that find their way under your clothes where they bit all along the tightest grips of your clothing leaving you itchy, hard to reach welts that
inch for days.

I think I love ticks more than the chiggers.

As I was standing there watching the grasses slightly bending from the 1 mph gusts, I heard a familiar, "grk, grk and I looked up to find Dancer, the king of this valley in my eyes flying south.

What bothered me was neither eaglet was crying out, or following him which meant they were further down the river than he or I could have thought.

A few minutes passed and I watched Daniels Charlie flying over my head and heading north. His appearance brought on the calls from D'ODEE who I guestimated was about a half mile north in the woods.

I watched as Daniels flew across the river to the other side and soared above the woods joining up with another eagle.


I wondered if that other eagle was Terry Gail. I took several photos but he was too far away and so was the other eagle to tell if it was Terry Gail.


Then as he disappeared a fervent cry came out of the north and it was D'ODEE flying towards the nest. It was the easiest footage I've ever shot in my life. All I had to do was aim at the bird and hit record.

D'ODEE flew in with the grace of a sandhill crane, and with the landing of an elephant on a row of dominoes. For as he landed, branches, limbs, and sticks flew everywhere and the sound effects were crunching and louder than a scene from Journey to the Center of the Earth as the eaglet crashed down through the top of the tree to the security of the bottom of his earth.

I hiked to west post and shot images of him, winded, mouth wide open and panting.
Remember, he's only been flying a few days and that was a big flight for him to make non-stop.

I hiked out after this and moved on to nest 2 where we found Terry Gail again. This time she was feeding on what looked like a fish, a red horse or trout something with a hint of red on its tail fin.

Further up the road Dave asked, "Are those the twin fawns?"
"Yes. They are with their mom. Pull over."

The twins and mom stood in the meadow, but only for a moment before they fled.

When we arrived at nest 6 I found the twins up on the branches above the nest. It should only be another week or so before I see them flying confidently all over the marsh.

The nest 5 twins were at the nest too. I felt pretty fortunate to hit the dinner hour for each nest, but then when you watch the eagles and activities at each nest daily you learn each nests patterns.

There was no activity at nest 3, and for a moment I thought I had found a nest 4 eaglet sitting in a tree by the nest, but when I went in closer I found it was a young great blue heron hunched over with its back to me.

On our drive back some guys were flagging us down. They had been canoing and locked the keys in the first vehicle about 8 miles away, and wanted a ride.

There little girl was holding a small brown animal."Look, I found this mouse floating down the river."

I looked at the dark brown baby vole with barely enough hair to keep him warm in a nest, let alone floating down the river. "He is just a baby. Do you know how to care for him?"

"I do. I'm going to give him formula. His eyes aren't even open, do you think he is a muskrat?"

"No. He's a vole."

We gave her dad a ride back to his car and headed home. "Thanks you guys. That would have been a long, long walk."

With temperatures at least in the mid 90s, I had to agree, especially without a water bottle, or two.

Sometimes helping someone else in need is repaid with blessings that you just know are Heaven-sent.

There we were twenty miles out from Rochester when the temperature gauge starting moving up to the H and the red.

Dave pulled over. "See I knew there was a reason you were supposed to come with today."

"It looks like the radiator hose has a pin hole leak in it."

He started grabbing water bottles out of the back of my truck and pouring them in the dry overflow.

We drove a few miles and the steam poured like a locomotive while we drove down the highway.

We pulled over again. Dave poured more water in the overflow. "It's not taking the water."

The smell was like brown maple cured bacon on a hot grill, or in our case, radiator.

"We'll just have to drive and pull over every couple minutes, what choice do we have, do you want to walk fifteen miles?"

We inches along, mile after mile, stop after stop.

On one of those stops Dave noticed the pin hole leak in the radiator. He let the truck cool and then opened up the radiator which was as good as bone dry.


"Great. I used up all the water in the overflow. Do we have any more?"

I dug through my gear and found two more bottles, and the water that I had in my bottle from hiking.

"That'll work."

I felt better when we hit the edge of Rochester. At least if we had to walk it would only be a few miles.

As we pulled in the driveway to our house I turned to Dave and said, "See, it's a good thing I'm doing this eagle project, otherwise I wouldn't have had all that water in my truck."

I'm looking forward to day 190.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, July 14, 2008

Day 188, Monday, 7/14/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

Welcome back to the story of the eagles. It was another beautiful day in the valley, with temperatures in the mid 80s while I was there and not a cloud in sight. Dave and Em came with to hang out with me in the truck, but neither wanted to hike today in the heat, or fight the tangled grasses and bugs.

There was no activity on nest 7.

I hiked out to nest 1 and could hear the eaglets crying as if one of the parents had come in, and then I saw the beating of wings where they toppled each other on a branch in the top of the tree.

Daniels cascaded through the heavy foliage and caught himself on a lower branch of the nest tree. As I focused on him he was winded and yet I could see the eagerness in his eyes to leave the tree.

I was barely there a minute when he took off and flew to the north. He circled the fifty foot cottonwoods, and he flew between their silvery boughs back to the river where I could hear D'ODEE calling to him.

For the first time since the eagles began nesting, I was all alone at the nest tree for the first time in months.

As I have mentioned several times in these writings, this is where my journey becomes difficult. I know the eagles are there, somewhere in the 27,000 acres, but finding them is another challenge.

I broke my trail down to the river again and when I arrived I found myself twelve new nettle bites, and a couple deer fly nips.

D'ODEE was somewhere across the river but I couldn't see him. As I moved down the river I could hear Daniels, who sounded like he was back in the woods, at least a 100 feet off the river.

There was a fox squirrel that came out of the fallen tree and began drinking cottonwood flavored water from a crevice in the gaps of the bark. I thought he was a brave squirrel drinking, then eating something he found while two eaglets watched from their perches.

I hiked out and moved on to nest 2 but didn't find Terry Gail.

At nest 6 I found both twins above the nest on a perch that is appears to be about four feet above their nest.

Nest 5 had one eaglet perched above the nest.

By the time I reached nest 3 I felt like I had missed many of my usual evening opportunities coming out so early in the day I didn't get to see the fawns, and the buck and does, or the rabbits, the pheasants, the turkey, or those darling black-masked raccoons.

There was no activity on nest 3 or 4. It felt good to have my project finished for the day, and knowing I had the entire late afternoon and evening off, it was almost like having a day off after 188 days.

Still, on the drive out I wondered what shots I was going to miss tonight.

I got one of those twinges to recheck nest 2 and sure enough, there was Terry Gail sitting dead center, barely visible from behind the thick tree trunk blocking the center portion of their nest.

She looked great. Healthy, alert, and her cries could be heard up from the road. On my drive home I thought, and then Dave mentioned, "You probably wouldn't have got to see Terry Gail if you had not come down early today."

So the moral of this story is: Take each day gladly, expecting every good thing and your opportunities will find you no matter when you arrive.

I'm looking forward to day 189.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Day 187, Sunday, 7/13/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

The weather was pleasant today with temperatures climbing into the mid 80s. The skies were blue with lots of sunshine making it a perfect day for taking in our second trip to find stories during the 150th anniversary of the St. Charles, Minnesota fair. The winds however, presented challenges to the exhibitors. Some of the smaller tents literally folded in half, crumpling their posts during periods of brisk winds.

We had returned for one show in particular, the Mitchell's Marionettes. By chance, we not only were lucky enough to get to observe one of the Mitchell's 40th year shows, but we also happened upon one of last performances of their opening shows' star performers, Valentine, the floppy eared rabbit puppet who officially retired with the ending of today's fair.

After the Mitchell's Marionettes stellar performance we took in a few games and rides, and I shot some images of the various fair scenes before heading off to my eagle project.

When we arrived at the eagle nest hike-in access, I hiked in while Dave and Em opted to wait for me in the comfortable air conditioned truck.

The twins were sitting side by side on the north limb of their nest tree when I arrived. They called out to the river where I believe their parents were hunting for their evening meal.

I hoped that I would get to see them both fly off together and I almost did when the winds picked them up on one strong gust, almost launching them.

Daniels has been sleepy the last two days, and I'm a somewhat concerned for his somewhat lethargic appearance and the way he is huddling in close to the nest.

D'ODEE on the other hand, at 13 weeks of age today, spent his evening flying from limb to limb, but I think he was trying to fly back into the nest to pick through fish bones but couldn't figure out how to get around Daniels who was blocking his flight plan.

I left and we moved on to nest 2 which was empty.

On our way to nest 6 we came upon a mother turkey with 6-8 chicks. She led them into the tall grass, then peaked out and ran across the road while the clutch of button-sized chicks trailed under the shadow of her tail.

At first glance I didn't see the eaglets at nest 6, but as I was shooting my video I noticed movement on an upper branch, and found them.

When I arrived at nest 5 I was pleasantly surprised to find both eaglets had made their journey back to the nest and it was like old times watching them wrestle each other for the perch that juts above the nest. One flew back into the nest and picked through the remains there.

I didn't find any activity on nest 3 or 4.

On our drive back I spotted the young buck and doe and spent some time photographing them. The doe was in rare spirits butting heads, leaping, bowing and lunging at the buck she seems to want to be with and a second buck who joined them.

I got some great shots and video of them and then I heard a vehicle pull up. It was my friend Chad who I had not seen in a long time. "Didn't know you made it down this far," came his greeting from his van.

He and his daughter were out taking evening pictures. We talked awhile and then both decided we better say our good byes, or the golden light will set before we take another shot.

I had put all my gear down and was looking forward to a quiet ride home while Dave did the driving. That's when I noticed all the geese and their mature gosling's on the edge of a muddy pond.

I shot their pictures down to my last few images on my flash card.

Then Dave noticed the two baby raccoons. I'm sure it was the same skinny little fellows I met there a week or two ago. The one let me follow on the other side of a slough, fifteen feet away and he would stop and feed on various twigs and shells in the water. He was a cute little guy and I wondered where their mom was. They were too young to be out on their own--yet they were surviving.

It was too dark to shoot any more pictures hand holding my big lens and trying to shoot at 1/20th of second is not something to brag about, quite the opposite. I only had 8 pictures left on my card and I spent more time pressing the little trash can icon on my camera, deleting everything I shot because the pictures were too soft or blurry.

I said good-bye to the little coon who impressed me with his curiosity of me and I walked back to my truck.

As we were heading out of the valley a red fox ran in front of us. "Dave pull over. I think I can get his picture."

He bolted down the edge of the riverbank and hid in the shadows, but I could still see him. Photographing him was another obstacle.

I got one blurry shot as he dashed up the side of a bluff. I know they have a den somewhere in that 1/2 mile area. I see them often there. As I walked back to my truck the coyotes, or wolves were baying.

That's when I noticed four fox pups sitting up on the edge of a grassy hill. I could see them even in the shadows, but pictures without a tripod were just not going to be possible.

The last I expected was to have one come tearing down the hill full speed ahead, and ran right up to me. I put my hand out, "WHOA! Little guy--where you going?" He stopped and looked up at me.

There was a truck coming and he would have been wearing the pavement had he not stopped. Then he turned and ran up the hill. I took a couple steps and he bolted again down to me. "What the heck are you doing?"

He almost brushed against my leg and then he jumped into the ditch.

We think he was trying to follow his mom or dad across the road. Maybe he was running from a coyote. If you didn't know, I'll tell you from my own observations that a fox is a coyotes favorite snack.

I hated to leave those cute little foxes but I'll see them again on another night when the moon is low in the sky, and the coyotes or wolves are howling.

I'm looking forward to day 188.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Day 186, Saturday, 7/12/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a gorgeous, sunny day in the valley with temperatures in the high 80s.

I found no activity on nest 7.

The twins were crying out so loud when I got out of my truck at my hike-in access point at nest 1, I thought I had missed a feeding. I barely noticed the rustling in the grasses beside me as a critter leap out of my view.

From the tracking around the puddle I thought I could sit there and write an entire book on who had visited since last night. There were rose-breasted grosbeak tracks, turkey, raccoon, pheasant, and two deer and what would a shallow puddle be without a couple whirly bugs?

As I shoved through the thick grasses, cutting me like sheets of paper, I grumbled my way to my grass coated path, still trying to recreate what took 4 years to keep clean.

I was happy to see my field camera had my favorite word on the LCD, FULL. It wasn't until tonight while downloading the images that full without an SD card only equaled
about 8 shots, three that were me--just to track the dates.

The camera's are notorious for batteries dying after a day or two, and the date stamp seems to always be off, so I don't bother resetting that every time I hang a camera either. I had forgotten how few images the cameras store without the SD cards.

The shots were, like I expected, waving grasses with a couple that I guess one could imagine were space aliens, or a big foot waving at the camera. Better luck next time I guess.

I was just thankful to see Daniels and D'ODEE. Daniels is 13 weeks old now, and Daniels will be 13 weeks old tomorrow. I don't know how these last few months passed me by so quickly, but I count every day I have with them a blessing.

I'm not finding the other eaglets like I have these two. Even when not on the nest, I'm finding them. I hope that continues, but it could change any day.

I sat with the twins until the sun went down and I watched Daniels take several eagle naps while D'ODEE watched for mom or dad and the food. Then I hiked out, taking my
field camera with me.

The anticipation of what shots I had weighed more than the camera bag itself.

There was no activity at nest 2.

I moved onto nest 6 and found the mother deer with her twin fawns. I have come to appreciate this little deer family, and I look forward to seeing them out in the meadow. I knew I wasn't going to get both video and stills just the way mom was cautiously watching told me I had about 12 seconds.

I filmed her with her neck up and eyes looking through me, a shoulder high rusty colored fawn on each side standing among the tiger lilies with the sun behind them. It was a sight that I'm glad I video taped.

I only got about ten seconds of video and she turned and called her twins to follow and in another few seconds they were all running through ten foot grasses into the woods.

Nest 6 was empty. I hoped one or both eaglets would have returned but they have some great places to hunt and fish so it may be a while before I see them again.

I was filming at nest 5 when one of the eaglets flew in and landed on the short perch above the nest. I wish I could find of them just to know they were OK.

There was no activity at nest 3 or 4.

I stopped and photographed a buck and a yearling doe out in a field. He was guarding her like bee to hive. Every so often he would bend down and butt heads with her, and she would roll her head all around his neck and lick his face.

They looked like a couple deer in love, and I've never seen two deer so fond of each other. I opted for video for most of this coverage, and I'm glad I did. I doubt you'll find more expressive, endearing coverage than what I shot.

Then three older doe's came into the clearing. The buck put his head down to one of them and they passed. They were the ones that snitched on me. I got a few shots, but it was disappointing that they had their senses turned up and all at once two shot past the buck as he and his doe looked my direction.

A moment later and all hooves were flying through the air.

That left me with the bats, dozens of bats diving and rising in the air eating up all those back-biting mosquitoes.

It was a great day in the valley.

I'm looking forward to day 187.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Friday, July 11, 2008

Day 185, Friday, 7/11/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles









Hello Eagle Friends,

Everyone knows how hot it was today! It was cooling off by late afternoon as temperatures dropped from the mid 90s to a cool 89 degrees in the valley. You would never have known that the storms we had yesterday could have ever clouded these blue skies.

I found no activity on nest 7, but maybe one day I will if I keep checking.

I hiked out to nest 1, and I guess I didn't do a very good job breaking my trail yesterday as I had to do it again in several places today to reach the nest.

The eaglets were crying out and I hoped they were on the nest tree. When I reached my west post I looked up and saw D'ODEE looking back at me. Then I watched a long leg stretch out and rest over the limb.

That third leg was Daniels. He was sitting behind D'ODEE and for the first time, ever, I had shots of the eaglets rubbing shoulders. I didn't think these two eaglets would ever bond, but they sure want to hang out together now that they don't have to sit together.

The winds were gusting tonight, nothing serious, but enough to keep the eaglets clinging to their perches. I was going to hike around to the north side but the eaglets kept opening their wings making me think they were going to fly off so I didn't leave my spot.

Daniels and D'ODEE were crying out to the turkey vultures that flew past them and then in front of the half moon. I wonder what they think of those big black birds with the pink fleshy heads. I wonder why they cry out--don't they know the difference between them and their parents?

I waited until the last ray of sun light splashed across their faces before I hiked out. They, like all the eaglets before them seem to enjoy watching that glowing sun go behind the bluffs. They get one last burst of energy like they know it's going to be a long night and start to flap around, or like Daniels and D'ODEE, fledge.

I was mildly disappointed that I had no shots on my field camera, but maybe tomorrow I will, and at least no one stole this one--yet.

I moved on to nest 2 and found it empty.

On my way to nest 6 I came upon those twin fawns again from the other day. This time they were galloping along the ditch, and drinking from the huge puddles in the road left over water from yesterday's storms.

Nest 6 had no eagle activity on the marsh floor or around the nest. I wonder where the
eaglets have gone.

Nest 5 had no eagle activity, nor did nest 3 or 4.

As I write this I find it hard to believe that 185 days have passed since beginning this year four story.

This is the part of the project that is the hardest. This is the season for letting go. That is hard to do when you get up every day and head east to the valley and make your day fit into the eagles world.

When I arrived home I found a nice email from Noel Sederstrom, the News Director of KTTC and he wrote they added my shots of Daniels and D'ODEE's fledging to their Website KTTC story on the eagle project.
and they were turning some news coverage to them on the evening news. If you didn't get to see the eagle story go check it out.

When I got home Em and me went grocery shopping, played some games and she fell asleep giving me some time to hand feed our frogs. The feature frog pictured above is one of my favorites. He has a cool frog personality. Guess you gotta feed a lot frogs to understand that one.

It was a great day.

I'm looking forward to day 186.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Day 184, Thursday, 7/10/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles















Hello Eagle Friends,

Today we had weather that kept the entire area on the edge-of-their-seats.

I was just getting ready to head down to the valley when the tornado sirens went off, and changed my direction. I thought I must have been the luckiest gal in the world, for if I had not worked all night, I would have been down there when the reported 50-80 mph winds whipped through the valley.

There were mudslides, semi's flipped, and clouds of every household name from shelf clouds to clouds with rotation. As I closed the windows I prayed for the nest and the eaglets that must have been experiencing the storm of their life.

It's one thing to be sitting in the storm with no option to get out, and quite another thing to be sitting inside where it's safe and trying to rip yourself from the clutches of your family who demand you wait.

I've sat through many storms like that out at nest 1, and for once, I was in the safe place at the right time when the storms hit.

The skies cleared and it actually turned into a gorgeous evening with the threat of more storms on the horizon.

So Dave cooked again, and did a quick drive through the neighborhood Kentucky Fried Chicken, and he asked for the desserts they stiffed us on Mother's Day, but they refused to honor that. I told Dave, remember, that's why the kid taking the orders said, "MMM that does sound good." He took them all and ate them. I just know it.

We both laughed.

I don't think they have passed any laws about eating KFC in your truck while your driving, so we ate on our way to the valley.

There was no activity on nest 7, unless you count the swirling clouds.

I begged Dave and Em to hike out with me to nest 1, but both decided it was going to be too wet. It was. I was soaked within the first few steps, but what choice did I have? I had to go find out how the eaglets were.

I had to re-break my trail which is an endless, tiring process of stepping down on the thick grasses.

However, when I got half way there I could see D'ODEE sitting on the north limb and he was looking back my direction. He probably saw me coming in long before I saw him.

I set up my cameras and recorded my openings while D'ODEE looked out towards the river, dipping his head down under the water heavy leaves of his cottonwood tree, looking for his parents, or Daniels.

I was looking for them too. Was Daniels okay? He's only been off the nest a week.

The only thing that was broken or damaged was the tall week with stems as thick as two
men's wrists put together. Folded right in half. I found a set of bear tracks, too.

Hmm. That might be my mystery animal, as I suspected. The one footprint is as big as my palm, with only one good right toe imprint in the mud, the rear foot in front of the right paw.

That screaming I heard a couple nights back, the one I told Em was a wild banshee--as a joke, was likely a cub that was running to mom. I really don't like the idea that they are out by the eagle nest, and I especially don't like that I'm hearing them nightly.

Of course, last year I found them around me in the afternoons. I guess we'll see what I get on the field camera for images, and hopefully it's not just leaves blowing across the lens and tripping the shutter.

You who use field camera's can probably relate to the experience of coming back and dumping your photos onto your computer and finding several hundred shots of leaves and no shots of your dream buck, or supposed big foot that took up residence in the back 40.

I wanted to hike out to nest 4, if there was enough light, so I started to pack my gear up when I noticed D'ODEE moving down the branch and studying Daniels exit path last week.

I looked away only for a second but quickly turned my head back as I heard D'ODEE crash land on another limb.

Sometimes you just have to trust your instincts. I mounted my 75mm-300mm on the camera body and I hit record, and for once in my life I had 60 minutes left on the tape instead of running on the last two minutes when action happens.

There is a look that comes on an eaglets face the moment they are ready to fly. A subtle tilt of the head, maybe a silent prayer, but I know there must be hundreds of angels there too. Maybe the eagles sense them, maybe it is their arrival and not the winds they are waiting for with that expectant look on their innocent faces.

