Showing posts with label Wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wildlife. Show all posts

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Trail Camera Update

A funny thing happened to the trail camera supply chain this winter.  There wasn't a Moultrie trail camera to be had.  Nothing in stock locally.  Nothing on Amazon Prime.  Nada.  Was it a chip shortage?  A consequence of tariffs?  A shipping container that fell from a ship and is bobbing-around somewhere between China and a California port?  I have no clue.  What I know for sure is I've been wanting to acquire two more cams and I'm not used to being denied for 3 months.

Since they don't need to be cellular-equipped I know I should be able to snag them for under a $100 apiece; only they've been unavailable.  Other brands and models, yes.  Moultrie. no.  Pardon me for brand loyalty but it is what it is.  It's a boomer thing.

Anyway, after waiting for months, the Missus announced they were back on Amazon and that I should check-out the selection so she could include them on our order.  In short order they arrived - a couple of A-900 bundles including SD card and batteries - free shipping too. Set me back about $90 a camera.

I deployed the first, replacing the last of two A-25i models deployed April 24, 2020.  Its twin succumbed in 2025 and after five years of continuous use this cam was nearing the end of its useful life and will be held in reserve or maybe finish its tour of duty as the 2026 Oriole Cam this year.  We'll see.  Bottom line is I have one new camera still in the box and one old cam in reserve for the present.

Here are the last two pics from the old trail camera... 


Prepping and deploying the new camera...


Stay-tuned for some new photos before too long....

Friday, February 6, 2026

Winter Adaptations

Getting-up before sunrise, flipping-on the coffeemaker and taking note of the single digit temperatures is a huge change compared to rising to the double-digit negative temps of only a couple of weeks ago.  Change like this makes me ponder whether springtime is lurking just around the corner?  Nah.  I digress.    How do the resident critters that make their home around here adapt and adjust to harsh winter weather conditions anyway?

The short answer is that wildlife does have adaptations to the seasons and this time of year they manifest as both physical change, behavior or a combination of the two. 

Thinking of the critters that show-up most frequently on the trail cameras; the resident whitetails, raccoons, coyotes, fox and other mammalian species all grow a thicker coat of hair and fur that absorbs sunlight, and provides camouflage properties to avoid detection by predators.  Additionally, this fur coat generally consists of several layers; the softer, thicker layer adjacent to the skin traps air and retains body heat.  Next to this undercoat is an outer layer of guard hairs that repels rain, snow and wind.  

So efficient is this winter-wear that the snow accumulating on a whitetail doesn't even get close to melting....


 

 

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Winter Adaptations

 

Sunrise the other day dawned at a brisk -4F (feels like -15F).  And while we have to deal with decisions about venturing outside our process has more to do with is it just taking the dog out to go potty, are we going out for an hour to check trail cameras or is this a trip to town for a scheduled meeting or a gallon of milk or do I have to dress for a Packer game at Lambeau Field.

All of the foregoing involve different sub-decisions about how to layer-up or is the trip even necessary.  How do the resident critters that make their home around here adapt and adjust?

The short answer is that wildlife does have adaptations to the seasons and this time of year they manifest as both physical change, behavior or a combination of the two. 

Thinking of the critters that show-up most frequently on the trail cameras; the resident white tails, raccoons, coyotes, fox and other mammalian species all grow a thicker coat of hair and fur that absorbs sunlight, and provides camouflage properties avoid detection by predators.  Additionally, this fur coat generally consists of several layers; the softer, thicker layer adjacent to the skin traps air and retains body heat.  Next to this undercoat is an outer layer of guard hairs that repels rain, snow and wind.  

As I observe the dark-eyed juncos scratching in the snow beneath my bird feeders they look like grey on white puff balls.  They also have two layers of feathers to repel the elements and retain body heat.  This effect, related to goose bumps, is called piloerection and animals puff up their fur or feathers to not only look larger as a defense mechanism but also as a means of thermoregulation to conserve energy and retain heat.  

