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Keep Your Eyes Open in the Daylight for these Four Raptors. In flight, Turkey Vultures’ wingbeats are clumsy and slow, they look unsteady and rock, but in a thermal they glide and soar with great grace and beauty. A group is called a Venue, when circling, a Kettle. Their circling does not always mean the presence of a carcass; they may be gaining altitude for long flights, searching for food, or just playing. They are usually silent but do hiss and cluck. You’ll know the Marsh Hawk by it’s white rump, narrow tail, and broad wings. Audubon describes it’s coursing flight this way...though light and elegant, it cannot be said to be swift or strong. While searching for prey, it performs most of it’s rambles by rather irregular sailings; by which I mean it frequently deviates from a straight course, peeping hither and thither among the tall grasses of the marsh, prairie, meadows, or along briary edges of our fields... He would sometimes see forty at one time. Now, with fewer marshes as well, it is referred to as the Northern Harrier. Slender and buoyant on wing, it will capture it’s prey with a sudden pounce. When you have the chance stop, and watch one fly. Our smallest and most common falcon is the American Kestrel (Falco sparverius) and can be seen perched on a wire or a pole bobbing it’s tail, or hovering over it’s next meal, most often a rodent or an insect. It is perhaps the most colorful raptor in the world: speckled steel grey wings, orange and rufous sides and back, with white and black bars beneath . It is about the size of a robin. When you see a large and conspicuous hawk, with stocky, broad wings and broad tail, the streaked belly band will tell you, but it’s most fun when it turns just so and you see why it’s named the Red-Tailed Hawk, the Buteo to which all others are compared. It will kite, hang in the wind, as it hunts. It’s voice is a long, distant sounding, rasping, scraping scream, that falls in pitch and intensity, a cheeeeeeewv! high above your head that makes you look up. |
When You travel this stretch of the River, it’s often the big birds that will capture your attention; who hasn’t marveled at an eagle and thought better of the day. But these small, sometimes secretive ground dwellers, should also delight you. Watch them hop-scratch and kick leaves back to uncover food. The Grasshopper likes dense grasses and has an insect like buzzing song tik tuk tikeeeeeeez. Or listen for the Tree Sparrow call a soft, jingling teedleoo. Of course the Chipping’s call is a sharp chip but it’s song is a long, simple, beautiful trill. The Savannah gathers in small flocks and will give you a series of descending buzzes, ti ti ti tseeeeeee tisoooooo.... |
“We do not go to the green woods and crystal waters to rough it, we go to smooth it. We get it rough enough at home in the city.” Nessmuk |
Maiden Rock and Hwy 35 Fryklund Photography Stockholm, Wisconsin 1946 |
GIGOSHUGUMOT MA--YA--SA WA--KPA‘ WAN--HIN--KPE KA--GA--PI WIN--YAN PSI-CA TAN--KA MDE MISHA MOKWA PA--HIN’ WA-KPA’ DAN IN’-- YAN TI--YO’-- PA Through the means of these Dakota and Ojibwa place-names, the land will be made to give up its silence to speak out, to tell of a land peopled by spirits and alive again with laughing children, tipis, and dusky warriors. These names are a witness to the sound of the flute, its folklore and spiritual beliefs. It has been said the frontiers of speech are the only real ones, for we carry them with us. Language is the vehicle of tradition; it might even be said that language is tradition itself, the living past. -- Paul Durand, from the introduction to Where the Waters Gather and the Rivers Meet Drawings Rene Durand |
Near Lincoln, Near Longfellow Gary Egger |