D'ODEE appeared confident while waiting for the winds, and the angels; the ones that took his brother. He bowed before his maker and then he summoned them
with a faint call and whether it truly was the winds or the angels, they wasted no time in arriving under his wings for they silently lifted him into the sky as the thunder cracked.

I was on the wrong side of the tree, but only for a moment, because he circled the tree and gave me time to shoot at least fifty pictures of him, all angles of his face and his flight.

I am honored to be the one to officially announce that on this day, July 10, 2008, Thursday, during the setting of the sun behind the bluffs, during a loud crack of thunder, one week to the date, and almost to the minute of his brother fledging; our dear D'ODEE Brian Michael fledged before my eyes at the hour of 19:22 and in that moment--Americas' Eaglet became an eagle.

In his flight across the sky I thought of all you men, woman, and families who are serving in the war, and I thought of all of you who are waiting for your loved ones to return from the war, and I thought of how many of you won't be seeing your loved ones return.

D'ODEE Brian Michael stands for our men and woman who have served, he flew tonight into the thunder, passing in front of the sun becoming a silhouette. He is the only eaglet out of all of them I have watched fledge, that flew in front of the setting sun and to me the blackness of his flying figure was symbolic and represented the unknown flight before Gods' eye.

I hope that his flight, the last eaglet to become an eagle in this valley, is an answer to some of you who may be waiting for sign in your own lives. I hope God uses this eagle to bless you in your life.

He flew off to the cottonwood grove where there are many trees to land on. I'll look for him again tomorrow knowing there is no guarantees I'll find him in the thick of the woods and rivers before me.

As far as I know, all the nests are empty now, and most of my journey is complete on this years' project. I'll keep looking for the eagles knowing that if I'm patient, and I keep searching with all my heart, I will find them again, and again.

I lifted my lens to a shadowy cloud figure over nest 3. "Dave, Em, look at that cloud.
That's the spirit of Whitewater."

I video taped this important scene of this 184 day journey of a shadow shaped like a man's figure and in front of his cloud body were ten eagle-shaped clouds.

"Under the light of half moon rising on the pinks and orange hues of the sunset, the Spirit of Whitewater came to gather up his eagles."



We went to the St. Charles fair after the eagle project. We went on some rides that still have me walking sideways waiting for the other half of my brain to ride back into place. Em won some neat prizes, and I met so fair workers with an incredible story of their grand daughter who are going to share it with me for a book on angels I've been working on for over 5 years, gathering stories across the country.

We ran into Kraig, and I told him I just shot some pictures of his co-workers in the barn. They were telling me a story of how one of the turkey's jumped out of his pen last night and causing a scene with the farm geese, and poultry. I think the bunnies were fine with this ominous big bird stalking their cages.

So I took a picture of the men who went beyond their call of duty to lock up a wayward
turkey who was probably trying to skip out on the blue ribbon and save his neck.

After the fair we went to the midnight special showing of Journey to the Center of the Earth. There is no way to doze off during this edge-of-your-seat feature.



I'm looking forward to day 185.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Day 183, Wednesday, 7/9/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles







Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a hot day in the valley with temperatures in the high 80s. It cooled off by evening dropping quickly to the low 70s.

I found no activity on nest 7.

When I reached my post at nest 1, D'ODEE was there alone. He was facing the river searching each passing bird to see if it was a familiar face.

I thought I heard Daniels Charlie up the river. It could have been Terry Gail, too. Both their cries sound alike.

I sat for a couple hours waiting and waiting for any eagle activity, but no eagles came in and D'ODEE made no attempt to fly today.

That animal was out by me again. I followed it's path into some low hanging branches from a half dozen sumac trees, but I found no animal. I did find three places where it had made a place to stand and watch me through the tall grasses.

Three foot circles just ten to twelve feet by three of my mini posts. I can't figure out what it is. I heard barking, a muffled bark in the distance again and I am sure it has to be a coyote or a wolf. I'll have to put my field cameras out again and see if it triggers them.

I left when the last of the sunlight was splashing through the leaves across D'ODEE's face.

When I arrived at nest 2 I saw movement on the nest, and by the time I got my camera focused the movement had stopped. I don't know if it was a big crow, or if Terry Gail was there and just left but I was disappointed that I didn't get a shot.

At least one of twins have fledged at nest 6. I could hear one of them on the marsh floor up in a tree, and if there had been more light and more time perhaps I would have found at least one of them.

Nest 5 was quiet. No eaglets had returned and for the first time in all these months that nest looked like the quiet tree that I first came upon during the winter. For even with it's leaves and and green head dress, it was just as bare, just as silent
without the twins.


I had barely focused in on nest 3 when a large brown eaglet, our Victory Bell, came dropping in before my eyes. Even in the low light I was able to get one shot of him returning home.

That only leaves nest 4, and D'ODEE. Maybe D'ODEE will be our last eaglet to fledge, maybe that is a sign in itself that let no eaglet be left behind so he is waiting.

I'm looking forward to Day 184.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Day 182, Tuesday, 7/8/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles










Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was another wonderful sunny day with the eagles. Temperatures were in the mid 80s when I arrived in the valley but dropped lower as the afternoon turned to evening.

I found no activity on nest 7.

It was much more enjoyable hiking out to nest 1 today, no need for a wet suit anyways.
I could hear both eaglets close together, and I hoped I'd find them on the nest tree when I arrived.

The grasses are 8-10 feet, so trying to see the nest while hiking in isn't impossible, but you do have to wait for a good wind to part the grasses ahead.

I arrived and found Daniels Charlie in the nest and D'ODEE out on the north limb. I wasn't there long before Daniels flew off the nest and joined D'ODEE on the north limb, perched side by side.

They each called out, one after the other as the parents flew by in their attempt to get D'ODEE of the nest and into the air. From what I was watching, it truly was a family working together to help D'ODEE overcome his fear of falling.

After Dancer flew past with food, almost coming into the nest, he got the eaglets' attention and caused Daniels to fly into the nest. I think Dancer wanted D'ODEE to
try coming off the nest.

Then Dancer left. Next a huge wind blew in, it was so unexpected it lifted and blew D'ODEE forward where he almost fell off his perch. He was quick to regain his post and from the look of fear in his eyes, I knew he had not been off the tree yet.

Then Daedee came by about a half hour later and was just checking on the twins. The twins were hungry, and finally after the sun had disappeared behind the bluffs they must have started wondering where their food was.

Daniels lifted off the nest and flew up and down the river a couple times and then circled the nest, not one, not twice, but three times. I thought at first he was trying to figure out how to land, but then I realized he was trying to get D'ODEE to follow him.

When that didn't work he flew in from the top of the tree and dropped perfectly into the center of the nest. This is something I've never even seen his parents do, of course they haven't spent their first months of life staring straight up trying to figure out a path out, either.

I was able to get some good footage of this, and some good still shots. D'ODEE was all excited when he returned, and I thought for sure he was going to try and leave the tree. He flew down the north limb, spread his wings and called out--just like Damian used to do before he would launch, but just as he was ready to go, he'd just stop.

It was dusk by the time I walked out, barely enough light to see the other nests let alone photograph any activity on them.

I guess God must have known that I would use up all my light at nest 1 for when I arrived at nest 2, that was empty.

Nest 6 was empty. Nest 5 was empty. Nest 3 was empty, and I couldn't see anything on nest 4.

I didn't see any bucks, raccoon tonight. Just a handful of rabbits and a great snowy egret in a tree.

I left knowing I got some important footage tonight, and I left knowing that D'ODEE is finally ready to leave and I strongly sense he will fledge tomorrow.

As I pulled into my driveway I realized I had fifteen minutes before the Barnes & Noble closed so I ran in and told Em, "Hurry up--we can get your book you wanted."

Dave cooked tonight, dinner sat on the counter in a brown paper bag and the contents of John Hardy's BBQ permeated our kitchen. But, dinner had to wait a half hour as I promised Em a trip to the bookstore if I got back in time.

I'm looking forward to day 183.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, July 7, 2008

Day 181, Monday, 7/7/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles













Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a day full of constant weather changes from sun to thunderstorms, back to hazy skies and the threat of more thunderstorms. It had cooled down to the low 80s by the time I reached the valley late this afternoon.

I've enjoyed the evening life of the valley, having spent 4 years shooting the early mornings and day hours, taking the later part of the day has new rewards.

One of those was not nest 7, however. Still nothing.

I hiked out, maybe I should say, I swam out to nest 1. The tall, 8 to 10 foot grasses had collapsed across my path making my hike out a guessing game as to where my trail was, and soaking me to the skin while I stepped into the pool of green grasses trying to find it.

D'ODEE was alone on the nest tree. He was calling out from his perch on the north limb. I thought maybe tonight he would try to fly, at least stretch out his wings -- but he didn't.

I sat with him until the sky turned to a marbled black and gray coloration as the last of the sun set behind the bluffs. I heard the deer that stays close to me thumping around me. I even tracked it back to my main post and the tracks are small, probably just a yearling.

I hiked out and squeezed out my rain bibs for a few minutes before moving on to nest 2. Nest two was dark from todays rain, but there was a small hope in me that the shadow on the side was Terry Gail.

I moved on to nest 6, and on my way I came upon twin fawns playing in a meadow. One would watch me while the other dipped his head down and ate some grasses and then they both got the "snort" from mom that is, and trotted off into the tall grasses.

I found no activity except a silhouette of one of the eaglets up on nest 6.

On my way to nest 5 I stopped to shoot images of a huge buck standing off in the distance. His rack was impressive, and was already jutting forward and several inches above his big ears.

He stood motionless as I approached him and when I stopped and set up my camera he moved ever so slightly to the woods, inching his way to them and then leaping into them.


My eyes had already caught the sight of a mother raccoon with four plump babies trailing behind so I forgot about the buck and turned my attention on her. She seemed to be teaching them how to forage under the crevices and had them all sitting in a circle around her while she would reach down under the ball of grasses and pull something up.

I would have stayed all night watching her teach her young, but I still had the nests ahead to get to before it was completely dark.

As I set up at nest 5 I wondered what I would find when I focused in on the nest. I found myself chuckling at those bright yellow feet of the eaglet, as visible as a yellow flashing light to a driver approaching an intersection.

What I didn't expect, however, was that the moment I snapped the shutter the eaglet fledged. I got exactly three blurry shots of an eaglet making his first documented flight into the marsh, sinking down as he tried out his pair of wings. I did the best I could panning and shooting at 1/20th of second.

I was so surprised at that unexpected blessing to be there, right there at the right to see what I thought would likely be impossible from my 1/2 mile distance. I wonder if God used that buck and those raccoons to slow me down, otherwise I would have been there and shot the eaglet and had already moved on by the time the eaglet was ready, at fourteen weeks.

I didn't see the second eaglet. He must have fledged, and he was most likely the inspiration for the second eaglet to leave. Those two eaglets are very bonded and where one goes, the other is sure to follow.

I didn't find Victory Bell on nest 3, and I hope I didn't miss his big day, his fledging, but I'll know more as I go out tomorrow.

Nest 4 was, as usual, too covered up to see any activity.

The skies glowed with a hint of pink and orange fading into the lavender clouds. I could not have imagined a day so full of surprises ending with shades of any other colors.

I'm looking forward to day 182.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Day 180, Sunday, 7/6/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles











Hello Eagle Friends,

It would have been a gorgeous day had the humidity not been so high making it difficult to take a deep breath. The temperatures were only in the low 80s but with the high humidity it felt much hotter.

I found no activity on nest 7.

As I reached the willow trees on my first leg of my hike, I came upon a small red squirrel with a black walnut cinched in his yellow teeth. He watched me closely, peering out from behind a broken branch, I think he may have thought he was hidden from my view, as he kept ducking back behind the broken branch.

Two other red squirrels chastened him from their perches in nearby trees, either warning him to get away, or sit still. He sat perfectly still, only his eyes moved and then he slowly slunk down again.

I hiked out to nest 1 and found, surprisingly, both twins together on the north limb. I was closely observing how Daniels Charlie would spread his wings, forcing D'ODEE further down the limb and I wondered if he wasn't trying to encourage him off the nest tree entirely.

This went on for several minutes and maybe Daniels was just trying to find his way around D'ODEE who was blocking his exit path off the tree that he has been using.

Then with little warning to get my camera's ready, both eaglets fell into a submissive pose. For the first time in several days D'ODEE was trying to figure out his way to jump over Daniels back into the nest as Dancer dropped off a "bloater".

Dancer sat on the edge of the nest, winded both from the weight of a water-swollen fish, and the exasperating humidity stealing his breath. Daniels had already snatched up the fish and was crying out as D'ODEE neared the nest.

Dancer flew off after a few minutes and went back towards the river. He takes good care of those eaglets, both on and off the nest. Like a good father, he seems to always know when they need water over food.

The thunderstorm never hit, but the light was so low I could barely get any "keeper" shots beyond Dancer's departure.

I looked for the red squirrel on my hike out but didn't find him.

Nest 2 was empty and today it began to feel like a January day out there, but then again, in January I was at least seeing Judy or The Mayor on the nest, feeding, building or resting.

The twins were up on nest 6, but the light was so low I could barely see them.

Fourteen weeks, and the nest 5 twins are still at more at home on the nest than in the air. We'll see what this week brings.

Nest 3 I didn't see Victory Bell, and I wonder if he fledged off that upper branch sometime today and I missed it?

I found no visible activity around nest 4.

It was a wonderful day in the valley.

We have another monarch hatching tomorrow. It'll probably come out of it's chrysalis around 6-7 AM.


Em and me stayed up playing cards late, and watched a couple movies.

I'm looking forward to day 181.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Day 179, Saturday, 7/5/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles










Hello Eagle Friends,

I think this has been one of the best weather weeks we have had in almost a year. We had periods of brisk winds, while the temperatures dropped to the low 80s when I arrived in the valley late this afternoon.

I found no activity on nest 7.

I hiked out to nest 1 and found both 12 week old eaglets, Daniels Charlie, and D'ODEE Brian Michael sitting on the nest tree. Daniels was sitting on the north limb, and D'ODEE was on the west limb.

There were people hooting and yelling on the river. I wondered if they had gotten tangled in the Twin Tree that blocked the river and forced unwary canoeists into a dangerous current if they didn't jump off on the sandbar.

The twins became silent and both strained their necks to see what all the commotion was, then they looked back at me to compare "humans" I guess.

I could hear Cindy, the white-tailed deer crunching around me in the tall grasses.

The people on the river found their exit, and I knew this by watching the heads of the eaglets turn and follow them. These eagles miss nothing, absolutely nothing in their territory.

When the winds picked up again Daniels stood up on the north limb and opened his wings crying out to D'ODEE, almost like he was trying to show him how to leap into the winds.

D'ODEE answered, but just was not interested in leaving the nest tree yet. Still, Daniels encouraged him. He folded his wings back down staring across at D'ODEE, waiting for him to look his way, then he opened his wings again and called out.

Daniels moved down the north limb and jumped onto his fledging limb, an offshoot of the north limb and opened his wings again. This time, a strong wind came in and he barely had to jump at all--for the winds picked him up and took him to the south, and I watched him fly beyond the river bend.

I couldn't get any shots as the grasses were towering over me blocking 99% of my view.
D'ODEE only watched, not even crying out.

Just before the sun was about to set I heard Dancer nearing, and the distant cry of Daniels calling in his hunger cry. I looked up to see Dancer above me, circling, and checking on D'ODEE.

Both eaglets were crying out, and D'ODEE began to fluff up his feathers, and he was about to jump into the nest when Dancer flew by him.

I could see that Dancer had no food. He was just coming in checking out where everyone was. He most likely saw Daniels fly off, or heard him crying out. Dancer keeps a close eye all that is going on.

I hiked out and moved on to nest 2. The nest had a golden glow cascading across the well-used, and nibbled branches and boughs. I listened and searched for Terry Gail, but I didn't find her today.

At nest 6, Linda or Dick was on the nest and I could see he or she was tearing food off for Freedom or Soar.

At nest 5 I could hardly believe that the twins were still there. Maybe they will leave tomorrow?

At nest 3, Victory Bell was sitting above his nest. He made it to the perch above it and he looked so proud sitting up on it.

I could see one eaglet on nest 4, but only briefly.

There were several great snowy egrets fishing the shallow edges of the marsh as I drove back through on my way out. One was wading in water up to his neck, which surprised me as usually these white giants are no deeper than their knees--which is still a deep pond.

The deer were out everywhere, and I stopped to photograph about 8 of them in an open field but they were just to hard to see.

As I drove past the river between nest 5 and 6 I saw an eagle sitting on a bare branch over the river. He was so handsome.

I paused to watch a couple baby raccoons who were stumbling up and down the edge of a stream. I wondered where their mom was. They were hardly bigger than two hands high, but very thin and wobbly. I wondered if they didn't have distemper, or maybe their mom did and died.

They stood up and watched me, then jumped back in the tall grasses.

I took Em to the book store tonight and we got some good books to read. Then we came home and played board games, and cards.

It was a great day.

I'm looking forward to day 180.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

I

Friday, July 4, 2008

Day 178, Friday, 7/4/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles













Hello Eagle Friends,

Happy 4th of July! It was one of the best 4th of July's I remember. The weather was gorgeous, a perfect mid 70s day with blue skies almost all day. The evening was cooler, but even the biting insects were not as aggressive today.

Dave and Em came with me on my project today. I was hoping they'd get the opportunity to watch D'ODEE fledge. Instead when we arrived we found Charlie had come back to the nest tree and D'ODEE had no intentions of leaving.

We waited for a long time for any activity, but mostly all we saw was two eaglets sitting and hoping for a big, juicy fish to be brought in. Daniels watched us intently,
and as shot the picture above he was watching Em who was sharing her leaf collection with me.

As we moved on to nest 2 Dave spotted the evening fawn in the small slough by nest 2.
I pulled over expecting he trot off to his mom, but instead, he turned and looked at me with his lovely big eyes. Then he lowered himself, barely cowering above the water, creeping, slowly back into the tall grasses as a loud motorcycle drew near.

It was so loud the mom popped her head up and was watching as her little one darted through the ten foot grasses joining its mom. Then they both jumped off into the distance.

There was no activity on nest 2. No sounds or cries of an eaglet and I keep trusting that she is OK, and that all is well.

At nest 6, I could see both twins behind the trunk, but not enough to get any good shots of them.

I hoped and hoped for a fourth of July fledging on nest 5, and I shot all my controlled burn shots, day 83, and lifted my lens to the empty nest, and the empty limb, but then I saw them. Both eaglets still tethered to the upper limb sitting opposite of each other--waiting for the other to go first.

Maybe tomorrow they'll fledge.

I took some time and photographed Em in the wild tiger lilies and they were some of the most beautiful images of her that I've ever taken.

At nest 3, Victory Bell was sitting on the north side of his nest. Nest 4 had nothing visible to record.

On our drive back I noticed an eagle sitting up at the very tip of a tree. "I'll bet that is Dick, the nest 6 male." I told Dave and Em. I pulled over and shot a handful of pictures of this handsome eagle and as I did he noticed something flash off to my left at the same time I did.

So I shot his pictures leaving his perch, and I rather like this low-light, blurred shot of him in pursuit of independence.

We could see the fireworks all the way out in the country driving back in to town. We
barely made it to the river where hundreds of others had discovered our quiet spot this year.

I'm looking forward to day 179.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Day 177, Thursday, 7/3/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles




Hello Eagle Friends,

Today we had beautiful weather. When I arrived in the valley later this afternoon, the temperatures were in the low 70s and the skies were mostly sunny.

I had a busy morning with four of our monarchs emerging and convincing my daughter why they needed to go free. We watched as three females and one male flitted off into the blue skies above. It was a tender moment when one flew back and dusted across Em's hand as if to say thank you and then flew away.

It was my father-in-laws birthday today. He's 29 again. Happy birthday dad.

I found no activity on nest 7. I was anxious to get to nest 1. I had the deep feeling today was going to be the day that Daniels flew and I felt bad getting out so late, and hoped I didn't miss him fledging.

I hiked to my main post, and met up with Cindy, the doe. Some guys yelled out the window at me as I entered the woods, "The eagles aren't there."

I didn't respond, but I sure had to wonder why of all days that someone would yell that out today? Just kids messing around.

By the time I reached my man post I was covered in grass seed, and hundreds of quarter inch seeds were pressing into my scalp and pasted all over my head. That is a feeling you never get used to. It's like getting sand in your mouth that gritty feeling.

I found Daniels sitting below the nest. He must have fallen down. There was only one way up and that was climbing up to the east side, but then he'd have to choose to hop over to the perch below the north limb, or try and fly up to the upper limbs to get back to his nest.

He sat for a long time contemplating his move, and I could tell by his peering around the tree he was going to try to go for the east branch. Then he did. He made it, but the real test was before him.

D'ODEE was centered on the north limb, and calling out, encouraging Daniels over and over to come up. I decided I needed to move to my north post, and fast, because I was just sure this was going to be the day he fledged.

