Looked at a map. Canada and all of the west coast seem to be raven
country. Looks like northern MNis the extremesouthern edge of a huge range.
Defund The 1 Percent War Machine: http://alturl.com/j7ibn
On 11/3/2012 11:05 PM, Steve Weston wrote:
Hi Jim,
The simple answer is that we have been talking about the southern edge
of their range which would be the middle of Sherburne Co, Northern
Anoka County and on across to the St. Croix. Go north from there and
they become more and more common as you go. By the time you
reach Highway 2 they should be more common than Crows. If you are
not familiar with the MOU website (www.moumn.org
<http://www.moumn.org/>) , you should check out the species occurance
maps to find out where any species is being seen.
Steve
On Sat, Nov 3, 2012 at 5:55 PM, Jim Mork <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I don't think I've ever seen a raven in Minnesota. Where do they
like to hang out?
Defund The 1 Percent War Machine: http://alturl.com/j7ibn
On 11/3/2012 5:04 PM, Steve Weston wrote:
they have been this far south for years. This represents the
southern edge
of their range in Minnesota. they have been found about once
every five
CBC counts at Cedar Creek Bog in northern Anoka County,
although with
greater coverage in recent years they are found more regularly.
Steve Weston
On Sat, Nov 3, 2012 at 10:18 AM, Al Schirmacher
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>wrote:
Ravens in Milaca, Sherburne Refuge, Carlos Avery - any
theories why they
are this far south?
Al Schirmacher
Princeton, MN
Sent from my iPhone
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Steve Weston
On Quigley Lake in Eagan, MN
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
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