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User / Nature by Travis Bonovsky / Sets / Birds of Autumn
677 items

N 25 B 696 C 4 E Oct 29, 2018 F Oct 29, 2018
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Sugar Maples from the cemetery in background

N 8 B 96 C 2 E Oct 21, 2024 F Oct 21, 2024
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An Osprey right after it detected something in the lake below. It did dive right into the water and catch a fish, but it was on the opposite side of the lake and pretty far away. Then, a mature Bald Eagle chased it, hoping to get ahold of the fish. This is likely the latest date I've ever seen an Osprey. Polk County, WI 10/21/24

N 7 B 65 C 1 E Oct 20, 2024 F Oct 21, 2024
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Yesterday evening, we watched a few hundred Sandhill Cranes coming in to roost at Crex Meadows State Wildlife Area in Grantsburg, Wisconsin. They are such large and graceful flyers, but they really do tend to look a little comical when they put their "landing gear" down. There was quite a crowd of people to witness this sight, and we were one of about twenty different vehicles parked on Main Dike Road. Burnett County, WI 10/20/24

N 18 B 103 C 4 E Oct 18, 2024 F Oct 19, 2024
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The female Red-bellied Woodpecker is still returning frequently to my natural "stump feeder" for black oil sunflower seeds. This was taken just before 6pm yesterday evening and the sun was pretty low already. Not long after, I watched the sun set, and was surprised at how early it was -just 6:23pm. Hennepin County, MN 10/18/24

N 10 B 119 C 4 E Oct 14, 2024 F Oct 15, 2024
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If you've read some of my posts about American Woodcock, you know they are among my very favorite birds. And as strange as these birds are, my particular encounters with them (nearly) every Autumn is almost equally as strange. I'll say that originally, this species "found me" versus the other way around. One day, I was casually walking a paved road in a large cemetery near my workplace. I had already been "birding" here frequently for a couple of years, but my mind was blown when an American Woodcock came bobbing across the mowed, green lawn grass, right out in the open. I mean, that bird would have been impossible to NOT notice, even by the average "non birder."

This first encounter set the stage for my obsession with Woodcocks, and I've spent the last 10 years searching for them every October. I can say confidently that I've had some AMAZING looks at these birds over the years, but I'll also say that I've invested ENORMOUS amounts of time for those opportunities. The times I do find them are always the exception, and I couldn't even tell you how many times I've come up empty-handed. In the process, I've learned a heck of a lot about when, where (and how) to find them -with some degree of reliability. I guess I’d say they were more reliable in the early years. They’ve become noticeably more difficult to locate over the past 4 to 5 years though. And, in last fall of 2023, I failed to locate one at all. It was kind of heartbreaking, though expected. To be honest, I wasn’t 100% sure they’d ever return. Which is why this particular encounter was pretty special to me. It just so happened to be on the very same day that I saw that first bird exactly 10 years ago to the day -October 14th.

I often wonder just how many years these birds have been making a migration “pit-stop” at this cemetery. Does the occurrence predate the cemetery even? And are they the same birds, or from the same family? And how do they find it every year, with consistent timing to boot? I’ll never know the answers, but I’m incredibly grateful to have had as many encounters with them as I have. In all honesty, I’ve been a bit careful -even a little selfish maybe- with whom I’ve shared this information with. I can think of only 4 people (all my closest birding friends) with whom I have.

Hennepin County, MN 10/14/24


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