Come Gather ‘Round

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Usually it is the oldest crane in the flock that will call the others to join him for late night story telling but occasionally a younger crane will take over and hold the nightly gathering in their place. Some of their stories are as old as their migratory routes and some are yesterday’s news. Many times you will find that there are larger gatherings at the young cranes get-together’s than you will find at the old timers’. To their dismay the old ones find that things meaningful to them don’t have the appeal to grab the young’s attention any more especially after they have been told many, many, times. The old stories get boring the young say (not that one about the old crane that ate so much corn it couldn’t …) while something new and feather-tingling keeps the gathering fresh and exciting.

According to Dr. Beakston our resident birdologist a male Sandhill Crane is known as a ‘him’ while the female is called a ‘her’ in an effort to be able to distinguish between the sexes as they appear to be very similar to the untrained eye. However this is an acquired skill leading to many a misidentification and much hilarity amongst the ranks of younger birds. Tonight it is a young crane calling the flock in for the nightly narrative and his story is absolutely riveting to the younger audience.

His adventure of flying over a hip hop concert and almost being shot out of the sky by  appreciative concert goers exercising their right of self-expression left his listeners nearly speechless. They too secretly and some not so secretly, wished that they could have been almost shot out of the sky over a concert so they would be cool and have stories to tell when it was their turn to hold the meeting.

Afterwards as always there were the usual warnings issued by the older members of the flock about the dangers of concert flyovers such as, “it might be fun now, but wait until someone gets an eye out and then where would you be”.  But of course, during moments of great excitement like this those warnings went largely unheeded. The young are invincible after all. There were many meetings held that night by whomever could drum up an audience and this one at the middle pond at Bosque del Apache was no better or worse than others, a little louder perhaps but a lot more exciting to those reveling in their youth. There would be many an eye peeled for future concerts and the thought of the risk and danger ahead kept this group hopping into the early morning hours.

Fooling Bears 101

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These Sandhill cranes have a brand new family that they are raising next to Floating Island lake in Yellowstone National Park and they have brought them out to see the world. The chicks are the little orange blobs on the reed pile. One of the parents always has it’s head up scanning the area for predators. Coyotes and foxes like to eat these little ones so constant vigilance is a must. The chicks can’t fly or even run very fast and are easy prey once they are seen. Being in the tall grass and reeds next to the lake gives them somewhere to hide if they need to.

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It’s a good thing the parents are keeping a close watch because soon a black bear comes out and begins sweeping the edge of the lake for an easy meal. He’s done this before, catching an entire brood of mallards, so his experience tells him that there’s a good chance for a snack.

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Just when it appears that he will blunder into the chicks, the male takes over and pulls out his most trusted trick for getting rid of unwanted predators. Pretending that he has a damaged wing he flutters and staggers around in front of the bear deliberately trying to get it’s attention. Weighing in at up to 14 lbs and with a wingspan of up to 5 to 6 feet he makes quite a sight and is impossible to ignore. Making distressed sounds while he thrashes about helps make the act more believable. This time it works as the bear starts off after him thinking that he has a sure thing going and will soon be dining on fresh Sandhill crane, but somehow the crane manages to stay just out of his reach. Before long he has managed to lead the bear well away from the young ones while mom has the time to lead the young ones to a safer place helping them to make it through another day. That’s one more reason Mom’s are important so love your mom or the bears will get you.

Bosque Sunset

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Bosque del Apache is a wildlife preserve located in New Mexico near the town of Socorro. Primarily a bird sanctuary it is the place to go if you want to see almost all the snow geese alive in the world today. OK, That might be a slight exaggeration but only a little. There are a lot of snow geese down here. They number in the thousands during the winter months and completely fill up the ponds so that it seems like there isn’t space for one more bird to land, but they do. Having said all that these are not Snow geese pictured here. These are Sandhill cranes. I’ll show you Snow geese in another post later. The Sandhills are here in record numbers too and they are really the main attraction for me as far as I’m concerned. Where the Snow geese are noisy and spectacular in the morning when they all take off at the same time, these guys, the Sandhills, are more graceful and sophisticated. They can be noisy also but it is usually when they land, or are calling their mates, or telling that neighbor he is way too close. They have a stately walk, they don’t scramble, they are polite to their mates bowing and nodding and will often engage in an impromptu dance to reaffirm how much they like each other. All in all, very nice birds. They congregate in small groups and those groups will make larger flocks and so on, but they seem to find smaller family gatherings preferable. In the early morning as they are getting ready to go to work they collect their other group members and begin the preparations to leave. In the evening as they return they glide in to the pond areas in formation and settle down for the night. This is the time when they seem to interact with each other the most. They talk over the days events, decide where they’re going tomorrow and then settle down until morning.