In the run-up to winter wild animals consume more calories to build-up stores of fat. This additional fat not only adds an extra layer of insulation it also is a store of energy reserves that can be metabolized during periods of food scarcity. 

Deer and rabbits modulate their circulatory systems (an evolutionary mechanism - not a parlor trick) such that blood vessels found in the ears and other extremities have reduced blood flow helping to retain core body temperature. 

Naturally, many animals (just like many of my neighbors and friends) beat it out of dodge before the Thanksgiving holiday and return with the warmer temperatures and lengthening days of springtime.  The herons, cranes, orioles and many other birds winter in warmer climes along with many of their warm season human neighbors.  

Other animals split the difference.  They don't migrate and they don't recreate; they hunker down to ride-out the winter.  The resident skunks, snakes, muskrats, salamanders, chipmunks, badgers, bears, turtles and other burrowing wildlife retire to their underground dens and enter a state of torpor or hibernation - a condition characterized by reduced metabolism where they survive on fat reserves or food caches over the winter season.  While our apex species, the whitetail deer, do not have a location or den; they do regulate their movement during the harshest winter conditions and seek bedding areas in thick conifer cover which provides browse and serves as a windbreak and thermal protection. 

Over millennia native wildlife have evolved and developed adaptations to managing all seasons and living conditions.  It is both remarkable to witness and not so remarkable to understand.  Get yourself a trail camera and situate it within view of a deer trail.  Over the course of a season you can use your citizen science skills to document the changes one animal undergoes as they go through their annual molt.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Neighborhood Baldy

A few days ago I had to run into town on some holiday errands and encountered this.
 

One of our resident bald eagles.  The bird casually allowed me to snap photos and even reposition the car on the road.  As I departed the bird did too.  I wonder if he/she deliberately allowed me the convenience of observation and study.  Naw.  That would be too much Disney-like anthropomorphism. 
 
Thirty years ago these weren’t as common as they are nowadays.
 
On the south side of County D a short distance from my front door…

Thursday, October 2, 2025

Who Dines On Acorns?

Just about everyone.  Squirrels, turkey and deer come to mind. 

If you take a moment to scan the forest floor beneath the oak trees you will find evidence of the critters dining on the acorns from above...


 

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Autumn

From our walk this morning there was more than a whiff of autumn in the air.

There was also silky dogwood - Cornus amomum.

This deciduous shrub has an open-rounded form and features tiny yellowish-white flowers in flat-topped clusters in late spring to early summer, followed by attractive berry-like drupes that ripen from white to blue in late summer.

It is typically found in moist lowland areas, such as swamp borders, floodplains, and along streams and ponds.

The berries are edible for birds and wildlife. The berries can be used in teas or other preparations when ripe but are otherwise toxic to people. 

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Another First

First there was The Mysterious Egg Caper; likely solved with the assistance of people who know much more about wildlife biology than I do.

Then there was this from one of the trail cameras.

A Canada goose with goslings in tow.  Decades of trail camera photos and monitoring; this is a first.

We don't (at least I thought we didn't) have geese nesting around here.  The cover is too tall, too thick and too tangled.  Geese prefer manicured landscape allowing them an unobstructed view as a defense from predators.  Don't take my word for it; go visit a park, beach or a golf course.  There will be geese.  Lots of them too.

Never a dull moment around these parts; and another opportunity to learn something new or just be surprised..... 

  

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Hiding Spot

Sometimes it’s the smaller surprises that can make your day. 

At the bottom of the first photo is our raspberry patch.  It’s not very large and the variety(s) of raspberries planted there is lost to history. Consequently, it isn’t mown, it sometimes gets a pruning of dead canes and usually receives a fertilizer drench in the spring.  It persists marginally above neglect and below proper husbandry.   Anyway, I picked the first ripening berries before the birds got them all. Nice surprise. 


The second surprise was this nest deep in the middle of the brambles and the briars. 