I unpacked my gear again, shot a few shots of the twins. D'ODEE was perched directly above Daniels and he was still looking for a way up to D'ODEE. Several times he opened his wings and then walked up the perch that only led to the narrow end of the limb, then he went back to the thicker part of the limb.

I decided to finish breaking my trail down the river and and to my east post. I knew I'd need fast access to that side in the next few days when the eaglets fledged. I broke it all the way to the twin tree that was still laying down across the river.

The twins pitched and I thought I was going to miss a feeding so I went back to my gear. Cindy was back there now, too.
I found several places she'd been standing along the river, her secret hideouts under the trees left bare sand bars. I almost stepped on what looked like another massasauga rattlesnake, too.

It had been sunning on a two foot wide by four foot tall sand pile brought in by the 2007 floods when I came through breaking my trail. I saw the dusty maroon and tan colors and a stout 3 foot body slither to the south. I went looking for it in the grasses, but I never saw it again. I tried convincing myself it was a hognose snake, it could have been, but I doubt it.

I went back to my gear and shot a few more shots as Daniels opened his wings and then folded them back to his sides. He was looking up at D'ODEE and D'ODEE looked down at him and cried out. I zoomed in on Daniels with my video camera as he cocked his head looking up at D'ODEE once again, then back at me.

Then I pulled back on the zoom giving him lots of room in the frame to fly, if he wanted and would.

I shot a few more pictures, and I thought I heard Dancer chirp out a couple times behind me in the cottonwoods, but I couldn't see him. Daniels opened his wings again and he looked out to the east, pumped his wings as I clicked a few more shots and then he did what none of his siblings have ever done.

He flew off because the winds came back for him tonight and they took him with this time. It all happened so fast and unexpectedly, and sometimes I wish I didn't have to view these events through tiny, scratched rectangular viewfinders or by hitting replay. I have never seen an eagle so determined to fly on his own and then fly, fearless of the unknown.

He flew and flew with such perfection that you would never have known this was his first flight. I shot his picture fighting back a stream of joyful tears knowing that we have a new eagle. He landed in a tree on the river. A tree that is new to the rivers' edge due to the floods that carved away the river bank.

I decided to call that tree, Big Rog after my father-in-law. If I were an eagle and it was my first flight that's the tree I'd aim for, one with arms big enough to catch and uphold me on my first flight.

It is my honor and privilege to officially announce and record that on this day, Thursday, July the 3rd, 2008, Daniels Charlie an 11 week and 6 day old eaglet fledged from his nest tree to the tree I now call Big Rog, at 19:25 this evening.

I can't wait to tell Charlie Daniels his eagle fledged.

D'ODEE sat in wonderment, he never chirped, peeped, or called. It was like he was in a state of shock watching his brother go off the nest tree with such ease. I am telling you from experience, I have not seen any of the previous 5 eaglets go with such ease as they all misjudged their flight and fell, or were blown out, or eating a turtle and fell out.

The video captures what the still photos could not, and the still photos captured where the video cut off, and only by the grace of God was I able to shoot both cameras and get good footage on both.

I broke my trail back to my right turn to the eagle nest main post, and I shot a few more shots of Daniels Charlie in the Big Rog tree. He looked so proud up there, so regal and if he was scared it didn't show.

Then sun had set, and I decided to finish breaking my path up to the gully. I found another spot that Cindy had been hanging out too. I hiked back to my truck, still in awe of the nights big event.

Nest 2 was empty. I hoped to hear Terry Gail but I didn't hear any eagles.

I moved on to nest 6 and I found Dick or Linda, perched up by the nest calling out to the twins who were in the nest out of my view except for a quick head shot.

As I headed to nest 5 a big buck jumped in front of my truck. I barely missed him. He stopped in a field and stared back at me nodding his head at my long lens. I counted 8 points, on his tall antlers but they still have a long way to grow. I thought his face was so handsome with a darker coloration and his eyes were closer together. He was just a very beautiful buck.

At nest 5 I thought for sure the twins would be gone. They were still there clinging to that tiny perch, both eaglets still wing in wing. They didn't look like they'd even moved since yesterday. Harry was driving by and I talked to him a few minutes.
I showed him my buck shots and he though they were pretty good.

I told him that Daniels had fledged and how incredible that was to see him fly off. He said, "I can tell how wonderful it must have been just the way you described it happening."

At nest 3, Victory Bell was sitting on the north side of the nest with his mom or dad next to him. That was a shot I wish I could have been closer to them to get.

It was almost dark now, as the time was already after 9 PM. I shot my last pictures of nest 3 and 4 and headed back to Rochester.

I promised Em I'd take her to Kit Kittredge: An American Girl, tonight. The movie was a real gem.

Tomorrow my real work begins trying to track Daniels just by his calls.

I'm looking forward to day 178.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Day 176, Wednesday, 7/2/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

It was another hot, humid Minnesota day. Temperatures were down to 80 when I left for the valley late this afternoon, but I heard they will be in the 90s tomorrow.

When I arrived at nest 7, at least a dozen turkey vultures were circling above the nest at the top of the bluff. I thought for a moment there was an eagle on the nest, but it turned out to be the leaves on a branch tilting up which made them appear white like the head of an eagle.

I decided to cover all my other nests first before heading to nest 1. I found no activity, not even a peep from Terry Gail at nest 2, and I wonder if she is okay. I did see The Mayor or Judy circling the marsh to the west and I stopped to see if Terry Gail was trailing but I didn't see her.

I could see one of the twins at sitting up on nest 6.

When I arrived at nest 5 I hoped to see the eaglets at least one more day and at first all I found was an empty nest. After a few moments I noticed, the bright yellow feet on the upper limb. There they were, side by side looking out my way.

As I focused in on nest 3, I could see Victory Bell on the north side of his nest. I wanted to hike out again. Nothing in view at nest 4.

On my way to nest 1 there was a group of orange flowers that caught my attention so I hiked to them to get a closer look. I remember photographing these when I did my 580 day marsh project, they were one of the "new" subjects I covered. Then a yellow sulpher butterfly passed me so I followed him to get his shot, but every time I got close he flew again.

His trail led me to a dragonfly and the dragonfly led me to a stink bug. The stick bug lead me to the shot I was sure I was supposed to get but probably would have never found had it not been for the sudden appearance of those orange flowers.

A little brown and white skipper butterfly resting between live and dead plants that matched his coloration.

Further up the road, I noticed that male red-breasted grosbeak again. This time he was with a female, or perhaps one of his offspring. I'm not sure what the female grosbeaks look like. I watched him fly to one of the long grasses and pick out a few seeds, turning them in his beak and then swallowing them.

A few seconds later and a young male, his son flew in and knocked him off the grass stem and began eating on the exact place his dad was just eating. I watched him peak out from behind the grass and that is what I had been waiting for, so I snapped that picture.

I didn't expect a female bird, possibly his sister to come in and knock him from his perch and feed exactly on the same grass seeds. I shot a few pictures of this female and then in a flutter everyone was gone.

There were a half dozen deer I wanted to stop and photograph, but the light was changing and I had to get to my main nest.

I listened carefully as I hiked out, hoping to hear Terry Gail again, but I didn't hear anything but the rustle of the grasses.

When I reached my main post I noticed Daniels Charlie had made it to the far east limb. Once the eaglets make it to this limb they are ready to go--they are ready to be eagles and now we all just wait. We may have our 4th of July fledging.

D'ODEE is not ready to go. He is hardly even exploring the other limbs. I don't expect him to leave before next week, unless he falls out, or is pushed out by Daniels while trying to hold the food portions.

I stayed until the great horned owls began calling and the muffled barks of the coyotes drew near. The grass was already covered in dew and the sun had gone behind the bluffs at least hour before I left. I wanted to be there until the last of the light was on the eaglets. I wanted to be there just in case Daniels tried to leave.

Then as I packed my gear he turned on the branch and he walked to the outer tip where the limb narrowed to circumference of
a ladies wrist. He opened his wings facing the river and for a moment he just shared with the moving waters his his heart and his soul and in his cry he told the winds I am an eagle and I am ready to fly--just come pick me up.

But the winds didn't come, not tonight, for every eagle has to want it bad enough that even God can see it in Heaven, in his desires of his heart.

I'm looking forward to day 177.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Day 175, Tuesday, 7/1/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a beautiful day in the valley despite the mid 80s temperatures and humidity. I arrived later in the day hoping to catch some of the evening activities of the valley.

I found nothing going on at nest 7.

I hiked out to nest 1 and heard the calls of an eaglet to the south cottonwood grove. It had the higher pitched cry like Daniels Charlie and I fully expected to only find one eaglet on the nest tree when I arrived to my eagle post.

However, when I reached my west post after pushing through the 10 foot grasses that are beginning to collapse together over my path due to their weight, I found two eaglets in the middle of the nest batting each other with their wings.

I was sure I had just missed the feeding and the eaglets were grabbing the last bites when I lifted my lens to their nest.
Then out of nowhere I heard this deafening rush of wings and when I looked up I saw, then felt the downwind of Dancer
dropping down to the nest to deliver a fish.

The twins beat him with their wings and pushed him to the edge of the nest. He sat on the west side of the nest panting from his flight and the weight of carrying the fish through the even heavier air. He sat for a few minutes and then hopped up to the west perch to watch his boys.

As usual, while I was photographing the twins he slipped away silently to the call of the river.

I wondered if that eaglet I heard on my hike out was Terry Gail. If I could have found the eaglet, I would have known for she has a lot more white on her than any eaglet I've seen.


I was shooting images of the twins spreading their wings out across the nest when I saw the white head of Daedee flying into my view. The twins rolled her into the nest, with Daniels underneath and D'ODEE hopping on her back knocking her to the south side of the nest.

An eaglet has but two seconds to grab the incoming food from the other eaglet and this time it was D'ODEE who was on the right side of the nest at the right time.

Daedee flew off and I watched both eaglets tear at the fish, literally splitting it in two.

I watched them swallowing down softball sized chunks of the fish as fast as they could. The next thing I saw was Daniels pushing D'ODEE from under his right wing. He kept rooting underneath, trying to push his way to the fish, but D'ODEE held his ground even when pushed to the outer limits of the nest.

Then both eaglets lifted their heads and both had part of the fish in their mouth. Daniels had the tail end and slurped the ten inches of fish down his expanding throat. I watched it going down in five large gulps it was gone.

In only a few minutes both fish were gone and the twins settled down fed, but never really full. Daniels moved to the west perch and D'ODEE remained in the nest watching for his next meal.

It's a rare day that I am able to get so many action shots with good lighting. The lightening is always broken on the nest, but
I left today thankful for this opportunity to capture a small piece of the eaglets private lives.

I moved on to nest 2 and found the nest empty. For a moment I stopped shooting and sat wondering if perhaps I had walked right by Terry Gail while hiking out to nest 1.

On my way to nest 6 I found a raccoon fishing in the creek. I thought my appearance would scare him off, but he or she was too focused on whatever it was fishing for in the creek. I watched this curious little critter reaching forward in the small rapids trying to grab at something floating away in them.

He jumped into the moving water and grabbed with his little hands the long stick covered with grasses, and snails. I wish the lightening could have been better, but then again, coons aren't something you find out before dusk too often either. This is the fifth coon I've seen this week. Maybe it is the heat that is bringing the coons out to the rivers earlier to satisfy their thirst.

I only saw one eaglet on nest 6.

At nest 5 I didn't see any eaglets at first, but I heard them. Upon further examination f their nest I saw them both huddled together so close they became one. I sat there briefly but neither moved while I was there.

At nest 3 I found Victory Bell up on the nest and eating something inside. I couldn't see anything at nest 4. I began to hike back and had full intentions of going to nest 4, but at the divide I decided to follow nest 3s path.

I heard the ailing cries of the mother wood duck, a warning call she gave as she lifted a foot of the lily pads and sent her ducklings in an opposite direction. The ducklings knew to scatter and they did. The mom moved on calling out trying to draw me to her and away from her ducklings.

I shot a few pictures but kept hiking as the sun had already gone down and there was only 30 or 40 minutes of light left.
I found Edward of Elaina, Victory Bells mom or dad on a perch by the nest tree. The eagle was tearing at the flesh of a huge
sucker. I don't even know how that eagle carried a fish that big up to its perch.

By the time I reached nest 3, Victory Bell had gone back into the nest and I could only see the nest. I could have felt disappointed but I had barely put my camera down when I heard, then saw a pair of sandhill cranes rise in front of me, flying against the powder-pink clouds.

I followed the path further from my truck and deeper into the mosquito's to the sound of more cranes ahead. I should have brought my tripod, and now had to use every muscle I had to steady the weight of my lens against the slowness of my shutter in the low light.

I actually got a few shots that looked good.

I was enjoying the hike and thought about continuing for a little while yet, but decided I better turn and head back or I would be swarmed by mosquitos instead of just a bite every few seconds.

As I took my last turn I heard a sharp bark of a coyote. He was in the grasses by me, somewhere on the edge of the slough, but I couldn't see him.

Then I noticed a heap of yellow and black dung beetles beneath my step. Upon further examination, I noticed the dead vole under the beetles that clean up the deaths. The poor little mom ripped open with her little babies pressed into the grasses still attached to her. It was a sight that saddened me.

With as much death as I see in this valley, I never get used to it.

On my drive out of the dark valley I stopped several times for deer and their fawns, and then there was the angelic look from the fox who sat on the edge of the road for a moment before darting into the grasses. Something in his stare gave me reason to pause too, and thank God for all I had seen today.

I'm looking forward to day 176.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, June 30, 2008

Day 174, Monday, 6/30/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles












Hello Eagle Friends,

Weather-wise, this was a perfect day to end June 2008. The sun was shining across the mostly blue skies, and the humidity was at a comfortable level to work in.

I found no activity on nest 7, other than the large branch that had been hanging in front of the nest took it's plunge to the river below.

It was a nice hike out to nest 1. The twins cries could be heard from the roadside, should anyone stop and listen. I had barely finished my opening notes and recordings when the twins let out a sudden pitch and within seconds, Dancer was there delivering a evening meal to his hungry eaglets.

I had my wide angle lens on my camera when Dancer came in so I have so great scenic shots of dad delivering dinner. I guess if I blow the shot up to a 60x100 foot print I could probably see D'ODEE and Dancer in the shot.

He landed on the nest and dropped the fish into D'ODEE's control and then peaked over the nest to look at me. He left and flew over to the Look Out Tree and watched the twins from there.

I did get some good shots of Dancer flying off the nest.

To my surprise, D'ODEE only rolled the fish around and seemed to be waiting for Daniels to come take it from him. Daniels ignored the food and watched D'ODEE from his north limb perch.

After awhile Dancer flew off, and D'ODEE moved up to the west perch. I didn't get many shots after his move.

Daniels never left his post, but he practiced throwing his head back a few times, which is something all eagles learn to do as a
signal to one another.

I hiked out when the sun began setting on the bluff line.

As I drove to nest 2 I saw Steve, one of the DNR workers out for a walk. We only waved and said hello, both in a hurry to finish our work or walk before the sunset.

There was no sign of Terry Gail in the nest area and it's hard to look up at the empty nest, and know that this time it really is empty.

At nest 6 the eaglets were stirring about.

When I got to nest 5 I paused for a moment before focusing in on the nest. I wanted to prepare myself just in case they had fledged. I looked and found the nest empty. Then I scanned the tree, hoping I'd find them up there somewhere. That's when one of them moved, and when I found one eaglet I knew I'd find both.

There buddied up, sharing the same short perch were two eaglets that are almost inseparable I should call them Dan and Little Ann, for they are the eagles as bonded as the coon dogs of Wilson Rawls, Where the Red Fern Grows.

I still remember Wilson Rawls coming to our elementary school sharing his tale and his book and he left an ever-lasting impression on me as well as countless others who have read his two books, Where the Red Fern Grows and Summer of the Monkey's which were both made into movies.

I moved on to nest 3 and shot the nest using infrared, which is fun to see what you can in the hills and the trees, including an eaglet who was otherwise invisible to my eye.

I found nothing new at nest 4.

On my drive back I came up a male rose-breasted grosbeak pulling seeds out of the grasses, feasting on a huge buffet of them as the sunset sliced a ray of golden light through the trees and onto him.

I found the lilies of the field in full bloom, bad lighting, but still a beauty to admire who stood tangled and growing through grasses, and not toiling at all.

Further ahead a young doe challenged me. She stomped her foot, and jumped back a few feet, then walked towards me before realizing I was human.

I'm looking forward to day 175!

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Day 173, Sunday, 6/29/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles










Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a short journey to the valley. The temperatures were perfectly fine with me falling somewhere in the mid 70s. The humidity was a bit much but that's just how it is during a Minnesota summer.

I thought I'd found some activity going on at nest 7, but it turned out to be a huge branch had fallen down and was draped in front of the nest. Not the activity I had hoped for.

I hiked to nest 1. The doe Em named "Cindy" followed me where ever I went. She comes in only a few feet away and snorts at me and then once she finds out where I move to she walks in behind me again and stomps and snorts. I haven't heard her fawn, lately, but maybe it was killed by a coyote and she is still looking for it. Maybe that is what that horrible dead smell has been the last couple weeks where I hike in.

Daniels Charlie was centered on the north limb and D'ODEE was on the west side of the nest when I arrived but he moved to
the west branch by the time I left.

D'ODEE is 11 weeks today and I question if they will leave this week, or wait a couple more. I just watched the story KTTC did on my eagle project (www.KTTC.com) Life in the Nest, and I can't hardly believe these are the same two little eaglets we watched pecking at each other in the latter part of the story. They were only about 4 weeks old when they shot that footage and they were covered in their grey down. Now here they are fully grown and feathered and ready to take on the skies.

The sun was just going behind the bluffs as I hiked out. "Good Night Cindy," I called out to the doe who was still trailing me.

Nest 2 was empty. I am sure that Terry Gail will be back before too long.

At nest 6 I couldn't see either eaglet, that's the way it is sometimes you see them, some days you don't. I have spent many days at nest 1, sitting the entire day and not seeing the eaglets so I think I've done pretty well on these extra nests this year considering the limited time I can give to their coverage.

I was anxious to get to nest 5. The twins are ready but won't go. I wanted to know if one had left yet. On my way I smiled as I passed a lady photographer shooting a snapping turtle off to the side of the road, I could tell from both her distance and the hesitation in her movements towards the turtle that she did not have much experience shooting these algae covered giants of our wetlands, and lately winding gravel roads.

The pelicans, egrets and herons have all flown off to another wetland. I didn't find any raccoon, unless I count the mom that was hit and her three babies. But I did arrive at nest 5 and find two eaglets who seem to have come to the agreement that if one is on the little perch above, the other has to wait his turn.

One eaglet was waiting in the nest staring up at his sibling who simply looked to the north ignoring any requests to move.

At nest 3 Victory Bell was practicing his flight jumps but my timing was so off all I could get was the down stroke of his wings just as they disappeared behind the trunk.

I didn't see any activity on nest 4.

I'm looking forward to day 174.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Day 172, Saturday, 6/28/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles










Hello Eagle Friends,

Today started out with thunderstorms but by evening the winds had parted the clouds and tamed the blue enough to stay for the night.

At nest 1 Daniels Charlie was sitting centered on the north limb while Daedee flew overhead checking her eaglets. D'ODEE stayed on the west side. The winds didn't budge either eaglet from their places during my short visit today.

While looking ahead I noticed a caterpillar staring back at me from a long grass blade. I think he was a red admiral caterpillar so I moved him over to a nettles plant, which aren't hard to find out in the field so he could eat. I wondered if I didn't knock him off a plant when I put my gear down and that was why I found him on the grass blade. Seeing him reminded me of the hundreds of red admiral butterflies that would sit on me last year where ever I went.

I have only seen a handful of red admiral butterflies this year but instead see hundreds of wood nymph butterflies. I think that's what they are called.

At nest 2 I found Terry Gail up on the south side of her nest. A giant black shadow flew overhead and Terry Gail called to her
mom or dad. I thought maybe she would fly off the nest and follow them, but she didn't. She sat crying out and followed the shadow with her eyes.

At nest 6 I could only see one of the twins clearly perched on the northwest side of the nest.

When I arrived at nest 5 I could see the those two eaglets still trying to share that limited-seating perch. One swipe of the left wing from the perched eaglet and the other would fall backwards and fly down to the nest. This went on for several minutes and I shot numerous shots of the two eaglets who appear to share a close bond, a bond like I watched with Damian and Dorothy, the 2007 nest 1 twins all last year.

As I walked back to my truck I wanted to call John Weiss, and let him know his eagles' eaglets were going to go sometime this next week to meet the wind on their back. Then I decided that I should name that pair of eagles after him and his wife. So I did. John and Debbie.

I'm going to have to get back over to the National Eagle Center to see what if any names guests have come up with for the names of their twins, and the nest 4 eaglet(s).

I found Victory Bell up on his nest at nest 3. I found no visible activity on nest 4. I had the time tonight, and I was thinking I should take that hike back to nest 4, and then a flock of white pelicans flew overhead. I have never seen that many white pelicans flying together. There must have been at least 400 of them as they stretched a mile wide and were flying triple layered.

