Dear Lincoln Talk,
Below please find the latest installment of Lincoln naturalist (and LLCT/RLF 
Trustee) Gwyn Loud's Wildlife Column.  Lots of different type of weasel 
activity plus some winter surprises from The Smaller Majority (one of my 
favorite books).  To put one more sighting into the rodent column, we got to 
see a muskrat scurrying along a pond's edge on one of those very cold snowy 
January days Gwyn mentions, which was exciting, but I wasn't quick enough on 
the iPhone draw to get it into Gwyn's column...
Enjoy!
Michelle BarnesLLCT/RLF, ChairSouth Great Rd
   ----- Forwarded Message ----- From: Lincoln Land Conservation Trust 
<[email protected]>To: Michelle Barnes <[email protected]>Sent: 
Thursday, February 17, 2022, 06:01:33 AM ESTSubject: February 2022 Wildlife 
Column: Maples, Beavers, and More!
  

 
Written by Gwyn Loud for the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust. Gwyn welcomes 
your sightings, pictures, and questions at 781-259-8690 or gwynloud555@gma
 

 
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Written by Gwyn Loud for the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust. Gwyn welcomes 
your sightings, pictures, and questions at 781-259-8690 or 
[email protected]. Banner Photo: Beaver by Norman Levey.
 
Ms. G, the official Massachusetts groundhog, who lives at Drumlin Farm, did not 
see her shadow on Feb. 2. If folklore is correct, this means that spring will 
arrive early this year. Time will tell. A blizzard on January 28-29 dumped 
about a foot of snow on us (it was hard to measure due to wind and drifts) 
followed by nights of bitter single-digit cold. Freezing rain and sleet came on 
February 4. Lawns turned into “white concrete”, walking was treacherous and I 
felt sorry for birds and mammals which needed to burrow through snow for food 
or protection. The swings in temperature continued, giving us 58℉ on Feb. 12 
followed by snow all day the following day. But the sunlight lingering later 
each afternoon lifts the spirits and we know that the spring equinox is only 
six weeks away. Clipped twigs of forsythia blooming on my kitchen counter are a 
bright harbinger of what lies ahead.
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February 13th Storm. Photo by Bryn Gingrich.
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Sugaring season will soon be here as sap rises in the sugar maples and climate 
change makes the season start earlier. Quoting from a Cornell Cooperative 
Extension newsletter, “Here’s how it works: During the periods when 
temperatures rise above freezing, positive pressure develops in the tree. This 
pressure causes the sap to flow out of the tree through a wound (tap hole).
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Sugaring. Photo by Gwyn Loud.
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During cooler periods, when temperatures fall below freezing, negative pressure 
(suction) develops, drawing water into the tree through the roots. This 
replenishes the sap in the tree, allowing it to flow again during the next warm 
period. Although sap generally flows during the day when temperatures are warm, 
it has been known to flow at night if temperatures remain above freezing. Well 
before colonists began sugar maple tree growing in this country, Native 
Americans tapped the trees for their sweet syrup and used the sugar made from 
it for bartering. Their method of sap harvesting and syrup making is still used 
today!”
 
Each week more birds are starting to sing their spring calls and songs, 
including woodpeckers drumming, cardinals singing “cheer cheer”, and chickadees 
calling “fee bee”. Birds (and red and gray squirrels!) have been busy at 
feeders and several people have written about the pleasure of seeing bluebirds 
feeding, as many as eight at one residence on Hawk Hill Rd. Birds seen recently 
at Drumlin Farm include a brown creeper, sharp-shinned hawk, golden-crowned 
kinglet, 25 white- throated sparrows, two pileated woodpeckers, hermit thrush, 
common raven, and hairy woodpecker.
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More over-wintering robins have been reported lately but it will be many weeks 
before we see migrating flocks of robins coming from the south. By the end of 
February, however, we are likely to see and hear the first red-winged 
blackbirds arriving. Listen for their raspy “conk-a-ree” calls from wet 
meadows. Various hawks have been observed, including Cooper’s hawks looking for 
prey near bird feeders, and red-tailed hawks soaring over fields. A Woods End 
Rd. resident was surprised to see a peregrine falcon sitting in a tree near the 
house, certainly not a normal “yard bird”. Owls, especially great-horned owls, 
are hooting a lot in courtship and territorial behavior, usually in pre-dawn or 
early evening hours. They are very early nesters and may already be incubating 
eggs when this column goes to press. The great-horned owls do not build their 
own nests but use existing nests made in a previous season by hawks or crows, 
often high in white pines.
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River Otter Tracks. Photo by Michele Grzenda.
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Recent snow has given us the opportunity to see all sorts of animal tracks, 
which tell stories of who was headed where, how fast, and how recently. A 
unusual mammal sighting was of an ermine, which is the name for a weasel when 
its coat turns white in the winter. It was seen in a surprising place: dashing 
across the homeowner’s living room before running outdoors! The home, on 
Concord Rd., is close to Polebrook, which is a wildlife corridor.
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Fisher Tracks. Photo by Ron McAdow.
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Over the past month at least four fishers have been spotted in different parts 
of town. Coyotes have been howling at night; mid-February is their breeding 
season. Local beavers have been living up to their “busy as a beaver” 
reputation, as throughout the winter they are active chewing down trees to 
provide food for the beaver family in their lodge. Beavers observed in Heywoods 
Meadow seemed unfazed by being videotaped. Beavers have built a fairly new 
lodge by a pond on Winter Street near the Waltham line, which may require a 
“beaver deceiver” installation to keep the beavers happy while also preventing 
flooding.
 
With snow on the ground one does not usually think about insects but Norman 
Levey has been out with camera in hand, looking for insects and other 
arthropods. He has found wolf spiders, stoneflies and even a grasshopper on the 
snow, a good reminder that very small forms of wildlife are essential parts of 
food chains and ecosystems. He also found a nature mystery: a frozen orange 
flow coming from a rotten birch log, possibly the result, from tannin or other 
chemical resulting from wood decay.
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Wolf Spider. Photo by Norman Levey.
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An upcoming citizen science opportunity is the annual Great Backyard Bird Count 
on Feb. 18-21. As explained by National Audubon, “The Great Backyard Bird Count 
(GBBC) is a free, fun, and easy event that engages bird watchers of all ages in 
counting birds to create a real-time snapshot of bird populations. Participants 
are asked to count birds for as little as 15 minutes (or as long as they wish) 
on one or more days of the four-day event and report their sightings online at 
birdcount.org. Anyone can take part in the Great Backyard Bird Count, from 
beginning bird watchers to experts, and you can participate from your backyard, 
or anywhere in the world.” I encourage you to participate!
 
The February full moon, often called the Snow Moon, will occur on February 16. 
It has other names, however. As explained in the Old Farmer’s Almanac, “Names 
for this month’s Moon have historically had...
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 ©2022 Lincoln Land Conservation Trust | P.O. Box 10, Lincoln, MA 01773 
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