I’d agree it’s a good location hidden amongst pickers and thorns…… 

Friday, July 4, 2025

The Mysterious Egg Caper

 

 

From the trail camera is a curious couple of photos of a turkey hen with an egg in her mouth.

What gives?

So I sent-off an email to a certified wildlife biologist at the University. 

Hiya Jamie...   From the trail camera is a puzzler.  Why would a turkey hen be moving an egg?  I cannot imagine she could get her beak around an intact egg.  But I'm happy to be wrong on that. Or is this some sort of predatory behavior?  Thanks, as always, for any insights.  Tom 

To which she replied.

Hi Tom,  You always have the most interesting trail camera photos!  From my understanding, hen turkeys do not relocate viable eggs.  I believe that this is a hen removing an egg from the nest that was depredated to avoid attracting additional predators to the remaining eggs.  Predators like ground squirrels and crows may puncture an egg and consume the insides.  While turkey hunting this year, I came across a turkey egg right in the middle of a trail (see attached), this was probably a similar scenario, or a predator carried it this far.  This looks like a crow, or another bird used its beak to pierce the shell.  Starting to see quite a few broods of turkey poults, hopefully you are, too.    Cheers,  Jamie

The plot thickens.  Jamie forwarded the email chain to a colleague for further discussion.

Hi Chris,  I hope you are doing well!  Below is an email I received from a landowner as well as my reply.  It got me thinking and I'm curious if you have any other plausible explanations for the hen turkey with an egg in her mouth.  Have you documented any turkey nest predation by turkeys?   During my master's research, I did have a turkey depredate a grassland bird nest and I know of at least one grouse nest depredated by a turkey... all opportunistically, I'm sure.   I'd appreciate any thoughts you may have.  Have a great week!   Jamie 

And the response from Chris.

Hi Jamie,   Good to hear from you. Things are going well here. I hope you’re enjoying your summer thus far!   Well…this isn’t something you come across every day! I haven’t knowingly encountered an instance where a turkey has eaten an egg, although I have suspected it. I’m aware of colleagues in other states that have attributed egg loss to turkeys on occasion, but none to my knowledge have photos of a bird carrying an egg. I did come across one wildlife photographer who was able to document a similar occurrence and included it in a blog post (https://www.robertgroosphotography.com/home/the-egg-bandit).     Turkeys are very opportunistic. And while eggs are not part of their normal diet, they are eaten on (relatively) rare occasion. I think it most likely occurs when a bird comes across an abandoned nest; or in the case of a hen, if she is bumped off a nest and the eggs are partially eaten by a predator, she may return and consume the remaining egg(s) since they are highly nutritious – which could be especially valuable if she decided to renest. However, I don’t believe that turkeys are actively hunting for eggs, whether it be that of other turkeys or other ground-nesting birds (which comes up way too often in discussions on ruffed grouse). Hope this is helpful.   Cheers,  Chris

So there you have it.  A possibly opportunistic turkey keeping-up with housekeeping around the nest.

Never a dull moment around here and an opportunity to learn something new.

Monday, July 15, 2024

Break Time

From trail camera three there was a bazillion photos.  I'm exaggerating.  Something on the order of 650; far more than the usual 300+ captured over a period of a couple of weeks.

That is because a solitary doe decided to bed-down directly in front of the camera for more than an hour (check the time stamp) and record several hundred selfies before getting-up and moving-on.


This has happened several times before.

The animal isn't actually sleeping.

Just taking a pause for the cause....

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Cute Rodent

For your morning viewing pleasure I deliver a foxy cute fox squirrel...



Thursday, March 2, 2023

Winter Yote

More of the resident coyote pack.

Handsome dogs this time of year with their prime winter coats.

I think I have figured-out why we've been seeing a historically larger number of them in the last few years.

It has something to do with the logging operation performed in May of 2021.

Any guesses?

