Sunday, May 3, 2009

Crane count brought rare sighting


2009

I spent this year’s Midwest Crane Count observing a rare and threatened species.
Sure, I saw some sandhill cranes, which is the point of the annual census sponsored by the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo. But the more rare sighting was a family that values nature over electronics.
I was joined at my usual crane counting spot near Hortonville by Terry Broullire and Cheryl Konkol-Broullire, and their children, 11-year-old Ella and 10-year-old Nathan.
This is a family that spends their free time on bicycle day trips, hiking in the woods and searching for salamanders. The kids take summer ecology classes. They camp together – in a tent.
These are activities I was beginning to think had gone the way of the barn dance and the rotary phone, crowded out of existence by social networking, virtual communications and pretend golfing in front of a TV screen.
The Konkol-Broullires don’t have any game consoles. They don’t even have – gasp – the Internet.
It’s not easy raising kids that way today, said Cheryl, a strings teacher at several Appleton elementary schools. Terry, an aviation mechanic with Gulfstream, conceded they will have to give in on the Web ban soon for the sake of school research.
I hadn’t met the family before, nor many like them. These kids were actually excited about watching the sun rise over the emerging scrub of a farm field and listening for the prehistoric trumpet of a bird that’s taller than they are.
I told them they were getting in on a site where I typically see 20 or more cranes. I regaled them with stories of wave after wave of sandhills flying in from the woods, 30 of them on the ground at once. I told of witnessing the mating ritual in which the male repeatedly tosses a stick into the air and jumps up with wings outstretched.
As it turned out, not since my first count nine years ago have I seen fewer birds.
This is not a dire sign of the sandhill taking a U-turn back toward extinction. They have become quite numerous. Last year, 13,764 sandhill cranes were counted in Wisconsin alone.
We had gathered before sunrise on April 18, an uncommonly warm, clear and dry day for the count. It wasn’t weather that kept them away. The food source was the same as always. The highway bypass around Hortonville that will claim this land is still on the traffic engineer’s drawing board.
The cranes start their morning back in a wooded swamp. I heard two calling as I came out of my house. Shortly after 6 a.m., a pair of sandhills flew in, putting on a show with their 6-foot wingspan as they glided down to the farm field.
They would keep us company all morning. But they would be our only company on the ground.
At 6:17 a.m., minutes after the sun broke over the tree line, a trio of sandhills flew overhead. Another triple and two singles followed over the course of the next half-hour. That was it.
With five distinct birds calling but not seen, our total when the count ended at 7:30 a.m. was 15 sandhills.
More impressive was another count – two children, not whining, not fidgety, not asleep.
Nathan pronounced counting cranes that didn’t come not as fun as checking salamanders.
Ella, who had a book to occupy here between crane flyovers, denied that the morning was boring. “It was cool,” was how she rated it.
My guess is the two cranes we did see all morning were a breeding pair that claimed the territory that had been a bachelor hangout in prior years. We didn’t hear them join in the unison call that would have testified to them being a pair, so we couldn’t count them as such, though I have heard the unison call in the field since then.
It turned out that Outagamie County’s cranes were hanging out around Mosquito Hill Nature Center near New London, the reporting center for the county.
“The unison calls were all around us. It was just a symphony,” count coordinator and naturalist Jess Miller said.
Our two birds never came close enough for a photo. Just to add insult to injury, as I walked from my vehicle at the nature center’s parking lot, two sandhills flew by at about eye level not 30 feet away.
The camera was in the vehicle.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Crane count brought rare sighting