I thought they were heading to the last marsh, so I drove that way thinking I was going to be closer to nest 4 when I got there.
I had such a strong inkling that I should go there I just couldn't ignore it.

When I got there I didn't spot even the last tail feather of a white pelican. However, I couldn't help but notice the cranky call of the dozen sandhill cranes that were just a hundred yards out, all stepping into the shallows from the protective cover of the tall cattails.

There was a brief stirring as one male chased off another and then a second and when they flew off the waters stood still and I could once again see two images of every bird in every rippled head.

I was just turning to leave when a couple pulled up with their fishing poles in hand. We talked awhile and she told me how terrified of snakes she was. I told her, "You're fishing in a bad spot for someone who is afraid of snakes last week I had four of them go right over my hand out there."

She said, "I stopped to pick up this pretty rock and one came out from underneath it."
"Was there a half buried block by your rock?"
"Yes."
"Yes, that's where the snakes went over my hand."

They told me about another slough I had not found so I'm going to go check that one out when the eagle project is not at peak season for fledging. They said there is a huge nest back there, but then weren't sure if that was the one I know of off by the highway.

Always trust your instincts to follow your story.

I got home and Em was brimming with a huge smile. "I made you a pumpkin pie."
"A pumpkin pie, no, really?"
"Yes."
"I'm going to serve it to you, but I ate all the whip cream."
I'm telling you I have tasted a lot of pumpkin pie, but none as sweet and made with love this one.

I'm looking forward to a second slice tomorrow and day 173.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

I

Day 171, Friday, 6/27/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles






Hello Eagle Friends,

Today we had a mixture of isolated thunderstorms, and brief periods of sunshine. It was high 70s when I arrived in the valley.

I found no activity on nest 7.


I hiked out to nest 1 and found Daniels Charlie on the north branch and D'ODEE in the nest watching him. I was there over 4 hours hoping to get some shots of one of the parents coming in with food. That didn't happen while I was there.

I did watch as Daniels courage increased throughout that span of time; enough so that he walked to the thin limb, and possibly, for the first time had the experience of cinching his talons around a branch. Moving to a limb offers an entirely new experience of learning to balance where before he would just stand on a flat surface of the thick north limb, or his nest.

Several times today as the winds picked up he turned and faced them and flapped his wings into them, and once, only once he actually lifted himself up off the limb and came back down.

That was the reason I wanted one of the parents to come in. I really thought after seeing him lift and face the open skies, that should they pass by with food, he would have followed.

I broke part of my trail back to the river. I'm going to need that trail once these eaglets fly. The closer to the river I went, the thicker and taller the stinging nettles grew.

Then I sat back at my north post, and watched the orioles, the red winged blackbirds, vireo's, robins, and of course, the eagles. There was a little baby vireo that spent that entire time with me flying around me, just inches away in the tall grasses. I should bring him a bread and honey sandwich tomorrow the birds love my snacks.

The storm brought three rain showers while I was there. I was glad to see Daniels return to the thick north limb and move closer to the nest as I left tonight. I barely had reached the White Wolf post when the winds broke through the valley sending
gusts strong enough to blow an unwary eaglet skyward.

It looked like the sun was going to come out during this last shower, so I stayed a little while in the downpour, hoping to get another chance at shooting a rainbow over the nest. I waited until the clouds simply rolled past the open sky and covered the sun.

At nest 2 I found an empty nest. I didn't hear or see Terry Gail.

I stopped at my old marsh project on my way to nest 6. I found a young buck with his antlers covered in velvet.
Then I noticed this killdeer throwing her wing in the air and I realized I must have been close to her nest as she was deliberately leading me away.

At nest 6 I only saw one of the twins. The other one must have been sitting behind the tree trunk on the other side of the nest.

At nest 5 the twins were batting each other, both trying to sit on the same spot on the limb ten feet up in their nest tree. It seemed like every time they both settled, one or the other would push the other causing them to fly back into the nest.

At nest 3 I could see Victory Bell up on the north side, and I could see one eaglet up on the south side of nest 4.

There were about 150 white pelicans all gathered in that marsh that had dried to only a few big puddles. I was barely past them when I started noticing hundreds of toads and frogs covering the gravel road. I drove slow and dodged them, I even stopped a few times to get the big bull frogs out of the road.

It was a beautiful day. When I got home Em came out as I was unloading, "Mom, did you see the rainbow?"
I smiled and thought, "Only in your eyes" but instead said, "No, mine didn't come tonight."
"We got to see one all across the Rochesterfest parade.

"I would have loved to have seen that, Em."
"Well mom, they might have taped it."

I'm looking forward to day 172.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Day 170, Thursday, 6/26/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles








Hello Eagle Friends,

It was extremely hot and humid today as temperatures hung in the high 80s. The sun peaked out behind the haze late this afternoon.

We went to the kid's carnival at Rochesterfest today and Em had a good time playing the games.


Then we all went down to do my eagle project. There was no activity on nest 7.

We all hiked out to nest 1 and could hear the twins, but I could only spot D'ODEE. Daniels is 11 weeks old today and I couldn't find him until I hiked to the north side of the nest. On my way I found a beautiful emerald green damselfly resting on the curve of grass blade.

When I broke a new path through the 8 foot nettles, I found Daniels staring back at me. There he was way up on the north limb.

Seeing him there up above his nest where his younger, less experienced sibling could only watch seemed to give him an exuberance of glowing confidence. It wasn't until Daedee flew in about an hour later that he lost it. There is nothing a hungry eaglet wants more than to eat.

He didn't budge from his perch he stayed centered and I think he must have actually considered the consequences of trying to fly back in and getting bumped out of the nest either by Daedee, or D'ODEE. Daedee sat there for about five minutes holding the food while D'ODEE pecked at her talons.

The mom seemed to sense her eaglets struggle on the limb for she spent that five minutes just staring at him, in some sort of encouragement spoken through her eyes to come home into the nest to eat.

She flew off and D'ODEE took the food. That was enough. Daniels stood up, stretched, turned and walked further north on the curved branch. I don't know if he thought following the upper curve of the branch would lead him to the nest, or what he was thinking, but as the branch narrowed his steps became quick as he turned and literally ran back to where he was sitting.

It took another ten minutes before he got his courage up to try again, but he did try. He walked about ten feet from the nest and leaned forward, rocking back and forth and then leapt up into the air flying into the nest with a perfect landing.

Then he turned and flew back to the perch. I think he'll fledge this next few days. I didn't expect him to be ready this soon.

We left and moved on to nest 2 where Terry Gail was eating on her nest.

At nest 6 the twins were both up on the nest and taking turns flying across the nest.

We stopped at nest 5 and found the twins both sitting up on their north limb. They are almost 12 weeks old, and will be fledging any second of any day. Even from my far distance I can tell one is waiting for the other to leave first. You can see it in the way one won't move for the other on the perch, forcing the other to fly around him while the first leans back making it difficult.

There was an old dead tree up ahead, actually two of them with a half dozen great snowy egrets in one and four in the other. The lightening was golden for that moment and cast one long ray of early evening yellow across their faces just as one of them flew off.

Then Em and me went looking for monarch caterpillars. She found a half dozen of them chewing on the freshly bloomed milkweed blooms. Then we went searching for bullfrogs. We found two males peaking up under the duckweed.

Then she wanted to see who could throw rocks the furthest across the pond. I guess I need more practice. Enough said.

Victory Bell was up on his nest at nest 3. It did appear that there were two eagle shaped silhouettes sitting on the edge of nest 4, but I can't confirm that.

When we got home I made up some homemade tacos. You just can't get the homemade taste from a fast-food meal, and my kitchen is open late every night. I gave Dave and Em their dinner and sat down to eat mine after we said our prayer and I was just about to take the first bite when Em said, "Let's make a toast. She held up her glass of water against mine and as we tapped them together she said, "To a very fun day!"

I'm looking forward to day 171.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Day 169, Wednesday, 6/25/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles








Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a scorcher in the valley today with temperatures reaching 91 degrees while I was there, late in the day. It was sunny and humid and it seems our weather has gone from soaked fields and flooded rivers, marshes and streams to almost drought-like conditions.

I found no activity on nest 7.

I decided to cover all my other nests before going to nest 1. I'm glad I did too.
At nest 2 I found 80 day old Terry Gail with her wings fanned out, and panting from the direct sun on her. I get the distinct feeling she's going to stay camped where the food is, at least for a few more days.

I found more turtles sunning themselves in the road than on logs on the marshes, but then when a hundred white pelican arrive overnight, soaking up the last puddles of one pool, I think if I were a turtle I'd move to a new pond too.

I found at least 30 great snowy egrets feeding together in the ever-diminishing marshes. When one would snatch a fish, another egret would fly in next to it, perhaps hoping for his chance at easy meal.

The twins were up on the nest at nest 6. That was just after I passed some teenagers on the winding gravel road driving with one gal plastered across the windshield like a
dragonfly that was all eyes; holding on to the wiper blades so she didn't fall off.

It must have been some sort of initiation, or challenge for up the road I found several more kids involved.

At nest 5 the twins were both together on the northeast perch and I think are nearly ready to fly off, with the rights winds they probably will.

At nest 3, Victory Bell was on the northwest side of his nest looking out. I didn't see anything to document at nest 4.

The milkweed beetles were still together from yesterday, if it was even the same pair, or else it was a different pair on the same plant. I walked down to the edge of the marsh, still trying to figure out where I lost that little lens, but all I got was a soggy shoe from stepping onto a boggy spot.

I headed back to go to my main nest, nest 1 and pulled over to look for the Marsh 1a and 1b gosling's, but didn't find them. I found a medium-sized bull frog, but I only managed to get a shot before he jumped into the tall grasses and back towards the marsh.

A vehicle slowed and backed up.

It was Greg Munson and Jim Peterson from Rochester. They asked about the eaglets so I gave them an update and invited them to join me as I was heading to nest 1 now. I told them about the eagles bringing in the turtles this last week and I think they found that interesting.

Greg had a gotten into some poison ivy hiking so he was headed to town to wash it off. I would not have expected poison ivy but then neither did he.


I hiked out and I found D'ODEE on the north west side of the nest, and Daniels perched up on the west limb. I obviously had missed their feeding as neither bird cried out at every passing black bird in the sky, and both actually seemed to be more concerned with staying cool, than eating.

I was thinking how much I missed having Em out there with me, and how much fun we had at the book sale today at the library, and then our time in the park playing.


Both eaglets had their wings dropped and hanging to their sides and sat with their beaks open staring down at me.

I think it was the robin that came in that gave me a reason to worry. I had been hearing a rustling in the tall grasses, and I tried to convince myself that it was that darn doe, but she will usually snorted or huff. This animal made not one sound.

Usually if I stand up and hit the grasses, I'll flush it back further, or I'll get a huff out of the animal, but today it only came closer.

Then that robin came in and chattered like they do when they are threatened, and I started wondering if whatever it was behind the green grass curtain, if that was, perhaps, the animal that ate the robin babies a few weeks ago.

There are few times where I really feel my safety is threatened, but tonight as the sunset and darkness fell around me, I did have some concerns.

I moved back over to my main post, and wouldn't you know that animal followed me.
It sits about 20 feet back, and must have vision that can see right through those grasses, or it wouldn't stay back that far.

I had decided to call it a night. I'd gotten some great shots of the twins, and them practicing their flight, and I was suddenly doubting that my mace was going to hold off any critter.

I stood up just as the animal jumped into my clearing, and it jumped back out so fast I didn't even see what it was. All I know is it was under three feet tall because that is how high the grasses folded over.

I guess I'll have to bring Dale, my German shepherd back out for a field day with me.

It was a wonderful day.

I'm looking forward to day 170.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Day 168, Tuesday, 6/24/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles












Hello Eagle Friends,

It was another perfect Minnesota weather day. The temperatures were mid 80s and it was mostly sunny during the time we were out.

Dave and Em came with, and even with all three of us looking, I couldn't find my small lens that must have fallen out of my bag yesterday. Maybe it will still turn up--they have before, sometime frozen in the water, but at least I found them.

We found no activity on nest 7 which probably doesn't surprise you.

The ticket to the real show was nest 1 today.

After tripping and slashing a gash almost deep enough for stitches, both on my palm and my wrist I thought my night was going to be a total disaster, but instead, things changed shortly after my fall.

We were just starting our opening shots when I heard the eaglets pitch.

Daedee flew in with a turtle. "Em, look--another turtle."
He landed and was pushed out of the nest by the eaglets rolling over each other trying to sink their beak into the hard, algae-covered, spiny shell of a snapping turtle. This one was about 10-12 inches long, and it wasn't moving like the one the other day.


Daedee's beak was bloody and there was no doubt that he'd been feeding on the turtle first. D'ODEE managed to capture it from the clutches of his mother and Daniels went and sat up on the west perch watching and waiting for his turn.

D'ODEE tossed it around in the large nest, and carried it, dangling it from his beak while flapping his wings.

Then he ripped into it and at it down to the shell. Daniels came down and took the turtle when D'ODEE had put it to the side of the nest to practice his flight on a new gust of wind.

He let Daniels take a bite or two, then he walked over swiped it out his beak and swallowed the leg in one gulp while Daniels watched. These two eaglets do that to each other often.

Em was working on her story book and in between the eagles moving around feeding on the turtle and waiting for Dancer to come in, I read her a comic book.

We hiked out and moved on to nest 2 where we found 79 day old Terry Gail back on her nest facing the south, and nodding off to sleep.

At nest 6 the twins, Freedom and Soar were sitting off to the edge so I couldn't see them very well.

At nest 5 the twins were both sitting by each other on a low branch off the north side of the nest. One almost fledged trying to move around the other sibling but luckily, as it flew he or she managed to get back into the nest. The eaglet flapped it's wings up and down, and I would guess that it is probably a female eagle. The wing span is almost the entire width of their nest.

Further on the journey there was a raccoon posing for my invisible camera that I had just stuck in the trunk on my way to nest 3 and 4, figuring I wouldn't see anything.
Luckily, it waited for me to circle, turn around, park out of view, kill my engine, open my trunk, clank my camera while taking it off the tripod, and it even let me focus before it ran off just I clicked my shutter on the lovely canary grass that remained.

I hiked out and found about 30 snowy egrets, a few sandhill cranes, and a dozen great blue herons all fishing the drained pool. There were some squabbles amongst each species--a fishing order it seemed as they all were in a long 500 foot straight line as they fished the narrow stream left in front of them where the tadpoles, frogs and fish must have been plentiful.

I stopped to photograph a young barn swallow which reminded me of one we took in years ago that had been injured. I wrote a small inspirational story about him and my new family. That's what I saw in the twinkling of that birds' eyes tonight--Harmony, our little barn swallow.

It was close to dark when I arrived at nest 3 and 4. I shot using infrared, just for effect, but I shot regular shots too. Victory Bell was up on his nest, and I didn't see any birds flying around or perched from my view on nest 4.

I was hoping this is where I lost my lens yesterday, and I searched heavily but didn't find it.

We left the valley just as the owls called out, "Mom, did you hear that owl? Whoo-Whoo," my girl replied back.

"He'll probably answer you, he might even come in so be ready."

It was a great day in the valley.

I'm looking forward to day 169.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, June 23, 2008

Day 167, Monday, 6/23/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles













Hello Eagle Friends,

What a perfect day for watching the eagles! The skies were mostly sunny and the temperature was low high 70s through the evening. Em accompanied me today so I had a lot of giggles and questions, but mostly I enjoyed her wonderful company.

We found no activity on nest 7. Maybe the winds have ruffled up the sticks in the center of the nest, maybe a squirrel or raccoon has been digging inside it, but there is a little rise in the middle and it's not a bird.

The nest 2 eaglet, Terry Gail was back on her nest and was rooting through it for food.

I was surprised to find the Marsh 1a and 1b families. Marsh 1a has 3 goslings that are miniature versions of the adult, only their heights separate them, and the 1b family still has one gosling whose adult plumage is coming in quickly. He stayed right under his parents watch, maybe he saw what happened to his siblings.

At nest 6 we arrived while I saw Linda crossing the marsh with a fish in her talons. I pulled over to watch her bring the fish which looked like a long pike, or a gar, and dropped it off for her 8 week old twins, Freedom and Soar.

We found another painted turtle crossing the road, but this one was making good time, so he didn't need our help moving him to the side.

Unfortunately we were too late for a snake, another unknown, this one looked more like a northern water snake but I just can't be certain when these snakes are juveniles they look nothing like the ones in my field guides. I moved him off the road so whatever animal or bird finds him (which was right where Dick likes to sit, the nest 6 male eagle), won't have to risk being hit from a passing vehicle too.

At nest 5, we found both of the 11 week old twins still perched on the nest, and no appearing to be in any hurry to leave.


At nest 3, Victory Bell was perched on the south side of his nest. I couldn't see much going on at nest 4, other than the egrets and great blue herons perched in the trees.

Em and I found 5 bull frogs, 3 males circling the 2 females in the ten to twelve foot circle, in the three foot deep ditch water.
Em wants a bull frog, but they are tricky frogs to catch, better to raise them up from tadpoles. That will be one of the critters we add to our new pond-in-progress at home.

Em found a huge spider web, with no spider. Sadly, little beetles, crane flies, flies had all been caught in its sticky silk. Em begged me to get them out. I told her, "Well, I wouldn't do this if there was a spider on there--that's his food."

I have to admit there was a small reward in setting free the captives of that web. You never know how many lives will be created from those few, but the look in their little eyes--all thousands of them--said thank you in a way words can't express.

On my second stop at nest 2, Terry Gail had left the nest again. This is nothing new. They do that. They come and go off their nest for months if allowed by the parents.

At least through the fall. I would highly suspect the parents are bringing food back to the nest for her. I just wish I saw more of a relationship with her.

Daedee and Dancer seem to spend more time with their eaglets than any other eagles of the study. Maybe that is how they were raised.

We finished our day at nest 1, staying until the coyotes and owls began their night calls. The eaglets are doing really well. D'ODEE Brian Michael made it to the west perch today. Just as I have seen these past couple years with the twins, they start with only one of them on the west perch, taking turns, but by the end of this week they will have figured out how both can sit together on it.

By this time next week they will have tried the north limb. I'd bet a turtle on it.

Daedee or Dancer kept flying by and causing the eaglets to cry out, and D'ODEE jumped back into the nest. This is also the time where the parents start flying past them with food, but don't come in. They are training them--while still on the nest to keep watch of them and where they lead them which will be crucial to their survival when they leave the nest.

Before they leave the nest they must learn to follow with their eyes, and know when to follow.

It was a great day in the valley.

I'm looking forward to day 168.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Day 166, Sunday, 6/22/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles










Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was an exceptional eagle day in the valley. The temperatures were high 80s, with thunderstorm clouds moving in, but they
didn't produce only a passing sprinkle. The sunset was something to admire and take note of.

Dave and Em came with me for a family day. We found no activity on nest 7.

Daniels Charlie surprised us when he flew up from the nest and landed on the west perch. This a sign that he is ready to start exploring the other tree branches that
are closest to his nest.

Once he masters his flight on and off the west post, he'll likely go for the north limb as have all his predecessors.

D'ODEE watched his brother and he seems to be more of a thinker and makes his moves carefully, without much risk.

This next week will go fast with the twins exhibiting more pre-fledging activity.

As we were watching the dark clouds roll in, wondering if we were going to get soaked by a sudden storm, Daedee flew in.

The twins jumped up and almost knocked her off the nest trying to take the food she offered, a 8-10 inch turtle. I watched as Daniels Charlie stole the prize from her grip, hardly knowing himself, how could he?, that this was "The Turtle".

Four years in a row now, I have watched Daedee bring in "The Turtle" that has launched
the eaglets into their first flights when they lost balance standing on one legs trying to eat the turtle with the other foot.

Oddly, this turtle appeared to still be moving. Some of the shots I have the turtles feet are clearly pressing on Daniels beak, and in the other shots only one foot appears to be pressing off the beak.

He tried to swallow it hole, but it didn't go down. D'ODEE watched him but never tried to take it away from Daniels.

Daedee watched the twins from her Look Out Tree perch and watched us as we left for the night.

At nest 2, we found the nest empty again. I said to Dave and Em, "I'm not falling for that again." Just then, we watched Terry Gail being chased right past her nest by a red-tailed hawk.

I tried to find where she landed in the south grove, but I didn't find her. It's my honor to write, Terry Gail, the 77 day old eaglet of The Mayor and Judy, officially has fledged this June the 22, 2008, which makes her the first eaglet of 2008, the newest eagle of the valley.


At nest 6, Freedom and Soar were up on the nest, both 8 weeks old and I'm hoping to see more of them this next week.

At nest 5, I finally found the second eaglet, it was sitting behind a branch on the north side of the limb. I had thought maybe one had fledged, but instead it had just found a new perch. They are both 11 weeks old and will probably leave the nest this next week.

The colorful clouds of sunset appeared to be casting for roles in the mini movies going on in the sky tonight. I must have shot a hundred images of all the formations and colors.

