It has been rather uneventful lately, and have no ambition to go any distance from home. Luckily, the St. Clair River has kept me occupied.
This past Sunday, I did my usual run along the river in the morning. In the afternoon, I was investigating the crawl space under part of the house. Behind the insulation I found a bat! Mind you, we have had them in the house before, but how they get in is a complete mystery since it is a sealed space.
Not one to kill anything, I carefully grabbed it with a bag, and put it outside. A while later I went out to check on it, and found it clinging to the side of the house. It eventually took flight. It was fairly mild, so hopefully it found a spot to continue its hibernation.
It was fairly large, so I believe it is a Big Brown Bat. The Little Brown Bat is around here as well, and they can be difficult to distinguish between.
Back to the river, I found a Ruddy Duck at Willow Park. Quite uncommon here in the winter.
There was also a Gadwall here, but we get a few along the river during winter.
Monday was quite foggy, so I was out later. Visibility was limited along the river, but there were thousands of ducks.
At Willow Park, the Ruddy Duck was still present, and there was quite a bit to look at. The five Trumpeter Swans were present. The three younger ones were swimming, then I heard them trumpeting. The adults were just flying in.
I noticed some flippers sticking up in the air. Obviously a duck got caught on a fishing lure while diving and was unable to recover. This remained stationary, so no doubt it was anchored to fishing line.
A fair number of gulls were at Cathcart Park, but nothing unusual again.
Tuesday was bright and sunny, but more ice on the river. The open spots concentrated the waterfowl more. I briefly stopped at Marshy Creek Park south of Sombra for a look. The five Trumpeter Swans flew by southbound here! No time for a photo though.
I did not take any photos this day.
Wednesday was another sunny morning, but more ice had moved in. Most of the river all the way up to Mooretown was plugged with brash ice. However, there were some open spots.
I took some random photos showing the concentration of ducks. Once again, I found no rarities! Ducks do a lot of sleeping on these cold sunny days.
There was a nice little open spot off Brander Park that attracted some waterfowl.
Note Ring-necked Duck |
A Gadwall was fast asleep here.
Today, Thursday, was too icy to go out since we had freezing rain overnight.
Nothing new at the feeder....just too many House Sparrows which hog all the seed. Once in a while, an accipiter comes around such as this young Cooper's Hawk. It needs to take a course in House Sparrow hunting, as it never gets anything!
Been passing time by reading a good book. It is about the rise and fall of the Hudson Bay Company and fur trading and settlement of northern Canada.
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