April 2009

I spent this year’s Midwest Crane Count observing a rare and threatened species.
Sure, I saw some sandhill cranes, which is the point of the annual census sponsored by the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo. But the more rare sighting was a family that values nature over electronics.
I was joined at my usual crane counting spot near Hortonville by Terry Broullire and Cheryl Konkol-Broullire, and their children, 11-year-old Ella and 10-year-old Nathan.
This is a family that spends their free time on bicycle day trips, hiking in the woods and searching for salamanders. The kids take summer ecology classes. They camp together – in a tent.
These are activities I was beginning to think had gone the way of the barn dance and the rotary phone, crowded out of existence by social networking, virtual communications and pretend golfing in front of a TV screen.
The Konkol-Broullires don’t have any game consoles. They don’t even have – gasp – the Internet.
It’s not easy raising kids that way today, said Cheryl, a strings teacher at several Appleton elementary schools. Terry, an aviation mechanic with Gulfstream, conceded they will have to give in on the Web ban soon for the sake of school research.
I hadn’t met the family before, nor many like them. These kids were actually excited about watching the sun rise over the emerging scrub of a farm field and listening for the prehistoric trumpet of a bird that’s taller than they are.
I told them they were getting in on a site where I typically see 20 or more cranes. I regaled them with stories of wave after wave of sandhills flying in from the woods, 30 of them on the ground at once. I told of witnessing the mating ritual in which the male repeatedly tosses a stick into the air and jumps up with wings outstretched.
As it turned out, not since my first count nine years ago have I seen fewer birds.
This is not a dire sign of the sandhill taking a U-turn back toward extinction. They have become quite numerous. Last year, 13,764 sandhill cranes were counted in Wisconsin alone.
We had gathered before sunrise on April 18, an uncommonly warm, clear and dry day for the count. It wasn’t weather that kept them away. The food source was the same as always. The highway bypass around Hortonville that will claim this land is still on the traffic engineer’s drawing board.
The cranes start their morning back in a wooded swamp. I heard two calling as I came out of my house. Shortly after 6 a.m., a pair of sandhills flew in, putting on a show with their 6-foot wingspan as they glided down to the farm field.
They would keep us company all morning. But they would be our only company on the ground.
At 6:17 a.m., minutes after the sun broke over the tree line, a trio of sandhills flew overhead. Another triple and two singles followed over the course of the next half-hour. That was it.
With five distinct birds calling but not seen, our total when the count ended at 7:30 a.m. was 15 sandhills.
More impressive was another count – two children, not whining, not fidgety, not asleep.
Nathan pronounced counting cranes that didn’t come not as fun as checking salamanders.
Ella, who had a book to occupy here between crane flyovers, denied that the morning was boring. “It was cool,” was how she rated it.
My guess is the two cranes we did see all morning were a breeding pair that claimed the territory that had been a bachelor hangout in prior years. We didn’t hear them join in the unison call that would have testified to them being a pair, so we couldn’t count them as such, though I have heard the unison call in the field since then.
It turned out that Outagamie County’s cranes were hanging out around Mosquito Hill Nature Center near New London, the reporting center for the county.
“The unison calls were all around us. It was just a symphony,” count coordinator and naturalist Jess Miller said.
Our two birds never came close enough for a photo. Just to add insult to injury, as I walked from my vehicle at the nature center’s parking lot, two sandhills flew by at about eye level not 30 feet away.
The camera was in the vehicle.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Crane count offers a seat for music of the morning


May 3, 2008
I went to a symphony a couple weeks ago.
They play daily in the warmer months, but the truth is there’s only one day a year that I really listen to the full performance. That’s the day of the annual crane count – April 19 this year.
Organized across the Midwest by the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo, the crane count is an exercise in citizen science. Biological laymen like myself get to help chronicle the comeback of the sandhill crane, this huge and amazing red-capped bird.
Beyond that, it is reason and license to spend sunrise doing nothing but listening and observing. It is an invitation to witness the music of morning.
Audience members are to be in position by 5:30 a.m. That’s not a challenge for me because my reserved seat is in a counting area in a farm field across the road from our home.
A combination of the lingering dark, the morning mist and the protection of the woods makes the start an experience for the ears more than for the eyes.
At 5:38 a.m., the orchestra begins to tune. The concertmaster bugles from offstage. His raucous, booming staccato is the alarm call of the first crane to proclaim the morning.
Within minutes, the rest of the orchestra joins in, creating a rising cacophony of musicians preparing their instruments. None is yet to be seen. The greatest of all houselights are still dimmed.
The sections of the orchestra – all horn players, distributed across the marshy woods – compete with their individual runs up the scale.
This discordant brass section must share the stage before long. The wild tom turkey adds a counterpoint to the melody with his curt “gobble, gobble, gobble.” The cock pheasant provides the percussion. The great horned owl insists on a mournful solo.
At 5:52 a.m., the mellower French horns (French Canadian that is) broaden the range with a quick arpeggio from a small flock of passing geese, accented by the gentle snare of wind on duck flight feathers.
As the clock ticks past 5:58, there’s a pause. While this orchestra is well rehearsed, it begins and ends movements at its own whim, independent of any score.
Six o’clock and the invisible crane chorus builds to a crescendo, each straining to out-perform the musician next to him. The pheasant adds a raspy rhythm and the performers begin to come out from hiding.
At 6:11 a.m. I record one crane walking and two flying over. Four minutes later, two more cranes fly by and a blast pierces the air. Not the wakeup point in the Nutcracker Suite, but an attempt at dinner by a turkey hunter camouflaged out in the field.
I did not have a solo seat to the morning performance after all.
As the sun lights the scene, the auditory treat turns to a visual one. At 6:22 I see two sandhills walking and feeding and count one group of 15 turkeys and another of 12 – with the hunter hidden in between.
The cranes’ numbers slowly grow as more and more emerge from the woods for the post-performance brunch. From time to time they reprise their song to greet a late arrival.
Scanning the field with a spotting scope confirms seven, then 10, then 16 cranes taking part in the feed.
At 7:10 a.m. something spooks them. I am frantically counting cranes as 26 birds rise up out of the farm field to take their final bow and fly from the stage.
Time for me to pack up and leave this outdoor concert hall and file my review with the International Crane Foundation. There’s no place for it on the counting form, but my evaluation is one word: Bravo.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Owl release is Abe's day at dad's work