At nest 3, Victory Bell was up on the nest. Nest 4 I found no eagles that I could see. Remember though, the foliage is very dense there.

Harry and Gary stopped by to say hello, and we talked awhile about where they had seen the wolves. I think this fall I will go back on my Wolves of Whitewater project.

They are by far the most elusive creatures of all critters in this valley.

On the drive out a long, skinny fellow met our path. He looked up behind his black whiskers and studied our move before making his. "Dave give me my camera." I reached for it, but the fast-moving weasel had already "popped" into the ditch.

This next week is supposed to be good weather in the valley, and well-deserved.

I'm looking forward to day 167.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Day 165, Sunday, 6/21/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles























Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a beautiful mid 80s day in the valley. The sun was shining until early evening when the clouds rolled in bringing in the thunderstorms.

Em went with me and we had a great time swapping stories and making up characters for the books she wants to create while we sat looking up at the eaglets.

Dancer had just dropped off dinner as we stepped on the well-traveled, winding trail through the 8 foot grasses. The wind provided comfort from the heat, and the clouds were beginning to fill in all that open blue sky.

The eaglets hardly act like 10 week old eaglets, and I don't think these two at nest 1 will be leaving, by choice, any time soon.
They just are not practicing their flights like they should be at their age. Having some good weather this week may change that
prediction.

Neither eaglet was eating the food brought in, it seemed to be more of a dominance play. Who ever could hold their stance over the food seemed to be the game. Maybe they had eaten well today and just were not hungry. But then again, have you ever known an eaglet not to be hungry?


D'ODEE sat on the west of the nest watching the sun setting, while Daniels Charlie sat in his favorite spot on the south side of the nest looking down at us frequently.

We stayed as late as we could without missing our lighting on the other nests.

On our way to nest 2, there was a huge deer, so big, that I was sure it was the only antler-less buck in our region, but it turned its head and it was a doe. She turned her head in the tall weeds where she had been grazing and then moved on.

At nest 2, Terry Gail was up on the nest crying out and walking to the very edge of the north side of the nest. Many times The Mayor or Judy will sit there, and I think she was just checking to see if one or the other had silently flown in. The early
evening lightening blazed across the bright yellow feet of this young eagle.

I know the shots I took tonight are of the remaining few I will of this eaglet before she fledges, probably this week. She is ready, and a week ago, I thought she had fledged.

We moved on to nest 6 where we found Freedom and Soar, the 8 week old twins perched looking out at their view of the marshes below.

Further up the road we found the big pond's goslings who in just the last week have changed from gosling to young goose.
The shot you see is both the parent and the goslings, can you tell who is who?

The goslings are the shorter ones in the picture.

We found another painted turtle in the road, they must all be starting to lay their eggs, I guess I don't that much about the painted turtles lives, not enough to know why so many of them are sunbathing and spending so much time on the roads this past couple weeks.

The white pelicans that came in a couple days ago had flown off since last night. Maybe they'll return another flock, another day.

For the second day in a row I have only seen one eaglet up on nest 5. I can't be sure if one has fledged or if it is just laying down in the nest at the times I arrive. I did see one of the parents swoop down off the nest, that's the first time in a long time that I have met their timing.

Em kept trying to catch dragonflies and damselflies while I was shooting the nest 5 shots. Then I heard this loud buzz and at the same time Em called out, "Oh mom--that wasn't a dragonfly---it was . . . a hummingbird."

I laughed, "I thought I heard a hummingbird flying around." They make such a loud rustling as they pass you that you never really forget that sound. I don't think I'll ever forget Em's expression either, when she quickly dropped her hands down and pulled her head back as the bird flew past her.

As we drove to nest 3 she said, "I wish I could have a dragonfly for a pet. I've never had one."
"Someday, we'll find one that lives in the marsh and you can watch him grow up."

Then I saw something in the road and pulled over. "What is it mom?"
"I think it's a blandings turtle." I moved picked him up and moved him out of the road so it didn't get hit. With good timing too, 30 seconds later he could have been flattened by a fast-passing truck. He sure was a beautiful turtle. "Can we keep him?"
Why did I know she'd ask that.
"Nope. This is a protected turtle and this is his home."


At nest 3, Victory Bell was up on the nest and the clouds were huge and full of pink hues. They were breath-taking. I posed Em in front of them and shot a few pictures of her holding another monarch caterpillar find. One of her monarch caterpillars changed into a chrysalis, and at the same time, a second one hanging died.

As I changed their cage this morning I watched as two grubs crawled out of the upside down caterpillar's body and dropped into the towel at the bottom of the cage where they pupated. This was the caterpillar that we found by nest 3 that had two black scars on its side. I figured that a wasp or insect had laid their eggs inside it.

The parasite eats the host until the day the stop eating and as they try to change either into their chrysalis or spin their cocoon--out crawls the parasite to go on to the next stage of their life cycle. I have seen this hundreds of times in my life.
Hundreds of times while the caterpillar is trying to spin or turn into their pupated stage.

Today was the first time I photographed it happening.

Then as we were heading of to the truck I noticed a dragonfly sitting low on a grass blade, "Em come see this dragonfly," I called out.

I shot a couple pictures, and as she came running, I said, "Look at that--he only has three wings. The forth one is curled up."

"Oh the poor thing. Why is his wing like that mommy?"

"My guess is he wasn't able to pump his wings when he hatched, he must have been interrupted, or maybe he was injured as a nymph and the wing never developed properly." I reached my finger down to the dragonfly who had a million eyes on me and surprisingly, he stepped up onto my finger. "It looks like you have your pet dragonfly, if you'll take him and take care of him."

"He flew, barely, to Em and he has been by her almost all night. He was grateful for the drinks of water and the small bite of meat we gave him. Dragonflies capture their prey in mid-air, so getting him to feed by hand, is crucial for his survival.

I'm looking forward to day 166.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Friday, June 20, 2008

Day 164, Friday, 6/20/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles






















Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was packed full of promises. My trip to the valley was a warm one, with temperatures already in the mid 80's, and with the humidity it felt like a 100 degrees.

I decided to cover all the other nests first and save nest 1 for last today.

I found no activity on nest 7, although it does appear the nest is either beginning to fall apart, or someone is adding to it.

On my way to nest 2 I found a mother pheasant watching over her little chicks who were hopping, leaping, and trying to fly
over one another. She kept a close on me, peeking out from behind a grass blade, and finally I won her trust and she stepped out into full view with her darlings.

Terry Gail was 75 days old today. She was practicing her flights across the nest when I arrived, but one of her parents must have been near for she stopped flying and started crying out instead.

At nest 6 the twins, Freedom and Soar were both visible and actively picking at something on the nest. They are 7 and 8 weeks old already and I'm expecting to see them practicing their flying and leaping up and down starting this next week. Their nest looks small in comparison to the other eagles.

I counted five turtles basking in the road, and I stopped for a few of them and pushed them off to the side of the road so they didn't get hit.

At nest 5 only one twin was visible, and I wondered if the other fledged.

The puddle with all the tadpoles was dried up when I passed by today. My heart goes out to all the lives that could have been.
It makes me wonder why a toad would lay their eggs in water that is that shallow to begin with, when only a few hops away their offspring would have had at least a 50% chance of survival.

I stopped to photograph and video tape the lives in a ditch pond. There was a huge bull frog calling out, who, unlike Gold Eyes, allowed me close to photograph him, and there was a leopard frog across from him. As I filmed those frogs I noticed
a five spotted fishing spider with its legs spread out and leaving little dimples on the water surface. These spiders grow quite large, I've seen them almost the size of my hand, and they scare a lot of people, but I've never had a problem with them trying to bite me.

I've seen them diving down and coming up with a minnow, or a tadpole. This one today must have been waiting for his opportunity, or he knew he had four frog eyes on him and that was his reason for remaining so motionless.

Victory Bell was up on nest 3.

I found the father eagle for nest 4 sitting high in a dead tree with his wings open and his beak open to keep cool. When he flew
back to his nest a male red-winged blackbird dove at him, and pecked his head.

I went to the whirlpool that the flood created to see if I could find those snakes again today in some good light. I didn't find any though, which makes me wonder if I had found a den at all, or did I happen upon a snake that had just given birth? Which is really early for most species, and that doesn't explain the garter snake that was with them either.

I didn't go to far before finding a pile of turtle eggs that had been dug up and eaten down to the last drop of yolks. There were
about twelve eggs from what I could tell. I felt around to see if there were any others that were missed, but to tell you the truth, I wasn't real comfortable sticking my hand in any hole near where I'd found those unidentified snakes.

Do you remember me telling you about the short-nose gar that I saw being tossed up on the swirls of the whirlpool?
I found two of them dead up on the shore. Maggots crawled in and out of their decaying bodies along with a a horde of
beetles who specialize in cleaning up our shores.

I wonder how many fisherman fishing those marshes and streams know that they are full of short-nose gars with razor sharp teeth?

I hiked out to nest 1 and found the twins hungry and crying up on the nest. I'll close today's story with my experience.



Tonight, with little warning it happened.


A prayer answered. A long-awaited promise, answered in a way, well I
think somewhere it is written, well, here it is: "My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me" (John 10:27) Tonight I believe I had one of those leadings in a way that only the Lord can speak.

There I was sitting at the eagle nest 1, my main nest for these past 4 years when suddenly, strong winds blew in from the west and then the east. Without warning I found myself in a whirlwind of grass chaff and seeds plastering my face, blowing dust in my eyes while debris blew across the black skies that covered the blue.


At first it was just leaves being carried on 40-50 mph winds, then small leaves attached to their branches. I wasn't sure if I was sitting where an invisible tornado was forming, or if the winds were just playing tag before sunset. I watched as the eaglets stood up against the winds, beating their wings as if challenged by them. Within seconds the temperature dropped from 85 to low 70s, or so it seemed.

A light rain followed, but not enough to discourage my wait.

I sat through a second shower, and even stronger winds, but I wasn't going to budge.

The father eagle came in and delivered dinner to his hungry twins who mauled him, forcing him back to flight. In fact, he flew so fast that as I dragged my shutter, panning on him -- he blended in with the winds and was barely visible at all.

From the looks of the skies, I gave up believing tonight would be the night, and decided to call it a good day and began my hike out, back to my truck.

I was almost to my truck when a burst of light poked out of the clouds, and it winked at me. All of a sudden, the rain came down, sprinkling at first, turning into a light shower. As I stared to the west, and watched the backlit rain falling, the winds turned my head to the east, towards the nest a quarter mile back.

Without further hesitation I dropped my gear, threw it all to the ground taking only what I could carry during a fast run back through the ten foots grasses, over the fallen stumps and to the promise I was sure I would have one day, if I was just patient.

If I didn't give up.

If I waited through every storm.

If I trusted Jesus.

As I ran through the rain I had the sudden realization that for every tear I ever had shed I was now enduring my own personal shower. But without the showers, without the sun, there would never have been a race back to the eagles I have loved all these years.

When I arrived back to where I had just left, I discovered through my new tears that God is faithful, and he gave me a sign as his promise.

I would never have expected . . .



. . . there would be a tall, wavering cottonwood tree planted by the river, in a place that I sometimes have called my valley of
the shadow of doubt.

But there it was, a tree with two eaglets and even more unexpected was the mother eagle who flew right through the sky bringing in food for her eaglets, and those of you who know me, know how dear that mother
eagle, Daedee, is to my soul.

But I assure you there has never been a flight such as this not in the four years I have spent there waiting. As the eaglets cried out their ear-piercing screams, hunger cries like never before, they were announcing their mother eagles presence as she flew across the valley, over the river of life, pushing all doubt and any chance of shadows aside.

I had but seconds to choose, video or stills, and as I hit record on my video camera Daedee flew right through the double rainbow and to her little ones cries.

I wish I could share that video with you right now, but maybe, one day God will help me get this video of these God-created eagles lives ready, and made for public viewing.

Of course, that's another promise--and another rainbow in time.

Well, I just thought you might enjoy hearing a true story from a gal who sits with the eagles--eagles that were at the end of my rainbow--far better and worthy than any pot of gold.

May God bless you all.

I'm looking forward to day 165.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Day 163, Thursday, 6/19/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee; Snow Falilng on Eagles
















Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was one of the hottest days of this year with temperature in the low 80s, but I shouldn't complain when the west coast is being hit with 100-118 temperatures.

I had a late start today and spent the late afternoon and evening with nest 1 eaglets, Daniels Charlie and D'ODEE Brian Michael.
They were panting with their beaks open and wings draped down to help keep cool. I can only imagine how unbearable their nest gets with all the direct sun during the day.

As I was sitting there, in the windless chamber of quietness there was a knock on the ground, followed by a short series of puffing sounds. This time I allowed the deer in. I wanted to see just how close she would come if I didn't shoo her off.
I watched the grasses folding back and I could see her buckskin colored coat long before her gentle eyes met mine.

Suddenly, she knew I was there and leapt into the air, above the 7 foot grasses, and stopped about 20 feet to the west.
She snorted a few times, and stomped her foot. Still, I didn't move. I allowed her to come back in to my area. Her fawn was
with her. I didn't know that until about a half hour later when the grasses moved with little rustling noises.

The twins were watching the entire scene from their high view, to them we must have looked like little ants about to meet in a field of grass.

I waited until the sun was almost even with the bluffs and hiked out, knowing I'd need at least an hour and a half to cover the other eagle nests.

At nest 2, Terry Gail was sitting up on the nest and practicing her flights back and forth. Twice she leaned way over the nest looking down with such intense curiosity, that I am now sure that she did not fledge, as I had thought, on Father's Day.
From her antics today, there is no way this bird has left the nest.

Next she leapt up and tackled her food source, thrusting her 4 foot wings on each side forward and folding them over her "catch". Then she picked up the food and lifted up with it and tossed it forward--just like her parents have shown her over and again with each feeding.

She practiced until the sun did go down behind the bluffs, and I moved on.

At nest 6, the twins, Freedom and Soar were both on opposite sides of the nest facing one another. Darkness was fast approaching so I couldn't stay long.

On my way to nest 5, a huge snapping turtle paused on the side of the road. There were vehicles coming from both directions and all I could do is pull over, hope they would notice the turtle too, and slow down. The turtle sat taking its eyes off me and appearing to look at the approach of a sporty teal blue car heading right at him. A near miss, and another turtle saved.

Further ahead a ringneck rooster pheasant lifted his head above what can only be the last remaining dandelion in this valley.

At nest 5 the twins were up on the nest there too. The two of them spend a lot of time sitting together, a lot like Damian Danielle and Dorothy, the 2007 twins from nest 1.

At nest 3 Victory Bell was sitting up on the nest while I shot the video footage, but disappeared out of my view when I went to shoot the stills. Nest 4 was quiet.

I don't know if it was the stillness of the air, the buzzing of the damsel flies and dragonflies as they passed, I don't know if it was the smell of the marsh, or the mosquitos biting me, but when I looked at the perfect calmness of the water wearing the the pink and purple hues of the sunset but when I looked around the marsh by nest 3 it took me back 20 years. On this very night, I would have been finishing the dishes, wiping off the counter in the cabin waiting for dad to say, "Lisa, you want to go back out and see if we catch anything tonight?"

Maybe that's why I feel the need to remain so close to water and the sunsets in late June.

I'm looking forward to day 164.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Day 162, Wednesday, 6/18/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles




Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a balmy 80 degrees in the valley. The sun was shining and we had blue skies the entire time.

Em came with me today. We found no activity at nest 7.

At nest 1 however, the twins were taking turns practicing their flights across the nest. Then Em made up a story about her new
pet salamander they found at her aunts house. It was very impressive, and even the eaglets were leaning with their heads tilted, "Em, look up, the eaglets are listening to you tell your story."

They were probably listening to her sweet, soft voice and her laughter that is contagious.

We waited for Daedee or Dancer to bring in the dinner.

At nest 2 we found Terry Gail perched up on her nest just staring out into the great outdoors.

When we arrived at nest 6 the eaglets were just stepping out of view. I managed a couple shots, but nothing to hold up for the world to see. The gnats were blanketing the upper grasses, rising and dropping in a wave of no less than a hundred thousand
specks at a time.

I shouldn't have said anything, but I did and because I did, I had to stop. It all started with, "Em do you want to see a bunch of
toad tadpoles?"

"Yes. Where?"

"Okay, I'll pull over. Most of them will be dead by tomorrow because the water will dry up by then."
"Mom, we have to save them."
"Em we can't save all those. They will become food for other birds, or insects--you know I would if I could."

She never heard a word I said. She was in the process of dumping out my bottled water, at a buck I might add, to fill it with ditch rainwater--and a few dozen tadpoles--as many she could catch. "Help me mom!" I couldn't resist the innocent pleas
for her desire to save who we could, and soon I found myself scooping them in my hands and dumping them into the little water bottle. They'll become part of our aquatic life in our pond.

By the time we reached nest 5 the eaglets were wrapping up the day and I think, flipping for the sunrise perch in the morning.
I got a couple shots of the twins I have watched grow from a half mile distance.

At nest 3, we found Victory Bell, up on the nest. Em wasn't interested as she was too busy searching for monarch caterpillars, "Mom, this leaf has bite marks, come here and help me find some caterpillars."

Instead, I turned my long lens on her, and I photographed a scene my parents must have seen a thousand times or more when I was her age, flipping through the milkweed like a blackjack dealer dealing a 21.

I'm looking forward to day 163.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Day 161, Tuesday, 6/17/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

Today it was a perfect last Tuesday of Spring. The temperatures were in the high seventies, and the skies a harmonious shade of powder blue. The winds were just enough to cause a reaction in the eaglets, too, the June winds that prompt the pledges for fledging.

I found no activity on nest 7.

The twins, Daniels and DODEE were both sitting on the north side of the nest when I arrived. The grasses are almost 8 feet tall
maybe even taller, and they have gone to seed so it's nearly impossible to hike out without getting your eyes filled full of grass chaff.

I waited through several attempts of their flying acrobatic routines to hopefully capture the evening dinner being served up.
Finally, Dancer did bring in some food, a "bloater". I call them bloaters because they are are dead fish, bloated up and full of water. I'm sure this is how the eagles give water to their eaglets during the long wait until they can fly to the river and drink for themselves.

Dancer flew off the nest as promptly as he landed and joined Daedee on the Look Out Tree perch. Together the parents sat watching their eaglets growing up. Every so often Daedee would let out a loud, "Caaaaa" her words to share, if I am understanding them right.

Whatever she had instructed them in that call, was met with Daniels lifting the fish, and swallowing in it one long 8 inch gulp of a bloated fish, scales, tails and all.

Poor D'ODEE sat there with the most horrible expression on his face, and it was like watching two kids fighting over the last of a bottle of pop on a scorching hot day, and swallowing it down to the last drop.

Dancer and Daedee looked at one another, and D'ODEE looked to them as if to inquire in that stare if there would be a second chance at dinner tonight?

I hiked out and moved on to find Terry Gail sitting up on her nest. She was content there. I think she saw her parents in the area because she was crying out and leaning over the edge of the nest making me wonder if she wanted to follow them.

As I moved on I found a doe in the road waiting until I was only 100 feet away before leaping into the tall grasses.

At nest 6 all I found was the nest. The eaglets were hidden from my view so I moved on to nest 5.

There I found the chorus of bull frogs in the marsh to be a welcome presence for this night. The twins were on the nest batting their wings in each other's faces.

At nest 3, I found Victory Bell facing out watching the sunset, and for a moment, I thought there were two eaglets. It turned out to be just a part of the tree trunk that narrowed and really did look like a silhouette of an eaglet.

I drove down to the last marsh and I thought I'd get a few shots of the fish jumping again but little did I know there was another surprise waiting for me there.

As I walked down the steep embankment, holding a video camera in one hand, and my still camera in the other, I was focused on the swirling of the water and the whirlpool it formed, and not what was underfoot.

I stepped down on a rock and noticed a garter snake slither out, so I put my hand down by the rock and suddenly I had four other baby snakes slither across it. They remained, just sitting there watching me. At first glance, I thought they were massasauga rattlesnakes. The habitat was right, the swampy river bank is were they make their homes and I don't even know how many thoughts raced through my head in that ten seconds where time froze, but you can bet that I didn't move -- rattlesnake or not.

They were cute little critters, but their curiosity had engulfed mine. I have never seen snakes coming back and checking out the surroundings, or sitting there waiting for me to move. Of course, I haven't been near a snake den in a long time. I think I had just stepped on a major rock that must have formed the den, and the flood from last week must have caved it in? Maybe my step opened their trapdoor?

Maybe their entrance had been filled in with sand and silt and my arrival, gave them their departure. I guess I have never watched snakes spilling from a rock before and there is no other way to describe that scene. I managed to grab and turn on my video camera with my free hand, the one that was not being 'watched' by at least four sets of snake eyes, literally.

I shot a ten second clip of them for later identification. The problem is, I can't identify them. They don't look like anything we have here. I don't think they were rattler's. I think they could have been water moccasins. They just didn't have the heads of any other snake, not even the northern water snake which is harmless, but will bite if provoked--like most snakes.

