birds found this weekend:  possible Kentucky Warbler, Cerulean warblers, 
Henslow's Sparrow, Western Meadowlark, Whip-poor-will, Bobolinks, Dickcissels, 
Olive-sided Flycatcher.

On Sunday, Jim Ryan and I went down to the Cannon River Wilderness Park south 
of Northfield and found a worthy treasure.  We were serenaded by the Veeries 
and Wood Thrushes and Ovenbirds, but it was the warblers that we came to see.  
We heard three Ceruleans and got incredible looks at one, even below us at one 
point.  On the right fork of the trail, where Joel reported a female Hooded 
Warbler,  we heard, but never saw a warbler that I ID'd as a Kentucky Warbler,  
Hopefully someone with sharper eyes will verify my ID.  Other birds included 
Eastern Towhee, Great Crested Flycatcher, Blue-winged Warblers, and 
Yellow-throated Vireo,   Glen and Jeanette found a skulking Mourning Warbler, 
which we missed.

We also visited the Soberg WMA (or is it a WPA?) and the fine prairie fields to 
the north.  This area is west of I-35 and south of CR70 in Lakeville, in the 
extreme southwest of Dakota County.  Take the first road south off of CR70.  
When the road turns south again you are at the fields.   Soberg is another 
quarter of a mile south..  The fields are full of displaying Bobolinks, that 
fly overhead and land just feet away on the fence posts.  both Marsh and Sedge 
Wrens are busy nearby.  I found the Henslow's Sparrow about a hundred yards 
south of the corner west of the road.  Another might have been calling from the 
same area, but I found it hard to separate out its call from the noisy Sedge 
Wrens, who first notes resemble the sparrow.   Soberg was an enjoyable walk 
through the ticks.  The most notable birds were Alder Flycatchers, a 
Great-horned Owl, and an Olive-sided Flycatcher.  Butterflies included numerous 
Common Ringlets, as well as a couple of Eastern Tiger Swallowtails.

We also visited Lake Byllesby, which had high water and no mud flats or sand 
bars.  Only birds of interest that we found there were the pelicans.  Other 
birds on the ride home were both Meadowlarks and a Logger-head Shrike.  
Dickcissels, which were missing from locations where they resided last year, 
were found behind the church on Highway 56 north of Randolf.   

On Monday night I ran my frog and toad survey route between Frontenac and Lake 
City in Goodhue County.  While some of my locations were dry and quiet, several 
stops were enveloped by a deafening chorus of frogs.  The most common choruses 
were the two treefrogs occasionally accompanied by the often drowned out songs 
of American Toads.   It was easy to stand there mesmerized by the symphany.  
Night birds calling included Marsh Wrens, a juvenile Barred Owl, and a 
Whip-poor-will.  The Whip-poor-will was distant enough that it was hard to 
engage in conversation.

Sorry for the late report.   I have been late getting home this week.

Steve Weston on Quiggley Lake in Eagan, MN
sweston2 at comcast.net

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20070531/a2f5b408/attachment.html
 

Reply via email to