By David Horst  sandhill7@gmail.com

SEYMOUR – My dad is a retired operating engineer – crane operator in more common language – so when I got to go to work with him, it was quite an adventure. 

This was well before the structured “Take Your Daughter or Son to Work Day” existed. I suspect now that it was more mom’s “Get Davie Out of My Hair Day.” Her job was taking care of the house and family so every day was a take-me-to-work day for her.

Going with dad to change oil on a Saturday meant a day of climbing on the gravel pile, pulling the levers on big cranes and unpacking your sandwich in the work site shanty like the big guys. In short, it was the kind of day when good memories are built.

Warden Mike Young and son Abe.
Abe Young had one of those days last weekend. His dad is Mike Young, a warden with the state Department of Natural Resources. 

I’m sure there are plenty of days when there are said to Young that a 5-year-old shouldn’t hear, but this was different. On this day, Abe and his dad were going to release an owl.

Abe had also been along the day Young responded to a report of an injured great-horned owl in a residential neighborhood in Seymour. That was in mid-December.

The owl had suffered a head trauma, possibly from flying into a window or a structure. She had convalesced at The Feather Rehabilitation Center near New London and was ready to be released into the wild in the same Seymour neighborhood.

As Young and Pat Fisher of The Feather affixed an identification tag to the owl’s leg, Abe alternated between peering back at its wide eyes and sliding on a patch of ice on the driveway where we were parked.

Young held the owl firmly at the tops of its legs preparing for the release. The bird flapped its great wings, making Abe go wide-eyed.

Walking to the edge of the drive, Young pointed the owl in the direction of a nearby woods and tossed her skyward. The owl dipped down and then silently caught the air in her wide wingspan, lifting a dozen or so feet above the ground. 

Despite the hint Young had given her, the owl flew not toward the woodlot, but into the front yard, where she disappeared into the branches of a spruce tree. 

In a dank, artificially lit bureaucratic DNR office in Madison, a biologist might have viewed her as just an individual, an injured member of a species that isn’t endangered or even threatened.

Out here in the brisk, waning light of day, she is an individual, with value all her own.
Fisher doesn’t recognize the word “just” when it comes to injured birds. “It’s another living thing. I’m not into numbers,” she said.

Abe went all shyboy on me when I asked him what he would tell his friends in school about releasing the owl. He did confide that letting the owl go was even more fun than sliding on the ice.

His curiosity took over after I left. He asked his dad where the horns are on the great-horned owl. Dad explained it’s named for feathers on its head that look like horns.

“Why did it fly away from us daddy?” Abe wanted to know. Owls may be renowned for their night vision, but they can’t recognize the innocence in the face of a 5-year-old.

Young said Abe went to kindergarten the next day showing pictures and talking about the owl. I’m sure he’ll still talk about it when he tops 50 and reflects back on good memories built by going to work with dad.