So it remains a mystery. I'm going to go back and check out that spot again during a time of day where there is some light and I can see just how many snakes may be denned up there.

I only had a few frames left so I shot the rising of the full moon over the marshes which was bright orange, huge in the sky and the perfect ending for this day.

Of course, that's when a mother raccoon stepped into view and then her little babies. They all stood up watching me and they made that coon "trill" that you hear in just every movie with a 'coon in it.' I pulled over to watch the mom, but she back-tracked and came up hissing and growling at me. Thank God for auto-windows, because there was one second I was just sure she was going to come flailing at me through my open window.

I gave her a good thirty feet when I pulled over. I didn't even expect to see her again, well, I guess I didn't, but I sure heard her and I wonder if that is the noise I had been hearing out at the eagle nest.

I didn't get home until almost 11 PM. My husband asked, "What's the rule?"
"I know. I know. Don't worry unless I'm not here an hour past sundown. But, I had a little snake incident, followed by a raccoon."

I'm looking forward to day 162.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, June 16, 2008

Day 160, Monday, 6/16/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a gorgeous Monday in the valley with the temperatures remaining in the mid-seventies.

I found no activity on nest 7.

I spent a long time at nest 1 with the twins because I know these are the last days before the real work begins trying to find them in the thickness of the fields.

They cried, endlessly for food but neither parent came in. Still, I enjoyed watching them practicing their flights back and forth from the nest. Daniels Charlie had all intentions of flying off the nest, you could literally see the desire in his expression, but he stopped himself every time by looking down.

I don't blame him, I can hardly imagine what thoughts must swirl through their minds when they come to the edge of all they know and have trusted their entire lives. He though a glance at me, I think he did that so D'ODEE would not think he chickened out. Of course, that's just me putting my thoughts on the situation.

As the sun started going down quickly, I decided I better hike out so I would have time to shoot pictures of the other nests.

I had barely made it past the gully when I heard the deafening screams of the eaglets, the one that echoed "dinner is here" my entire hike back to my truck. I was going to go back and shoot, but I followed my gut instinct to head out.

On the highway, sunning himself in the last ray of sun hitting the asphalt was a 8 inch long, red-bellied snake. I bent down and picked him up off the highway. "I've seen three of your siblings run over in that same spot this month--not a good place to sun bathe."

I know he didn't really understand me, but at least he didn't bite me.

I moved on to nest 2 and to my surprise I found Terry Gail on the nest. I know--I said she did, and I thought she did, and I can only go off my observations of each day. I didn't actually see her in the grove of trees, it only sounded like she was there. Maybe she returned to the nest. They always do. So I really don't have an explanation for Terry's reappearance, other than I was wrong in my observations of yesterday, or I was right, and she had simply returned home for food.

The sun was going down fast and I was shooting the scenes as fast as time allowed. I stopped by a noticed the hundreds of pepper sized tadpoles swimming so carefree all along a long puddle that would soon dry up. Who was I to tell them they were
in danger?

I moved on to find the twins up on nest 6. Not much else going on, except for the sudden hatch of a zillion biting-gnats, wedging their way into my eyelashes, taking what bites they could steal off me.


At another marsh the young Canada goose goslings were all sitting up on the muddy embankment watching the sunset and somehow blinking away those awful gnats. The always on guard parents allowed me to take a few images of their ever changing gosling's who are about 9-10 weeks old now.

At nest 5, I found a yellow caterpillar twisting and turning one leg over the other, and after observing him for awhile, I left not really sure if he was coming or going.

The twins were up on the nest, but sitting so still it took the wind to shake them into raising their wings.

At nest 3 Victory Bell was tearing at something he was eating in the nest. Nothing was going on at nest 4.

As I left the valley I decided to shoot one last image of the rising moon over the valley so dear to my heart.

I'm looking forward to day 161.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Day 159, Sunday, 6/15/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

















Hello Eagle Friends,

Happy Father's Day guys. Today was a perfect spring day in the valley. It was 78 degrees when we arrived and mostly sunny.
Dave and Em came with so we could spend Father's Day together.

There was no activity at nest 7.

At nest 1 we watched Dancer fly in with a fish as we hiked in. I heard a few screams over who was eating first, and by the time we reached the post D'ODEE was sitting on the edge of the nest staring down at us. Sometimes eating left over's is better than
not eating at all.

This next two-three weeks the parents will be bringing the food by, not always in to the nest and they'll call their eaglets trying to encourage them to fly off the nest and follow them. The food will become more scarce too.

After Daniels Charlie finished eating he joined D'ODEE up on the top of the nest and cried out a few times as he saw one of the parents flying in the distance.


When we were getting back in the truck I noticed some fairly large black caterpillars feeding on the top of a branch. "Oh Em, I know where all those caterpillars were coming from that you pulled out of the puddle last week."
"Where?"
"Look up." There were at least a hundred hungry mouths slurping leaves in to their grinding, chewing, mowing mouths.
I lowered the branch and Em took a few home.
"What kind are they mom?"
"I think those are morning cloak caterpillars, another of my favorites."

Here it is midnight and they'll about eaten me out of leaves and home. I'll have to bring more leaves home tomorrow.

Time passed fast and we hiked out to go to nest 2. There was a empty feeling about that nest before I even looked for Terry
Gail. Then we heard an eaglet crying out, but it wasn't coming from the nest, but the grove of trees to the south. Terry Gail
officially fledged today. She turned 70 days old today.

When I left the valley at dusk last night I stopped and was going to take a shot of her on the north side of her nest, but then I decided it was too dark. So I have this picture in my head of her walking around on the north side of the nest in the dark, little did I know I'd arrive today and she'd be gone.

I knew from the way she was flying the other day it would not be long before she left the nest. I have never seen an eaglet
fly so majestically and with just perfect control of their wings on the winds at such a young age. She was born to fly early.

I think her picking Father's Day to make her flight to eaglehood was a symbol for all our fathers to fly higher and reach the winds that hold your dreams.

I left a note for Headquarters that Terry Gail fledged. They'll get that in the morning when they open up. Maybe it'll make someone smile, maybe it'll make someone look up in the sky, maybe it'll give someone that warm feeling of accomplishment.

At nest 6 the twins were up on the nest. All I saw was silhouette's but those black detail-free figures were our eaglets, Freedom and Soar.

At nest 5 the twins were up on the nest there too. They'll be leaving sometime in the next couple weeks.

At nest 3 we found Victory Bell up on the north side of his nest picking through food. I looked for eagles around nest 4, but
they were not visible today.

Em and me found a newly hatched bullhead swimming in a puddle left over from the flood. Another puddle had four or more
tiny fish of an unknown species. They were transparent and only a few centimeters long. It's amazing what life can survive in
a few tablespoons of water.

From daphnia, to baby dragonflies, snails, bullheads and minnows, sometimes the best viewing of a marsh isn't the big waters but the small puddles that offer a miniature glimpse of life.

As we left the valley the deer were just coming out to graze. I kept looking for bucks, but found only the does. We laughed as one was feeding nearby and she finally realized I was there. The look on her face was worth more than a thousand words.

It was a great day. It was late and we were all hungry so we drove to an A & W in St. Charles, Minnesota. I was laughing when three kids maybe 2, 5, and 8 were ordering their dinner with their parents. Then the oldest child said, "You and dad take that romantic spot there, we'll all sit up here at the counter."

How precious there concern was that mom and dad had a romantic moment to themselves, in between, "I'm missing a chicken strip." "You can't take mine---Mom." "Dad. She took my fries."

I'm looking forward to day 160.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Day 158, Saturday, 6/14/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



























Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was the first sunny day to hit 80 degrees in the valley in a long time, perhaps the first time this year. Rochester was 82 degrees when I left.

I found no activity at nest 7 today, except for more turkey vultures above the bluff.

I hiked out to my post at nest 1 and found D'ODEE up on the nest looking down at me. I saw Dancer fly over and do a nest check which caused the eaglets to cry out.

Tomorrow D'ODEE will join Daniels Charlie at nine weeks of age. It hardly seems possible that all this time has passed with so much still to learn from these magnificent brown feathered creatures.

As I sat there watching the eaglets, and the sun beginning its descent over the highest bluffs, I heard a stomp, but the second time I thought it was a car door getting slammed shut on the highway. A few seconds later I heard, "Wssp. Wssp. Wssp."
I knew something was about a foot away on the other side of the 6 foot grasses.

The next thing I saw was the doe's white tail rise above the grasses before I even finished standing up to see who was visiting my four foot circle in hundreds of acres of grasses. I wonder why this doe stays so close to me, every day where ever I go, so does she. I wonder if she's the same doe from last year, the one with the triplets following her same paths.

D'ODEE stood up and began flapping his wings across the nest as Daniels Charlie watched.

I went back over to my south post to watch for the parents, hoping to get a shot of them bringing in the food.

The bright yellow colors of a one half inch long beetle caught my attention, so I did a few close up shots of him.

I moved on to nest 2 where I found 9 week old Terry Gail up on the nest preening and calling out for her parents. Then she went into the nest and began feeding herself, taking bites off an unknown food source.

At nest 6 the haze was covering the nest, but I managed to get a few shots of the eaglets up on their nest. The gnats and mosquito hatch was something of a challenge to avoid.

On my way to nest 5 I found a huge painted turtle sunning himself on the shoulder of the road above a ditch filled with flood water. Who but God knows, maybe he washed up from another pond. He looked so content, can you see the peace in his eyes?
This turtle was about 12 inches long and 8 inches wide, but it was so thick, I thought at first pass it was a Blanding's turtle.

I figure he is probably 15-20 years old, if not more.

At nest 5 I picked some milkweed leaves for my daughter's monarch caterpillars and I happened to pull off the top of another plant that had two more caterpillars. She shares my love for the monarchs and like most children loves to watch the caterpillars grow up.

The twins were up on the nest but again they were blocked by the haze of the humidity. There was something stirring in the marsh and then it stopped right in front of me. It was a good sized muskrat, eyeing me cautiously from behind the tall grasses.

Poppa, the father red-winged blackbird and his other female mate were attending their nest. I don't know how their nest didn't get flooded, maybe they built that one up a little higher.

As I neared nest 3 there was an odd looking object standing 4 feet high, dead center in the road ahead of me. It turned out to be a branch with numerous Mountain Dew cans hung on it. The road was washed out about 8 inches below the highway from the flood. I thought it was very ingenious and kind that someone had stopped and taken the time to mark it with reflective
cans so evening motorists would catch a glimpse of it and avoid that part of the road.

The water had receded back into the marshes, with huge gouges in the roads' shoulder leaving their mark, along with a raccoon who stamped his one footprint into the wet sand.

I shot images of nest 3s Victory Bell up on the south side of his nest, and I could barely find nest 4. There was a chorus of bull frogs in the flooded ditch on the other side of the highway and I wondered if that frog missed Gold-Eyes, the bog frog as much as I did.

There was a family of goslings on the back waters of the marsh by nest 3. Their gosling's adult plumage was coming in through the baby down.

I looked down to his floating bog, which was covered in duck weed and other plant debris, but I didn't find him. As I was picking up my cameras to move on I noticed a flash of yellow, black and blue. I kneeled down to a one foot long puddle to find
a blue gill sunfish gasping for air in the warm 1 inch deep puddle, barely covering his gills.

He had a gash on the upper side ripped deep into his back, and hardly a chance for survival. He died by the time I finished
shooting the damselflies at sunset.

On my way out I found the Marsh 1a and 1b families sitting on the edge of the marsh, but the scene I liked most was the reflection of the father Marsh 1a goose in the sunset on the marsh.

I'm looking forward to day 159.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Friday, June 13, 2008

Day 157, Friday, 6/14/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles























Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a gorgeous day in the valley considering the weather we have had these past few days. I arrived in the valley while the sun was shining and the temperature was in the low 70s. I hope we can have a few days of sunshine to dry out the fields, and the overflowing banks of the creeks and rivers.

At nest 7 I watched a turkey vulture descend from the nest area. Still, I wasn't convinced that was a turkey vulture nest, maybe he was picking through old bones on it.

Dale, my German shepherd and me hiked out to nest 1. The twins were both up on the nest and D'ODEE was practicing his
flight across the nest while Daniels Charlie watched. Daniels Charlie turned 9 weeks old today, and the eaglets don't seem to be ready for fledging. They have hardly even begun to use their wings to practice flying.

We'll see what this next week brings. I think God and Mother Nature gave all the eaglets of this valley a short season to learn how to grow into their wings, with the foul weather this season. I'm sure God had a reason to slow down an otherwise very eventful weeks 7-10 with these eaglets, we just don't know what that answer is, yet, but will in time.

Maybe there will be a flood, maybe keeping the little ones on the nest longer will prevent them from drowning. Maybe there is another reason. I am glad to have the extra time with them if that is how it will be.

At nest 2, 68 day old Terry Gail had just finished practicing her flights across her nest when we arrived. I was there in time to grab a few seconds of video as she folded her wings to her sides and stared across the valley into the setting sun.

At nest 6 the eaglets were not visible nor were either of the parents.

When I reached nest 5 I realized how much the water had come up. The marsh was filled to the grasses and slopping over.
The twins were up on their nest back in the slough and for them, it was probably a good thing they had not fledged with everything flooded back there.

I could hear a slurp, slurp, sloshing in the tall grasses, and I knew it was a deer but I couldn't see it. I could tell that she or he was at least to the top of her shoulders in that cold water just by the way the water sounded sliding off its back. That's what drew me into the red-winged blackbird nest.

I had not mentioned that the nest was abandoned, the dad was there for several days, but the female never came back. I figured something happened to her. Three birds lives stopped short from the lack of incubation seemed a cruel sentence for
something so helpless, three eggs forever unborn.

Now, a few weeks later, I stood where I stood three weeks before, however, today all I saw was the water running over the nest like a "river of life" flowing onward, and what was to be the water of life instead became the bath for a passing deer.

How many times do I question what God has done, only to find later he had his reasons. Had the nest not been abandoned, I would have stood today knowing three baby red-winged blackbirds had drowned, with no hope for survival. Instead, God spared their lives.

That's how I see it. Of course, you all have your own ideas and opinions.

When I arrived at nest 3 and 4 I was shocked to find the highway shoulder eroded, and a rushing river pouring from one marsh to the other, a steady stream of fish, debris, and those lovely water lotus were nowhere in sight. I couldn't hike out as the river must have overflowed into the oxbows, which must have overflowed into the sloughs which must have overflowed into the marsh.

I shot my pictures from the edge of the highway with my tripod ankle deep in the swelling of the water. Then I noticed how the ditch had swollen and was overflowing from the culverts that run from the marsh into the ditch. I found a shaken and half-drown damselfly clinging to a plant stem.

How could I deny life to a creature dressed in such a vibrant blues. I reached down and he gladly accepted my finger perch.

That is when I noticed a tiny ditch fish swim past my foot. I guess now that they have risen to the shoulder, they should be called "shoulder fish" instead of ditch fish.

I took another look at the rushing water and as I watched a fish flopping up trying to stay in the first marsh I noticed the floating bog had risen to a new height, too. I thought about old Gold-Eyes, the bull frog who lived there and I knew he
had been washed away to bigger ponds, and I have to admit I'm going to miss that frog, but I know he'll be happier joining the bigger frogs in the bigger marshes.

I drove down to the last marsh and found the road was flooded in several low areas. When I arrived the water was rushing so fast and furiously I made Dale stay in the truck. There were whirlpools swirling in whirlpools. I watched a long thin short-nose gar get tossed out of the water and land by me on the grasses. It fought the current but was pulled back under the water, back into the whirlpools.

Then I watched as red horse, suckers, and trout were whipped out of the culvert into the air, others leapt from one whirlpool into another and it was horrifying to watch. I saw a pure black animal approaching the rapidly rising water, and it looked like
a black morph fox, but I couldn't be sure.

The noise from the rushing water was deafening and I stayed until filling my last few shots. I saved a couple, just in case I found something else on my way home.

As I traveled back I noticed four sandhill cranes on a dry spot on a flooded marsh. One was laying down, and I presumed that to be the mother. There were two little baby cranes, as little as three feet can be. The father was with them. What amazed me was a white tailed deer standing right behind the cranes.

I had little chance for a still shot, even pushing my ISO to 1600, but I had a chance for video and that is what I reached for. As I filmed I heard the slosh, slosh, slosh, slosh sound of four hooves stirring the seemingly calm marsh that is life to so many in this valley.

I'm looking forward to day 158.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Day 156, Thursday, 6/12/08, Year Four Dancer & Daeedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



























Hello Eagle Friends,

Today I went out early to cover what I could, in case it did flood. We are under a flash flood warning, most if not all of southeast Minnesota until tomorrow.
It was cooler, a mere 67 degrees when I arrived in the valley. The skies looked threatening but it was the rising of the creeks and rivers that I focused on.

I stopped at the Whitewater River that runs through the Lazy D campground. The river was well over the banks and one of the owners was by me observing the same scene.
"Are you evacuating campers, and having people move out their trailers?"
She shook her head, and my heart went out to her for what they had just rebuilt was
on the verge of being destroyed again. "Not yet. My husband is coming down to take a look first."

I felt as helpless as her watching the water rise and spill up onto their new asphalt.

I hiked out to nest 1 and right away Dale, my German shepherd picked up the scent of that animal. We were there less than ten seconds when the animal lunged back towards the river.

The sound of the river was enough to make me uneasy. The twins were up on the nest,
both were soaked and drying out under an sunless sky. I didn't stay long today due to the quick rising river, and I know from the other floods that where I was standing would be 12 feet under should the river flash flood.

That and I was unsure if the roads would be passable by nest 3-6.

At nest 2 I was fortunate to arrive at time when 67 day old Terry Gail was up on the nest leaping into the air, into a perfect flight. I thought she was going to fly right out of the south east opening and towards the river, but instead she hovered and flew
about five feet up and off the nest before coming down and landing.

The eaglets wait for a strong wind gust to perform these mini flights, so it is true, that the eagle flies on the gusts.

At nest 6 the river was already over the banks and pouring into puddles in the turn-around off the highway. There were three goose families led their gosling's right into the fast moving current, and in a blink all were swept downstream.

The twins, Freedom and Soar were up on their nest, peering down at the 100 foot drop while their father, Dick watched them from his perch. My guess is that food may be
harder to find while the water swirls around creating chocolate whirlpools; with only a chance of fins.

I drove deeper into the valley, unsure if by taking the next curve if the road would be submerged ahead where the river runs parallel to it.

When I arrived the rive had swallowed most of the shoulder and the current was rushing
but not wild, like I have seen it, so I moved on trusting that I'd have a road to drive back on when I finished up ahead.

At nest 5 the twins were up on the nest practicing their leaps into the air. They are
coming up on 10 weeks and will be leaving the nest any day in the next couple weeks.

I watched a small, about a one week old monarch caterpillar chewing holes in the smallest leaves at the tip of the milkweed plant. I watched a couple small beetles nymphs,resting on grass stems not even knowing what dangers could be coming their way if that river keeps rising.

At nest 3, Victory Bell was up on the nest. Dale wanted to go explore, so we hiked back a little ways and I'm glad I let him lead for he lead me to the most lovely
water lotus I have seen this spring.

I probably shot a dozen images trying to capture the feeling I had when I saw it. Then
I watched a female red-winged black bird hoping from lily pad to lily pad and I tried to imagine what that would feel like if we could be as weightless as a bird, hoping across lily pads on a rising marsh.

Another female red-winged blackbird was either gathering grasses for her nest, or puling out soaked grasses from her nest that was submerged. I don't know why these birds choose to nest so close to the water, to me it would seem that even a fishing spider would carry away their young.

I saw a few deer out on the roads where their normal watering holes were swollen with the rising of the creeks. On my last pass through the water had come up higher and with more fury than on my first pass. It would take another few inches of rain to flood the area. We have that rain coming this weekend, unless the storms shift again.

By nest 1 I noticed a female pheasant guiding her "perfect by the dozen" chicks out of the road and into the ditch grasses. I was laughing as I watched them fly up and over each other in a "leap frog" game of staying closest to mom. Of course, if you were on this valley's menu of bite-sized appetizer's, you'd stay close to your mom too.

On my drive home I met a thunderstorm scene that moved slowly, drifting across a pasture far, but to beyond the cows with their calves.

As I left I said my prayers for the safety to those valley inhabitants, the people their, their businesses, and the eagles who nest there.

I'm looking forward to day 157.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Day 155, Wednesday, 6/11/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles




















Hello Eagle Friends,

As I type this, lightening bolts are striking Rochester, Minnesota in every direction, the thunder is crashing through the rains, and my lights are flickering. We are under so many warnings and watches, perhaps it's quicker to write the situations we aren't under: hurricane's, earthquakes, and there are no threats of volcanic eruptions.

I was blessed to arrive in the valley during the only few hours today when the rains were not coming down, long enough to do my entire project. However, don't think even for a second that I did my project in anything less that soaked sneakers. All I had left that was dry were my old sneakers with broken laces. At home there is a deck-long
line where my boots are drying out. My rain bibs didn't stay dry beyond the first 100 yards into the 5-6 foot grasses on my hike to nest 1.

