
Outdoor Adventures with Gary Lee - Vol. 217
The temperature here this morning was forty much cooler than the folks to the south and west of us are feeling. It rained two and a half inches of rain here on Saturday, which got a few wet who thought the rain was coming later and they got caught out in a downpour which soaked many to the skin. It rained so hard it washed a little gully going down the road to the pond.
Happy to report the male Loon which had the fishing plug in his tongue is back with his family this week on Limekiln Lake doing chick care as the female worked hard catching fish for their chick. If you’re out and about on many of our local lakes, there are Loon families out there with you. If you are fishing using live bait or plug and lures that look like live bait don’t fish near one of these families as Loons can swim very fast under water and take a bite at one of your baits or lures, then you have a problem, and the Loon has a problem your hook in its tongue. So be careful out there and don’t fish near a Loon or a Loon family.
Our last three nights of Loon banding went very well as we caught several new adult Loons and a few Loons that we had banded in years past. It is good to catch a banded Loon as we can check the pollutant levels in their blood and feather samples from this year to what it had the first time it was caught and banded. The first night we went to Abanakee Lake where there were three pairs of Loons nesting this year. Two pairs had chicks and the third pair just lost their nest this week. Some one had put in a new platform up at the upper end of the lake and the pair there had two chicks. The crews went up and caught both adults and the two chicks and they were taken back up to that territory after processing. The pair just above the causeway had gone under the causeway with their family and one adult and one chick was caught and processed. We quit just after three AM, so it was an early night to go to bed.
The second night we started on First Lake of the Fulton Chain which also had three Loon territories two of which had chicks and one nest failed. The outlet pair had two chicks and we found them along the south shore. I caught the female of the pair and we put that on Don Andrew’s lap in the boat, then I caught the banded male of the pair and got it on my lap to go ashore for processing. Being banded, it doesn’t take as long to process a bird, we only need to take feather and blood samples, bill measurements, take their weight and they can be released. If the plastic bands are older, they sometimes are replaced with duplicate bands. Since we have been banding since 1998, we do come across some bands missing or so weak they need replacing. We went right back out to try for the Dog Island pair who had one chick. We found the male, or he found us, and I had him in the net and he got out. He was a banded Loon and he let the whole south shore know that he was mad and woke up the neighborhood. The other boat moved in and caught the female and chick to take in for processing. We moved up to Second Lake where there was a pair with two chicks. It was very foggy, and we found the pair who are both banded, and they didn’t want to be caught. The chicks were a little bigger and they were divers also after their parents told them to hide. In the fog, they stopped calling and we couldn’t find them again, so we quit there. We dropped the boats and went to Gibbs Lake where there was a pair and two chicks. Carrying all the gear and one canoe down to the lake which was solid fog when you turned on your light. The catch crew saw both adults and the two chicks a couple times but never got close enough in the fog to catch them and we quit at sunrise when the Loons could see the canoe.
The third night was visitor night at Sixth Lake where we had about fifteen visitors some of whom got to hold a chick. We only used one boat so we could use the other one later if we got time and didn’t have to wash it. The crew went out and caught the banded female and one chick and then went out and caught the male and other chick. They all got processed and released with lots of picture taking. We left there and went to Dart’s Lake where there was a pair and one chick. It was very foggy and neither of these birds would hold for the light in the fog and none were caught so we moved up the road to Twitchell Lake. Going up in elevation the fog wasn’t too bad, and we had about an hour of catch time where the pair and two chicks were in sight of the launch. The catch crew had the male in the net twice and he climbed out both times, did the same thing to me last year, smart Loon. The female disappeared so the crew caught both chicks who gave a little blood and feathers and were released too small to band. Just goes to show that you don’t catch them all just like fishing. We caught 29 Loons in six nights, 13 adults, five which were banded, and 16 chicks which were all too small to band, but most gave us a blood and feather sample.
Butterflies are loving the milkweeds, but that’s another story. See ya.
Photo above: Sixth Lake Loon banding by Kathy Ruscitto
Foggy Sunrise Gibbs Lake by me