Showing posts with label Wolves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolves. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2025

New Year Night Sky

The first full moon of 2025 rises tonight. 

According to Native American tradition January's full moon is also known as a Wolf Moon.  Legend suggests that wolves howled more at this time of year due to winter hunger. European settlers also knew this as the Old Moon or Moon After Yule

Wolves have made their presence known around here on very rare occasion and what I know for sure is that with all the dang deer on the landscape if any have found their way across the ice to the peninsula they will not be hungry.  I fully expect that any howling I hear this evening will be from the resident coyotes.  Like their larger wolf brethren any vocalizations will be social in nature - locating pack members, reinforcing their familial bonds, defining territory and such.  

NASA image

Prior to European settlement the Lakota people know this as the Hard Moon, the Cree called this the Cold Moon, the Ojibwe of the Great Lakes Region called this the Great Spirit Moon and the Assiniboine fittingly refer to this as the Center Moon - the demarcation of mid-winter.

Watch for the moon to rise from the east at sunset tonight and tomorrow. As a bonus, the bright red planet Mars will be shining just to the moon's lower left (or celestial east).  


It will reach its highest point around midnight. If you're up for any reason while the moon is high in the night sky be sure to observe that a winter full moon climbs as high in the heavens as the summer noonday sun.  On a clear winter night you can see your shadow by the light of the moon!

If you are an early riser you can locate the moon above the western horizon before sunrise. 

Fingers-crossed for cold, clear, winter night skies.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

January Night Sky

 With the arrival of January 25th comes the first full moon of 2024. 

01.09.20 photo
According to Native American tradition January's full moon is named after howling wolves and is remembered as the Wolf Moon. 

It is said that at any given time there are estimated to be a dozen wolves wandering-about here on the peninsula.  I haven’t heard any wolves howling - just the resident coyotes - likely explained by the fact that the only wolves here are  solitary males.  They've been  known to find their way here having dispersed from other packs in northeastern Wisconsin or Michigan's Upper Peninsula.  I am also told it is unlikely there is a breeding population around here.  But I digress.

In other cultures this is called the Old Moon, Snow Moon, Ice Moon or Moon after Yule.  My Celtic ancestors called this the Stay At Home Moon. 

And so it begins - if you like clear skies and howling at the moon - 2024 is going to deliver 12 full moons.  The September and October lunar events are super moons and for good measure - a blue moon in August.  You may wish to bookmark this link so you don’t miss anything.   

Fingers-crossed for cold, clear winter sky-gazing tonight. 

Cheers!

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Wolf!

Just about the time I thought it was safe to take my new pup for a walk in the woods this shows-up in my email box this morning.

A trail camera photo taken just before Christmas by J.B. Sensenbrenner on his Southern Door property located near Lake Michigan between Algoma and Sturgeon Bay.

That would be just east of here.

And that is a gray wolf.

The January full moon is called the Wolf Moon.....

Monday, January 8, 2024

Comparison

Not my work - found on the interweb.

Yes, this is photo shopped.

Taken with the same camera, from the same location at similar times, two separate images were merged into one.

It is a very good tool for identifying the key characteristics differentiating a gray wolf from a coyote. 



 


Thursday, February 16, 2023

How To Tell A Wolf From A Coyote

While there are no reported breeding pairs of wolves on the peninsula it is not unheard-of to have a sighting from time to time.  It's typically a juvenile male - a solitary individual - who has dispersed from his pack to strike out and claim his own territory.  These animals typically find their way here from northern Wisconsin (via Green Bay) or travel over the ice on the bay from Michigan's upper peninsula.  There was a reported sighting a week or so ago and a discussion ensued on a local Face Book group about identification of a wolf versus a coyote.

Being a Snapshot Wisconsin participant I figured they would have some useful info on how to differentiate a wolf from a coyote.

From a stationary camera here you go with both individuals superimposed together for comparison....

click on the image to enlarge