It was mid-seventies, but it felt much cooler with the cold rain I was wearing.

Several times this season I have wondered if perhaps I'm being prepped for a rain forest expedition. With all this non-stop wet weather experience, at least I know what camera bodies, lenses, and rain gear that I would not take with me.

That animal was out by me again. I scared it back into the brush, but it only goes about 50 feet away and then circles me again. Sometimes it comes in so close I can hear it exhale. I'll bring Dale out again tomorrow.

The twins were eagerly watching the skies for the return of their parents with dinner.
After a short while, and several shots I watched them dive down in the nest and I looked to see Dancer coming in at record speed.

He dropped off a fish and the two nine week old eaglets leapt upon each other trying to get their talons into the wet, slimy fish. Dancer hopped over to the edge of the nest and immediately began pulling up a long stick that was perpendicular to the rest of the sticks. I wondered if he had brushed against it as he landed, and saw it as a hazard, or was he pulling it up to make the nest uncomfortable. "Stirring up the nest," as it mentions in the bible. Of course the bible states it is the mother eagle that stirs up the nest, so maybe he was just moving the stick so he didn't hit it again when landing.

At nest 2 Terry Gail sat on the edge of the nest, but didn't offer anything more than a few glances for today's notes.

At nest 6 the twins were moving around but the lighting was so poor I couldn't get the shots I wanted. There was however, the most wonderful storm cloud above their marsh, it looked like a soot-colored tornado painted on the shades of gray in the sky and it stretched three miles in length, connecting nest 1 to nest 6, or there abouts.

At nest 5 the twins were milling about and the clouds were darkening. I wasn't sure if a tornado would drop at any second, or if the storm would pass without incident.

At nest 3 and 4 I shot the distant scenes of the two nests. I could see Victory Bell up facing the storm clouds, brave little eaglet that he is. He reminded me of his sibling that died, Tookie, from the nest that collapsed in 2005. Something in his calm
something in his fearlessness showed a strength we all could learn from.

On my way back I saw a doe in the road drinking from the puddles there and she is always looking over her shoulder when I find her, if it is the same doe, and I wonder if she has a fawn hiding in the grasses that she turns to watch.

As I left the valley the rains poured down again, and I was thankful that I was driving home in soaked shoes, but my cameras and equipment was spared the weight of the rain.

Canon doesn't cover mud or rain that gets inside their camera bodies. That is a word for all you that buy that extended coverage too.

I'm looking forward to day 156.

See you on the journey--

Lisa




The twins were up on the nest at nest 1.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Day 154, Tuesday, 6/10/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles




















Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a beautiful day in the valley. The skies were blue most of the afternoon and it was 76 degrees. By early evening the clouds rolled in and offered an impressive array of swirls of grays and pinks.

I found no activity on nest 7 today.

At nest 2, 65 day old Terry Gail was sitting up on the nest with her eyes following something I couldn't see from my viewpoint. Her sharp cries told me it was probably mom or dad with dinner.

I moved on to nest 6. The twins were only visible for a moment before they moved into a location on that nest that was out of my view.

As I moved along towards nest 5 I stopped to shoot a picture of a great blue heron fishing in a shallow marsh with arrowhead plants. Then an osprey flew overhead, so I followed him. He moved towards the big pond and I followed him there too. He seemed to be narrowing in on a fish below.

I watched him as he circled small tight circles, then suddenly he folded his wings in and dropped head first into the pool below. There was a loud splash and I watched this eagle-sized bird rise like a Phoenix from a fire, out of the water with a good sized fish cinched in his talons.

Up he lifted, with such grace, it seemed effortless and he flew off into the distance to feast on his find.

At nest 5 the twins were buddied up side by side.

At nest 3, Victory Bell was up on the nest tearing at some food. I watched two eagles flying around nest 4. I looked for Golden Eyes, the bullfrog, but he was not there. Maybe a turtle did eat him, that or a huge fish.

I hiked out to nest 1 and found the twins up on the nest, crying out. Daniels Charlie called out for attention as one of the parents flew by. Finally the two eaglets settled. While they sat there side by side in the nest it was like watching one bird with four eyes, for their heads moved in unison and their eyes focused on the same birds of the air.

I found a doe nursing her fawn in a meadow and watched her as she stepped over the fawn to get a better picture of me. She watched me cautiously for about five minutes before moving off with her fawn following closely behind. I was just ready to leave when another doe came in.

She looked right at me, and then I noticed the buck watching me. His antlers were only about six inches high and covered in velvet. He watched me as I shot his image, and another doe walked behind him. The sun had already gone down behind the bluffs so I had minimal light for the shots, rare is the opportunity for a buck to step into the view in the first place, so I'm thankful for the shots I got.

Of course my card crashed while downloading and I got all my images from today, except a handful of the eaglets and the buck, and the doe with her fawn. Thank God for good recovery programs. It took awhile, but I got my images back.

On my way home from my studio tonight I noticed a couple lumps in the road. As I neared them I noticed one was already dead. A drake mallard. The other was a young, but fully feathered duckling. The scene was enough to make my eyes fill with tears.

As I stopped my truck the duckling didn't even get up. His father (assumed) was dead in the road just inches away from him. There were no siblings or mother in sight. Just one lone mallard duckling who was just starting to get his green head, and he didn't know how to fly because his wings were not fully feathered.

I can't explain how we have a duckling this mature this early in the year when most other duckling's are still down covered and chasing the tips of their parents tails. Perhaps he was an easter duckling that someone raised, then turned loose down at the lake where he found a mallard to hang out with. That is one possibility.

I'm glad you didn't have to see that duckling laying down by the dead drake, faithful to him, even with the approach of my headlights and truck. It bothered me all the way home, in fact, I circled back just to make sure the duckling was still in the grass. That's when I realized there was only one moral to this story: John 15:13: "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."

I'm looking forward to day 155.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, June 9, 2008

Day 153, Monday, 6/9/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



















Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a gorgeous mid-seventies degree day in the valley. The sun was out, the skies were full of the pink clouds, and it looked like a scene out of The Cat in the Hat by sunset.

Em came with and I'm so glad she did. We found so many creatures out and about, that and I taught her how to bring a hover bee in to land on your finger. After a few tries she could bring them right to her and the giggles were worth the entire trip.

While 8 week old Daniels Charlie was preening and D'ODEE was just starting to peak up from the basement of the nest, both twins went into a long call which meant food was coming in via mom or dad. Both tripped over each other to gain the best foothold of the food, once it came in.

Dancer brought in what looked like a turtle, but the light was low, and I had to pan to get any shot, it could have been something else, too. The twins both dove onto their father trying to get control of the food, and pushed him right off the nest and onto the west limb. He looked at Em and me and then he left the nest tree to watch over the kids from the Look Out tree.

D'ODEE had the food, but Daniels Charlie was able to pull it away from him, so D'ODEE came back up out of the nest and his expression to me looked like a face of defeat.

We left and moved on to nest 2 where we found 9 week old Terry Gail calling out for her dinner too.

At nest 6 Linda or Dick was perched by the nest and their 6 week old twins, Freedom and Soar were stirring about on the nest.

The sun was just setting behind the bluffs when we drove to nest 5. I stopped to photograph a doe who was feeding on the edge of the road, but another doe blew my cover by snorting out a warning call that sent the first doe leaping into the grasses.

At nest 5 I could see the twins but no parents were around that I could find. Em and me looked for caterpillars and found a few. She sure enjoys watching nature and how it changes into new life forms. There is no better season than caterpillar season.

She takes good care of them and pampers them like mini poodles. Good thing they haven't invented ways to dye your caterpillars in pastel hues, but maybe that will be a thing of the future.

We found the county line goslings, all six goslings have made it another week. They were trailing off into the depths of the marsh and led my eyes to a nest 5 eagle who had been sitting there all along. He was being bombarded by a male red-winged blackbird and every time the bird hit him the eagle would cry out. I wonder why the male red-winged blackbirds relentlessly
take after the male eagles? They go after the eaglets and females, too, but with a different tolerance.

An immature eagle flew over me and disappeared into the last seconds of the sunset.
At nest 3, Victory Bell was up and flapping across his nest. Nest 4 eagles were out of sight. The color of the sky was so
gorgeous that I shot it over and over, for every few minutes it was like an entirely new canvas. As I was shooting another scene
Em called out, "Mom, mom, look at it!"
I turned around so fast I thought a bear or coyote was coming in. Instead, I watched her pointing to the sunset and continuing, "Mom, isn't that just so beautiful?"
"Yes, I think God painted that one just for you tonight."

As we drove back I stopped several times to pick up tree frogs and American toads out of the road. Most of the toads were locked on a female and the vehicles were running them over by the dozen. Big mounds of mushed toads where the two never had a chance to get out of the way.

It was one of the best days we have had in the valley.

I'm looking forward to day 154.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Day 152, Sunday, 6/8/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles

















Hello Eagle Friends,

As I type these words tonight I crave the comfort of a warm house, and a blanket to suffocate the chill that snuck into me while sitting in the rain all day. It was 75 degrees when I reached the valley today. We had storms all night, all morning and on and off thunderstorms all afternoon and into the evening.

I shot most of my images today at ISO 800 and 1/10th to 1/30th of a second. It gave me practice panning as almost every subject was on the go.

There was no activity on nest 7, unless you count the rain.

I decided to do my other nests first and save nest 1 for last. With the grass nearing 6 feet already I knew the scene well, and I'd be swimming to the eagle post.

At nest 2, Terry Gail was sitting up in the rain. I had hoped to get a few shots of her moving around, flying up, or at least moving, but she was content with the rain falling at her sides. She's nine weeks old today. Nine. She could leap into the air any second, any day now. I hope I'll be there when it happens.

At nest 6 the youngest twin turned 6 weeks old today. The other is 6 weeks and 2 days of age. Since they will likely be the last eaglets to fledge I'm hoping I'll get to spend more time with them as their time comes.

At nest 5 I found two hungry caterpillars munching on grasses. One dropped out of sight and the other just kept on chewing away, leaving little crescent shaped patterns in the grass blade. I could see the eaglets, barely, but I could see them. Both were still on the nest and I noticed one flapping and slapping the other in its face.

The skies were so dark and full of rain it seemed like it was 9:30 at night. I wondered what critters I'd find out with me once I got out to nest 1.

At nest 3 I could see Victory Bell picking at food in the nest. Nest 4 had no eagles flying in or out.

The dragonflies, and hover bees, and damselflies all were flying from the grass patches to the grassy shores, I stopped to photograph a blue damselfly or darner I'm not sure what they call these little skinny ones. Email me if you know.
After I shot his picture I noticed old gold eyes, the bull frog sitting on his bog, staring back and I think he may have even been smirking at me.

"Oh, that's real funny. Wise guy-eh? Well, Gold-Eyes, you just go ahead and sit there on that little floating bog but I should warn you, I set three turtles free in your spot, a couple years ago. They might just get hungry for a gold-eyed bull frog."

I shrugged, and looked back and I think he must have heard my thoughts, "I'll see you tomorrow," because he turned partially to meet my gaze, or else he was tuning on the shroud of insects I was stirring up with each step.

Wouldn't you know it. I looked at the time and I really for the first time ever, believed I really was going to be home at 8:15 PM,
real-time, not Lisa Time. I no more than let that pride go to my head and I took a bend and found a, you guessed it, another snapping turtle in the road. What is it with snapping turtles this week?

This one was different. He was sporting a golden colored snail, moving at a pace that would beat this turtle. I went to get my tripod, but for some reason my truck was sealed shut from the heavy rains and I couldn't even wedge it open. So after trying for five minutes I shook it off and climbed through the back seat over my piles of outdoor gear and pulled my tripod out.

The turtle took it and I pulled her off to the grasses. I don't know how many people would stop for a snapping turtle. I've seen many run over on the various highways. I don't know how many turtles I've moved off the roads, but I would guess were in triple digits now. I know that besides me, the only one it really made a difference to, was those turtles that were moved.

I geared up for nest 1 and the skies rumbled more than they had been all day. The lightening flashed a few times, but mostly the rain just would not let up. I hiked out and I was soaked even through my rain bibs. I could feel a river of water sloshing around in each boot. That's why I go barefoot in my boots.

I'd rather not have to walk around all day with wet socks sticking to my feet too. Besides, when I am barefoot in my boots and they fill up with water, it sometimes reminds me of walking on the edges of Steamboat Lake where we vacationed; except I don't have to worry about crawdaddies pinching my toes.

The twins were drenched. They were so wet and looked so cold that I would have given them my rain gear if I could. They would shake it all off and then I would watch the heavy rains soak them again and again. The rains seemed to keep them close together. Daniels Charlie acts so much like Damian Danielle, the older twin from last year, that I find myself calling him Damian at times.

D'ODEE leaned in under the umbrella of his brother and when I saw this I thought of all the solo eaglets in their nests in rainstorms and I wondered who would be their cover, who would take the rain so only the drips would land on their backs?
As I watched these eaglets growing up, I've noticed how strong their bond has become these last couple weeks.

Today's example just strengthens their bond even more. I soaked all my gear, my bags, my cameras, and even the inside of my rain poncho, and don't even think for a moment these rains would not have found a way inside. I had to guess at focusing most of my shots of the twins today as the lenses were fogging up so badly, and then the light dropped to nil.

I think we are due for some clear weather tomorrow. These eaglets have never seen hot weather for more than a day or two.
They have all been blessed for having the cooler weather even though they endured more storms, and snow.

As I hiked out, I could hear the thunder of the rising of the river. Chocolate soup, that's what it was now, a frothy, stirred with earth and eagles dreams of flight.

I'm looking forward to day 153.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Day 151, Saturday, 6/7/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles
























Hello Eagle Friends,

I think the storms have calmed down long enough to write without worrying that my electricity will flicker down to a halt.

It was 76 degrees when we reached the valley today under overcast skies and the threat of on and off showers. That all changed about the second we stopped the truck to hike out to nest 1. Suddenly there were tornado warnings issued in surrounding areas.

Knowing that weather changes fast, we opted for a very short stay. It started sprinkling as we began our hike, but by the time
we reached our post the rain was pouring down. Daniels Charlie was up on the nest and he didn't seem to mind the rain at all.
Every so often he would shake off the rain that had collected on his feathers.

We kept hoping D'ODEE would come into view, but where he was on the nest he was probably not going to move just for us.

We left and headed to nest 2. As I passed a small dark object on the road something within me screamed to stop. I backed up and told Em, "We have another animal to help."
"What is it mom, a toad?"
"Nope. I'm not really sure what kind, but it is a baby bird."
I lifted her up and she was shaking from being wet and cold. I don't know how the truck in front of me had missed her, and I didn't even want to think how many other vehicles had drove over her or passed her. "Mom, we would have missed her wouldn't we if we had done the other nests first?"
"Your right Em. She probably would have been hit. Maybe it wasn't such a bad thing us doing nest 1 first and getting soaked."

Em pulled a towel out and began dabbing her dry. I was scanning trees for a nest, still unsure what kind bird this was. It sounded much like a baby robin the couple chirps we heard, but it was too small to be a robin, and hardly big enough to have fledged. My guess is the storms from last night and all morning blew this bird out of its nest, or blew the nest tree down.

It wasn't until the bird dried that we discovered it was a nuthatch. Em drew him in her journal, that and a tornado that I told her to draw. The weather forecast was changing by the minute and we once again found ourselves in the safest place in six surrounding counties.

I laughed when she handed me her journal and said, "I drew a cow by the tornado."
I know she was thinking of the movie Twister, where a cow gets picked up by a tornado, twice. I just loved her sketch of the nuthatch.

At nest 2 we found 62 day old Terry Gail flying up off the nest a few inches, and I shot several pictures as the large brown and white speckled eaglet flew over to the opposite side of the nest. This eagle could fledge anytime now, but lets hope it's not during the storms tomorrow or the next few days.

We found 3 gosling's who I believe were the Marsh 1a or 1b gosling's there was another family with only two gosling's but they were too young to be the two that marsh 1b Canada geese were rearing. This was probably a different pair of Canada geese.

At nest 6 we found the twins up on the nest.

At nest 5 they twins were dark shadows in the overcast light. The skies were layers upon layers of dark and light clouds. The tornado warnings in a couple counties were reissued, and now they posted a flash flood warning for our county where we were for the night anyway.

A car stopped and the lady driver asked if I'd seen a couple guys walking. I told them I had not. She said they left to canoe the river this morning at 5 AM, and had not returned yet. I hope they made t out okay. I hope they didn't get hung up on the Twin tree.

At nest 3 I saw Victory Bell on the back side of the nest and took a few shots. I couldn't see anything on nest 4. Then I stopped to photograph the damselflies and dragonflies who would zig across the tops of the grasses as i took each step, probably knocking them into the air while they were trying to stay dry under the curl of a grass blade.

Then I saw him. Old gold eyes the big bullfrog that has had Em and me searching for over a couple weeks trying to locate him.
Well I finally saw him, he blew his cover answering a frog in the ditch with the ditch fish. I stepped down on the ground by him, all I had to do was step over one foot onto the little chunk of grasses where he was.

I stepped down and my left leg dropped to my knee, and would have gone further down had I not thrown my weight back quickly from this floating bog. I don't find only a handful of those a year, but I'm forever on guard for them. The water was probably only 6 feet deep there, but I didn't feel like falling in just for a frog.

As we headed back two young men from Northfield, Minnesota stopped to ask me some questions on the river. They didn't know there was a flash flood warning. I showed them on their map where to pull over in their canoe and walk the sandbar to avoid the Twin tree.

They had never been down here and the other young man said, "We took the corner and my mouth just dropped it was so beautiful here."

"Welcome to the valley--one trip and you'll want to come back again and again."
"We work all the time and we had this weekend off so I called him." He pointed to his friend and continued, "I told him, we're going."

I just love to see that spark in people's eyes when they reach this place. It is like they have found a treasure. Mostly, I enjoy how they appreciate the beauty.

Up the road a little further a snapping turtle was sitting in the middle again. "No, not again." I though chuckling at the turtle the other day that I got out of the road.

This one moved quickly for a turtle, almost a sprint for him. He was safe once off the road. Then up the road it happened again. A second turtle who didn't want to budge and then he insisted on going up the bluff, against all my efforts to turn him in the right direction. So it is true, you can lead a turtle to water but you can't make him drink, and if he wants to climb a bluff first then you let him.

I saw an adult eagle fishing over a marsh by nest 3 and it was probably one of the parents. I hardly had my lens focused when the eagle spotted something ahead and took after it. It returned to the stump with "empty-talons."

A young cottontail caught our attention, him and his little sibling in the grasses. This one had been caught by an animal for his fur was all missing from the back of his neck. He also had the appearance of being severely dehydrated. His bones were showing though his skin and his eyes were sunk in. Maybe he contracted rabies. You just never know what or who you'll meet
while in this valley, but whoever it is, where ever you meet them, there will be a story in their eyes.

As we checked one last time for the cry of a nuthatch on our way home, a deer stepped out into the light fog that had settled on the highway and she bowed her head and gave me a half second to capture the beauty of her face.

We left and when I reached the old barn and windmill that I shot pictures of during last winter's blizzard, I decided to stop and photograph it during a tornado warning.

The weather settled down once we got home.

I'm looking forward to day 152.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Friday, June 6, 2008

Day 150, Friday, 6/6/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles






















Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a wonderful afternoon and evening in the valley. We had wind advisories until 6 PM, and temperatures in the mid 70s again today. The thunderstorms are supposed to increase over the weekend and I thought the storm was moving in early tonight as I watched the dark clouds rolling across the sky while sitting at my nest 1 post.


Daniels Charlie was not practicing his flight jumps, but rather he focused on preening every feather on his wings, back and tail.
D'ODEE Brian Michael only stretched out his wings twice, hardly moving from his cozy and shady spot behind the west limb.

Daedee came circling in around 18:30, and the eaglets were looking at her talons dropping as quickly as I was, they wanted food, I wanted the shot of her lugging in a huge fish. Instead, the screams of the eaglets increased as she neared the nest, and landed on a branch at the top of the tree.

Daedee looked down into her nest and swayed back and forth on the branch while Daniels Charlie continued to cry out. He kept looking for ways to reach her. She continued to chirp soft little notes out to her kids which I believe is the same chirps she'll use to coax them out onto the limbs. She is the best mother eagle, always patient with her eaglets and I know she'll graduate these two eaglets in the next few weeks from nest and eaglets to the skies wearing newly-fledged eagles.

As I waited for Dancer to come in to do a feeding, a hover bee flew over by me dancing on the air between the blades of grass and hovering, something they do best, and then it landed on the grass blade.

Dale my German shepherd was with me. The grass is 4 to 5 tall now and I let him run ahead as we hike out to the nests and he will go about ten feet before he senses or hears no one following and he backtracks making sure I am with him.