Monday, January 23, 2023

Eagle Update

After a week and a half of gloom a couple of things happened this afternoon.

The sun came out and everything became bright a beautiful.

After a couple of days of being away (or out of sight) there were several bald eagle sightings.  Every time I went out to try for some video of a soaring bird I was thwarted.  Nevertheless, the both of them (yes, two) perched in a cottonwood north of the house along the creek.

2022 brought the largest number of coyote sightings.  And 2023 is starting-off with the largest number of bald eagle sightings.  That is a significant anecdotal (unscientific) uptick in a couple of keystone predators in the last three decades.

Must be something in the water....

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Take a Hike

Recently, we had an opportunity to pay a call at the Lautenbach Woods Nature Preserve near Egg Harbor.  There's no building or facilities - only a small gravel parking lot including a 1.3 mile self-guided trail.  

In any event, it's a terrific place to visit and take-in the geology of the peninsula and the seasonal changes in the local flora. 

Trillium


Long-Spurred Violet

Pileated Woodpecker Activity 


Downy Yellow Violet


Door County Geology Includes Caves 


Forest Canopy


Wild Leek (ramps)

Wild Sarsaparilla


 
Large Crack/Crevasse In The Dolostone Formation 


I'd return with friends from out of town and make it an opportunity to get some quality outdoor time and may lunch or dinner at a chic northern Door restaurant.


Thursday, March 24, 2022

Roadkill

I have lost trail cameras to theft, flood and old age.  This week I suffered the loss of a camera as a consequence of bird attack. It was pecked-to-death. 
 
 
Likely a raven committed the assault. 
 
In any event the camera was replaced and a couple of new ones ordered.
 
This motion-activated trail cam had been set to monitor a road-killed whitetail on Sunday March 6. This was to be a Citizen Science Project of my own making.  I wanted to monitor who eats roadkill.
 
It's been an interesting journey over the past couple of weeks.  As of Tuesday all that was left of the deceased was skin and bones. 
 
This first batch of photos is from March 8th.
 
 
Coming in for a landing
 
 Crow with a mouthful
 
Thus quoth the raven
 
The large yellow beak is a field mark that differentiates this bird from a rough-legged hawk.  It is a juvenile bald eagle and size matters too as you'll see in a future post.
 
Stand-off
 
 Juvenile bald eagle and crow
 
Stay-tuned for more photos to come.....

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Wile E. Coyote

Near the dawn of time, the story goes; Coyote saved the creatures of Earth. According to the mythology of Idaho's Nez Perce people, the monster Kamiah had stalked into the region and was gobbling up the animals one by one. The crafty Coyote evaded Kamiah but didn't want to lose his friends, so he let himself be swallowed. From inside the beast, Coyote severed Kamiah's heart and freed his fellow animals. Then he chopped up Kamiah and threw the pieces to the winds, where they gave birth to the peoples of the planet.  

– Nature


Yote - short for coyote, Wile E. Coyote, Canis latrans.   If you were to inquire of a wildlife biologist they would tell you that there are nineteen subspecies of coyote that are exceedingly well-adapted to living in urban, rural and wild America.   

Male coyotes top out at about 44 pounds while females weigh-in slightly less.  For scale my Lab is bulkier than the average coyote.   

Coyotes are known for how well they adapt to different habitats.  They are found living in and around large cities, the central plains, farmland, and northern forest, in the desert scrub of the Sonoran Desert, foothills and mountains as well as in populated ring suburbs. 

Coyotes dine on large prey and also eat snakes, insects, rodents, fruit and other mast.  As an opportunistic hunter coyotes have been known to prey-upon small pets and livestock.  In an urban setting they will eat garbage and pet food left on a deck or patio.  The coyote is a gregarious animal - socially-inclined - like the wolf.  This is likely a consequence of the need for a family unit or pack of animals combining to bring down large game. 

