Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Mass influx

Sandhill Cranes coming in to roost for the night.
Starting in mid March, about 500,000 Sandhill cranes arrive at the Platt River from Texas, New Mexico and Mexico.  They then spend the next month fattening up on waste corn (from the fields) and invertebrates (earthworms, snails and insect larvae) before the continue on to their nesting grounds.  It is truly an impressive sight to see so many birds acting as a single entity.  There can be as many as 12,000 in any half mile stretch of the river. They filter in during the evening to roost in the shallow areas of the river and then, if you are patient, you can watch the whole mass of them take off in the morning to head out to the fields.  Interestingly, 90% of their diet during this time comes from the waste corn in the fields.  Before there was the corn, the cranes ate starchy tubers from the surrounding wetlands, most of which no longer exist.  We must be careful how we change this environment in the future.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Cedars and Waxwings

Cedar trees are my favorite type of trees.  You always find them surviving in the most amazing and harsh places.  The harsh climates often warp their shapes and causes them to curve in the most extreme manners.  You can also find them growing absolutely straight.  A single tree can survive when large portions of it have been damaged and they are some of the oldest trees on earth.  Also, they bring my favorite bird - Cedar Waxwings.  I love the waxwing's quiet, high pitched "weeee" call and they look like they were designed in the 20s.