On my hike out I somehow got caught on a branch and tumbled over a stump, stood up and tripped on another. I crashed my head into my tripod, which is not a new experience and I have the scars to prove that, but this time I went face down smashing into the nettles and then the stump. I sat up in a daze for a moment with a face that felt like it had been shot up with Novocain knowing how lucky I was not to have knocked myself out. I felt my forehead and ran my fingers over the new rise on it. I had a good lump on my head, but I have a tough head.

I looked down at the ground and I had not even noticed in all the commotion that Dale was pressed up me staring into my eyes with his ears up. Good old Dale was right there, had been all along, guarding me and making sure I was okay. I patted his head and said, "I'm okay. Thanks good boy." He gave me a look that was so precious that I had to thank God for having him there tonight.


61 day old Terry Gail was up on her nest when we stopped there. Just in the last week she has had so many light feathers come in on her chest that she doesn't even look like the same eaglet.

All the other nests were quiet today. I sat roadside watching four Canada geese guarding their gosling's in the tall grasses, eating right to that last ray of light. There were more in the shallow area of a back marsh. I was too far away for a good shot in the low light, but I sure enjoyed watching the straggler running to catch up with his family. His little wings flapping up and down opposite of his big webbed feet slapping up the water.


I hung around for awhile though and watched the deer grazing in the fields, two of them with a
raccoon the size of bobcat. Seriously, this raccoon could have a career as one of those animal models. He had a lot of personality and it was so interesting to watch him skirting around the deer.



I'm looking forward to day 151.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Day 149, Thursday, 6/5/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles




























Hello Eagle Friends,

Today we had overcast skies and temperatures in the mid 70s and with severe thunderstorms warnings on the horizon coupled with a flash flood watch for the entire state of Minnesota.

I wasn't worried about any flooding today, tomorrow, however, may be a different story. As I work on this writing lightening and thunder is breaking my concentration
and demanding a piece of todays' story.

I stopped at nest 7 first today and found there was no activity there.

At nest 1 I hardly had stepped out of my vehicle when I noticed three female tiger swallowtails flitting across the sandy path and pausing to take drink from the earth.
What a beautiful sight it was to enjoy, photographing it was secondary.

Then a click beetle flew in and hit me and then flew into the grasses. Those beetles are so bottom heavy I'm surprised they fly at all. Every June, so far, I have been flown into by a reckless beetle who can't maneuver his own weight.

Daedee was on the nest with the twins when I arrived at my main post. The clouds had filled in the partially sunny skies and the air became still. It was so humid I sat wishing that the rain would fall quickly, but it didn't.

Daedee flew over to the north side of the nest so I hiked to my north post and photographed her sitting with her right foot slung over a thick branch above the north limb. The north limb is not for sissies.

Daniels Charlie watched his mom, and she seemed to be communicating to him to try climbing on the branch. He would stand up and flap with all his might, but he just
went up and down. He wanted to go to her. She was only a few feet out, and you just see from his attempts that it didn't seem to be that hard of a challenge, until he tried.

Seven, eight, ten tries, and D'ODEE just sat watching him make every effort to reach their mom. I gave that eaglet an A+ for effort and bravery today. He is not even fully
feathered and he is trying to fly like a ten week old eaglet.


I think it is wise of Daedee to begin their training now to teach them how to reach the perches off the nest, but if one should miss on their attempt there would be a small chance they may not rise faster than their plummeting to the ground.

I left and moved on to nest 2 where I found Terry Gail perched on the edge of her nest. I wish I was able to document more interaction with her parents. I realize
each nest and pair of eagles have their own internal instincts on how to be a parent,
which from what I have been able to document varies greatly from new parents to experienced, older and wiser eagles.

Nest six was quiet as was nest 3,4, and 5. I found a weevil on a flower and I found it
a scene I wanted to capture. I wanted that shot because it brought me back to a time
I shot those same flowers with my first camera in the fields when I was just a kid.
I think I still have those old slides, Kodachrome 64, or maybe it was Exctachromes with the month and year stamped in the upper right hand corner in red ink.

Back in those days, I waited eagerly to hand over my hard-earned $7.50 for a processed roll of 36 exposure slides which came in a little cardboard package.

When I got back to Rochester we had a surprise friends date for Em. Her friends were back in town from Missouri and we only told her that we had a wonderful night planned.
The look on her face when she saw her friends was so precious.

The kids had a wonderful time, and I got to catch up on old times with their mom, and
another girlfriend. The night went too fast and we soon found ourselves ready to turn into pumpkins if we didn't get home before the stroke of midnight.

I don't know if God could have given me dearer, truer friends. So when I was gathering my shots for my blog tonight, well, early this morning, I realized that those three butterflies gathered and flying together were a mirror to the night ahead.

I'm looking forward to day 150.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Day 148, Wednesday, 6/4/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



























Hello Eagle Friends,

Today was a perfect weather day in the valley. It was 78 degrees when I arrived and mostly cloudy. I brought Dale with, my male German shepherd. He was so happy to
have a field day again he laid across my seat with his head on my center console the
entire trip down.

He picked up the critter trail immediately and began spraying his marks on the others.
I'm guessing it was probably a coyote, maybe it was my lone wolf. Maybe it was the mate that didn't get shot a couple months ago a few miles away.

Daedee was on the nest with twins. I am thinking that this time next week she's going to be working with the kids teaching them how to step out on the west limb. Daniels Charlie and her preened each other, but each time she would reach to him he would come back and bite the tip of her beak.

He seemed to expect her to sit still however, while he reached over to preen her.

D'ODEE didn't care about preening at all. In fact, all he did was stand up, stretch and walk over and try and steal that fish again from under the clutches of Daedee's talons.

I know it was a fish because he stabbed a free bite and swallowed it quickly. When you are the younger eaglet, and have had to fight to eat all your life, you can probably understand why he eats first, then preens.

In two hours we watched dozens of turkey vultures circling the area. Then Dale began to chew on a willow sapling and it broke it off. He handed me the three foot tree and
I snapped it in half tossing one stick into the tall grasses.

He retrieved it and I threw it again, and again, and again. Then I threw it further out and he sniffed, and circled, but didn't seem to know where it went. I was still watching as he came back through the grasses and snatched the other half of the tree
and went back out to where I had thrown the first half of the tree, circled and came
trotting back to me setting the second half of the tree in my hand.

He was trying to convince me that this was the first stick, and by the expression on his face, I think he knew I wasn't buying it.

We left and moved on to nest 2 where we found 59 day old Terry Gail up on the nest.
She was peaking out from behind the trunk that is on the west side of their nest.

There was nothing going on at nest 6. I looked around for Dick or Linda on their favorite perches, but didn't see them there, or above the river or streams they like to fish.

I found the gosling's that are getting their adult feathers. This one in the photo was sitting so contently on the edge of the marsh that he seemed to be enjoying the sounds
of nature.

At nest 5 the twins were walking around the nest, but the parents must have been on the hunt or their dinner as they were alone, too.

At nest 3 and 4 I didn't find any activity going on. I shot a few images of the area scenes and started heading back home.

I found a few deer out early tonight. One had several ticks hanging off it's head, and bites so numerous that I wondered if it would become ill.

Then I noticed a blueish-purple flower, the name escapes me, but it is one of my favorite June flowers and there were two of them in the ditch across from where I found that first snapping turtle in the road a couple days back.

I photographed it in the flat, overcast, shadow free light, and I popped it with flash and then just with the ambient light and I decided to bring it home for Em. She wanted to come with today but I wouldn't let her with not knowing what critter was out at nest 1 yesterday.

I thought it would cheer her up. As I type it sits in a little cup of water, folded up and asleep until the first light of tomorrow.


I'm looking forward to day 149.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Day 147, Tuesday, 6/3/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles


















Hello Eagle Friends,

We're just in from the valley and happy to report that there are fawns, fawns, and more fawns. Fawns nuzzling their mom, fawns nudging their mom to be fed, fawns being groomed by their moms. It was a cool 61 degrees while we were down in the valley this afternoon.

Luckily, we didn't encounter any rain while out, other than a light sprinkling a couple times, nothing that really was more than a sip to a leafhopper.

We started at nest 1 today. Daniels Charlie was up on the nest when we arrived. We were only there about a half hour when Daedee flew in with a small fish, but fish is food and two hungry eaglets don't think about size, only what they can swallow in one bite.

As was the case with D'ODEE stealing the fish and gobbling it down in one gulp as
Daedee watched him, not even trying to take it away. There was something else stirring
in the grasses. Something grunting, and at first I thought it was a bear, but as I stood up I saw a beige colored animal that was now to the north of us and had circled us that entire half hour.

I pulled out my bear mace for the first time this year and shot it in the direction of the animal. Something I would not of done had the animal not come in so close. It pumped about a 20 foot stream and I heard the animal rustling into the gully and then we watched all the birds fly out of the bushes, and that's when we packed to go.

A sheriff friend in the valley there told me there was a cougar in the area, and that is just not something I want to tangle with. I wanted to believe it was a deer, but I saw the animal and it was too small to be a doe and too big to be a fawn. That means it could only be coyotes, cougars, or an unidentified, tan animal that grunts.

We met a deer at the White Wolf post leaping up on our the hike out, but she was too far ahead of us to be the animal in the gully. Birds don't all fly out of an area when a deer walks in, but they do when a fox, or coyote, or a big dog or an unidentified tan animals comes in.

I kept wondering if that was the animal that ate those poor robins? I'll be bringing my top field dog, Dale, with me tomorrow. He will protect me. I wouldn't
even worry too much about it, but that animal literally followed us in.

We heard rustling and soft noises only 3-4 minutes after we arrived and throughout the time we were there it semi-circled us, finally closing the circle, drawing closer just as Daedee brought in that fish.

Em won't be able to come with until I find out what kind of animal is out there, and what it is doing. I really wanted to believe it was just a deer leaning down, but in my heart of hearts, I knew it wasn't. Too wide, too short, too inquisitive.

We moved on to nest 2 and 58 day old Terry Gail was up on the nest walking around calling out to her parents. Then she did something that I knew signaled the beginning of the departure from the nest.

She walked all the way over to the very last stick on the edge of the nest, this is where her mother sits and I'm sure will lead her off the nest when her time comes.
Terry Gail leaned down and dropped her head so low I thought she'd fall head over tail and be airborne.

She didn't fall out. She then walked to the center of the nest where her dad sits, The Mayor. She stretched her neck up looking at the perch hanging over the nest. She left no doubt in my mind that she was thinking about ways to reach these other perches.

She could fledge as early as next week. She probably won't, but she could. I can hardly believe we are so far into the season with the eagles already. The hardest
work begins once they fledge, so I'm trying to gear up for that time.

We moved on to nest 6 and didn't find anything going on there so we left.

Up the road I found Dick the nest 6 male sitting in a short tree over a small stream
fishing for a meal for his eaglets, and I'm sure a few bites for himself. The nest 6 eagles are big eagles. They are at least 6 inches bigger than Daedee and Dancer.

At nest 5 it was quiet too.

I didn't find any snappers in the road today, and that hole was filled in by cars and big trucks running over it all day. At least the one turtle who was trying to lay her eggs in the road, under the road, didn't become a pot hole filler, which is probably what would have happened had I left her there last night.

At nest 3 I found Victory Bell in the shadows of the nest. It was almost dark when we arrived. Nest 4 is blocked by foliage now, as you that have been reading know, but I still look around for the eagles to see where they are in their nest area.

I didn't find them today. However I did find an entire marsh filled with blooming water lotus and I was moved by their beauty. Things change so fast in the valley that missing one day, I could have missed an entire marsh with white delicate flowers dancing across the lily pads.

It was 8 years ago today I lost my father and when I stared into the marsh and into those blossoms, somehow their sudden appearance connected me to my dad and gave me
the peace I sought today.

As we traveled back we found deer everywhere. Suddenly there were two does standing over a stream so I paused to photograph them, and got several shots before they picked up our scent and fled.

By nest 1 this beautiful doe was standing frozen along the edge of the woods. She never even flinched as I snapped off a few shots.

As we drove to the edge of the valley I saw a young fawn prancing around and then running up to its mom trying to nurse. The doe kept stepping over the young fawn, never giving it a chance to nurse.

She was busy feeding on the edge of the woods and where ever she walked the little fawn hopped, leapt, and turned in circles biting its tail while spinning in the direction of its mom.

It turns out that on the day I thought I'd find it difficult to find beauty, a day I'd be wrapped up emotionally in the loss of my father's passing, that in seeking peace I stirred up good memories of our time together, and the animals, the eagles, and those
lovely flowers all had a part lifting me back to my dad.

It was a wonderful day in the valley.

I'm looking forward to day 148.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Monday, June 2, 2008

Day 146, Monday, 6/2/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles



























Hello Eagle Friends,

It was a high 70s, rainy day today. When it wasn't raining it was drizzling, and when it wasn't drizzling everything was so soaked that the entire valley sprinkled as I walked through it. It felt good to pull out my plastic rain jacket from my trunk. For the first time since last fall, it really does seem like spring is staying.

I found no activity on nest 7.

I hiked out to nest 1 and found Daedee, the female eagle up on her afternoon perch on the Lookout Tree. She peered back at me through the clumped, wet leaves of the tall, lanky cottonwood tree. Her expression and the mood demanded this be shot B&W. That is what I shot it as. That'll be in my book, if it doesn't get cut.

Daniels Charlie at 7 weeks was flapping up and he actually lifted up off the nest, which seems early. I wonder when these two will fledge. I wonder if they'll fall out of the nest, get blown out, or just go on their own when they are ready.

The rain starting coming down heavy so I pulled out my poncho to cover my gear and shot from underneath. I think every photographer should have the experience of shooting under the cover of a bright yellow rain poncho draped over his or her tripod holding a huge tank lens and camera body while the rain pours through the arms and hood.

So there shooting in near-impossible lighting, minding my shutter speeds and F/stops when I heard a loud "Ppphhh. Phh. Phhh," come up behind me.

I don't know if there are even words that would express the exhilaration of having a doe that came up and snorted while I was under my poncho, but maybe just one word,"Oh," could lead to an entire short story or essay contest for an outdoor writer
club to finish that scene.

By the time I lifted my yellow veil to meet her eyeballs to muzzle, she was already gone.

D'ODEE Brian Michael stood up in the nest and began beating his wings and knocked them straight into Daniels Charlie. Then the two eaglets sat by each and the scene with the rain falling on their slicked back feathers was something to remember.

I hiked out and ran into Steve from the DNR. He said, "You're pretty dedicated to be out there in this weather. You must know those eagles as well as your family."
I said, "Yes, I think I do. I poured a half gallon of water out of my boots."
He said, "I better keep moving or I'll end up as soaked as you are."

Terry Gail the 57 day old eaglet of nest 2 was sitting under an overhanging branch, and appeared to be relatively dry in comparison to Daniels and D'ODEE. The light was fading fast with the heavy cloud cover so I moved on to nest 6.

I found no activity there at all. I think it was about a mile later that all the critters seemed to be stirring. I found a family of geese whose little gosling's are in their "teddy bear" stage. They are so adorable with their adult feathers coming in covering up their bright yellow down.

One goose stood up and ran towards his mom, flapping his one foot wings on each side as he ran.

Then I did a U-Turn to reach nest 5. There was a toad, the third one of the day, that I went right over, but didn't hit. I picked him up and put him on my notebook to make a couple notes. He hoped over and sat by my goose sketch of the gosling's I had just
photographed.

The twins were stirring and flapping their wings on nest 5. I shot the controlled burn area for day 50, and that's when I noticed three Baltimore orioles; two of them males, chasing the female.

The wildflowers were so vibrant going up the bluff, unfortunately the light was so dim it didn't offer the conditions I wanted for capturing their beauty.

As I was driving down to nest 3 & 4, my eyes caught sight of a large object in the middle of the highway. I figured it was a woodchuck drinking rain water out of the gravel, but as I neared the critter I could clearly see trouble.

I pulled over and stepped out of my truck and walked around the 2 foot snapper. She had both hind legs deep in a hole she had carved under the gravel highway. She reminded me of four or five foot snapper I found years ago up north digging a hole in the sand.

I didn't know how I was going to move this turtle, but even with the night traffic, minimal I didn't want to leave her at the mercy of the next vehicles' driver swerving to miss her in the dark.

I looked around for a big stick, but found none. So I reached in and took my tripod out. I figured she'd bit it and I could drag her. My plan worked. It took a couple tries but she allowed me to pull her off to the side of the road.

One she was safe I went back to bury her eggs, if any. I looked into the hole, then reached down under the highway and felt around, but there were no eggs.

I shot my nest 3 and 4 pictures, and found no eagles up or out flying. I did find a serene looking white flower that towered over the marsh by nest 4. That flower had so much peace waving around in the wind, that it made all the rain of today worth every drop.

I headed back, ready for dinner and maybe even a cat nap as I was feeling the day with all the activity and extra duties put on me this past few days. I was enjoying watching the fog settling across the road, the valley, the bluffs and was just thinking about pulling over and shooting a couple scenics when I looked down and saw a large object in the middle of the road.

I knew that I knew God just does not put two huge snapping turtles in your path, in less than an hours' time without trying to tell you something.

I got pulled over and stared the wild beast in the eyes. This one wore a "don't mess with me" attitude in every ounce of it's 40 lb body, at least 40 lbs.

Once again, not a huge stick in site. I had to really think about offering my tripod again for this "turtle in the road" removal. I barely had the leg out when he snatched it shaking it from my hands with such force I almost dropped it. He was like a pit bull refusing to release this metal leg.

Then I looked down and saw a tiny one inch green inchworm, inching across this
turtles shell. That to me showed me that even the littlest creatures can walk on
the mighty shells of those kings and queens of life's ponds.

I'm looking forward to day 147.

See you on the journey--

Lisa

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Day 145, Sunday, 6/1/08, Year Four Dancer & Daedee: Snow Falling on Eagles





















Hello Eagle Friends,

It was hot and muggy today. The temperature was 81 degrees when we reached the valley
and pure sunshine.

There was no activity on nest 7.

At nest 2 we found Judy feeding Terry Gail, mostly taking the first bites for herself while 8 week old Terry Gail begged. She blocked her eaglet feeding with the food facing us and Terry Gail was learning a lesson about the dominant eagles eat first.

At nest 6 we saw the twins, Freedom and Soar. Not much was out for wildlife on their pond so we moved on.

We found only one twin posed sitting up on the nest at nest 5. There were gosling's swimming through thick green algae and scum and Em asked, "How do they even swim through all that mom?"

It's an acquired skill no doubt. I think I'd get tangled up in that muck before making it to the shoreline like these little four week old gosling's and their parents.

At nest 3 we found Victory Bell up on the nest, but he was hard to see as the shadows of the late afternoon fell across his nest. I didn't see any eagles flying around or perched at nest 4.

I showed Em some monarch eggs on a couple leaves of a milkweed plant and she was entranced by the beauty contained in such a small ivory oval egg. She is anxious to watch the caterpillars hatch and follow along on their journey as much as she is on the red admiral caterpillars in the nettles.

Their are about 100 water lotus that are ready to bloom and I'm sure that will happen in the next couple days. Em can't wait to see them all bloomed as it is a sight that you only see a few weeks each spring.

The damselflies hatched by the dozens and try as she might to catch one, they eluded her efforts and teased her by flying around her.

We both tried to find the a bull frog that would call out endlessly, and within close proximity to where we were standing, but he remained hidden from our view in the grasses.

We moved on to nest 1 and hiked out after watching a scarlet red male cardinal taking a bath in a puddle with a goldfinch sipping from the same puddle. That was interesting to watch.

Daedee was up on the nest with the twins who were calling out eagerly, but we couldn't see them. From the irridescent feather stuck on her beak I was sure she had a wild turkey up on the nest.

After some time had passed, Daniels Charlie lifted his head and I was able to get a few shots of him with Daedee. Then Dancer flew in unexpectedly, as D'ODEE let out a piercing scream and ducked into the nest. Dancer had a fish and the twins literally pounced on him to take it.

Daedee intervened and took the fish and offered bites to the eaglets. Dancer flew over to Riverside North and watched over his family. After about ten minutes he began calling on non-stop.

"What's the matter Dancer?" I asked the eagle, knowing he would answer in his eagle speak. He looked down in front of us and called out and that is when I noticed what all the commotion was about.

There was a doe feeding about 20 feet away from Em and me.
"Em, quietly and slowly stand up and look in front of the tripod. There is a deer there." Em did as she was told and came back down to my knee high level and whispered, "Oh mom she is so beautiful."
She's never had a deer walk up to her before. "Be still and she'll come in."
She did, she walked about ten feet from us before realizing we were people, and bolted. Three giant leaps and she cleared the gully and was tromping through the underbrush on the other side of the gully.

"She probably has a fawn out here somewhere." I told Em.

We moved on to check the caterpillar in the nettles and he had doubled in size since yesterday which didn't surprise me.

I thank God for every moment today. What a day for exploring all the creatures, their habitats, and their behavior but mostly what a wonderful time Em and me had.

I'm looking forward to day 146.

See you on the journey--

Lisa