Recent genetic studies suggest that coyotes are not native to the eastern United States - having largely evolved on the Great Plains.  As the eastern old growth forests were cleared for settlement and agriculture coyotes adapted to the new environs.   It is thought that coyotes dispersed to our neck of the woods early in the twentieth century.  These canids are presumed to have come from the northern Great Plains and are unique in their genetic origins.  Additional coyotes dispersed from here to New England via the northern Great Lakes region and southern Canada meeting in the 1940s in New York and Pennsylvania. These coyotes have inter-bred  with gray wolf and Eastern wolf populations adding to their own unique genetic diversity and further contributing to their hybrid vigor and ability to adapt to an ever changing environment.  Coyotes here are known as the Northeastern coyote. 

More frequently Jill and I hear coyote vocalizations than we see them live and in person.  In rural America coyotes share the same natural aversion to people that other wildlife do.  They are scared-to-death of people.  However, from time to time I do capture a handful of digital photos on a trail camera.

 

Saturday, February 12, 2022

Bedtime

Weather and calendar-permitting I take a daily walk accompanied by my faithful Lab.  And while we're out and about we make every attempt to pay attention to evidence of the wild things from nature with whom we share our home.  For instance the evidence of the resident whitetails around here.  I find their scat everywhere. Their rubs and scrapes during the mating season.  Shed antlers this time of year.  And don't eat the yellow snow.  Lastly, I find their beds all the time when scouting in the brush - a carefully matted-down depression in the taller grasses or a hollowed-bowl melted into the snow.  I have blogged about this before.

Whitetail deer like to sleep in locations where they feel secure. Typically, where they have the wind at their back to smell danger and can see potential danger in front of them – a place that offers good cover.  A deer is quite vulnerable while they sleep if it were not for the sensitive sniffer and always swiveling ears.  Deer know what is happening around them at all times and if they smell or hear something out of place with the normal rhythms of their surroundings they will bolt and skedaddle.  In the wintertime deer prefer to bed amongst the thermal cover provided by dense stands of pines.  

Deer also prefer to bed near water and food sources.  Sometimes they sleep solo.  Sometimes they bed-down in groups.  Because they are creatures of habit if they find an optimal location it is not unusual for several return visits. 

Sleep is usually five to ten minutes in length - or as evidenced here can be longer.  Some trail camera surveillance supports the notion of up to twenty minutes of sleep.  The whitetail sleep cycle is not at all unlike that of the whitetail deer hunter – dozing-off for a few minutes and snapping to attention. 

Consider this too; bedded deer might not be dozing at all.  They might just be hanging out for a siesta to chewing their cud.

The video cam recently recorded a series of short, silent, 15 second video vignettes of a whitetail doe who laid down, made herself comfortable, hung out for 60+ minutes and eventual got up to move along.  Without boring you with countless 15 second video records of a deer chewing her cud - here are the opening and closing segments....  


 


Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Local Critters

From a recent round of the trail camera trap line are these infrared (IR) photos of...

Mr. Buck

Mrs. Doe

Wiley Coyote



Saturday, January 8, 2022

Thieving Troublemaker

Meet Corvus brachyrhynchos - the American Crow. 

A common, year-round, resident here on the peninsula this is an all-black bird – including plumage, legs and feet and beak.  The raven shares some similarities with the American Crow but is measurably larger.  A raven sports a wedged-shaped tail (apparent in flight) while the tail of a crow is squared-off.

I happen to think that this is one of the smartest birds around these parts. a highly social bird they flock together for roosting overnight with unmated birds pitching-in to assist with raising the young.

Don't leave your car keys outside on the picnic table as this bird collects and stashes bright shiny objects in its nest.  It is also able to mimic the calls of other birds and human voices. As a trickster it uses this skill to make trouble and entertain itself.  This is a bird that not only makes and uses tools, it can solve puzzles on par with your five year-old, learns from the death of one of their tribe, holds a grudge and can even identify you on sight.

Anyway, here are a couple of fun action shots taken of this bird after an overnight snowfall.....