Showing posts with label younger outdoor kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label younger outdoor kids. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Summer Flowers

Beautiful indeed are the flowers of summer. When I posted about spring flowers, I promised a post about summer flowers as well and now redeem my promise. One of the joys of summer is the wide variety of flowers you may grow in the garden or enjoy on an outdoor adventure. Don't get me wrong . . . gardening in itself is an outdoor adventure of a more tame nature, unless you garden like I do and then things can get pretty wild. I am including an assortment of wild and domesticated flowers (most of whom have their wild cousins) to accomodate the tastes of gardeners and wildflower enthusiasts both.


Nodding Trillium

Butterfly Bush
California Poppy
Purple Coneflower
Rudbeckia
Columbine
Wild Rose
Hollyhock
Delphinium
Water Lily
Sunflower
Since a picture is worth a thousand words, and no words of mine can do justice to the flowers, I will leave it to the viewer to exclaim over the beauty of God's handiwork. But when you get outside, just don't forget to sniff the flowers!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Crazy About Loons



I have to admit to a weakness . . . I am crazy about loons. I love seeing them, calling to them, taking pictures of them, and inflicting the pictures I have taken on my friends. Who could not be crazy about these awesome birds? They are world class divers, fabulous swimmers, beautiful to see and eerie to hear . . . best of all they are great fishers and spend their days out on the lake fishing. No wonder I am crazy about loons!


Up here in the North Woods, we have an expression "crazy as a loon" to describe anyone that we find mighty peculiar. Why the expression? Loons are not crazy, of course, and one loon acts much the same as another so they are not peculiar. The expression cames from their call, the tremolo, which you may listen to here. After listening, you may agree that the tremolo sounds a little, well, crazy shall we say?Loons use the tremolo call when they are excited or alarmed. Often this call may be heard if you accidently approach a loon's nest. The nest (below) is always carefully cammoflaged to remain hidden from predators.

Not all calls of the loon sound strange and eerie, though. The wail is a lonely and beautiful call often heard after dusk coming from bays around the lake. Family groups communicate with the "hoot" which sounds just like you would imagine from the name. The yodel is the call male loons make and use to defend their territory. Loons can use any combination of these calls to communicate with other loons.


Loons have no need to rely on technology like depth finders to do their fishing. As you can see in the picture above, loons have a far simpler way of finding fish. The loon has eyes that can see well underwater and it sticks its face into the water and looks down to see if there are any fish around for dinner.


Seeing a fish down below, the loon (above) makes a neat surface dive that is so smooth that it hardly disturbs the water. Now you see it, now you don't, and when you see it again it will not be where it was! To watch a video of a loon diving, you may click here. Loons are powerful swimmers, and when they resurface 100 yards away, there is hardly a ripple to show that they have. One second the lake is empty, and the next there is a loon sitting placidly atop the water.



Don't get the idea that loons are just laid back placid fishers, though. Loons have attitude, as the one above shows by flapping his wings, which in loon language means: "I am so bad . . . don't mess with me, baby!" Loons can be vicious fighters and during the mating season have terrific rumbles down under the water. Their weapon is their strong, pointed, beak which they use as a sword of sorts. The male loons fight under water, twisting and dodging as they try to get the best of their opponent and stab him with a beak. It is serious business, and a stab will pierce the bird who receives it. The long nimble neck of a loon is as dangerous wielding a beak as the arm of an old-time knight was wielding a sword.



For the most part, though, loons are just beautiful birds drifting about on the water during the warm summer days (or winter days, if you live in the South). They are fun to call to using the hoot (who could possible do a tremolo?) and will often respond by coming closer. Watching and calling to loons is just one more way to enjoy the outdoors. But I would not recommend trying to "swim with the loons" as some people swim with porpoises. That beak could as easily pierce you or me as it can a fish or another loon! Loons must be respected and when you learn more about their calls and behavior you can be pretty sure what it is they are trying to tell you. A tremolo means "Back off, you are crowding my space and I'm worried." A hoot is akin to "Howdy y'all!" and a wail is meant for enjoyment as you sit back in your boat or on the shore after sunset. Enjoy!

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Skunks


Most of us have seen a skunk at one time or another. Skunks can even live in towns where they dig in lawns for worms and grubs (short, fat, worm-like creatures) and eat the dog's food or dig in the garbage. Skunks have a smell that is pretty strong even when they have not been scared and sprayed. The smell is called "musk" and has an odor all its own.

Skunks are called "omnivorous" (om-niv-or-us) because they eat both plants and animals. They eat berries, seeds, insects, spiders, grubs, mice, eggs, and any small animal they can catch. Skunks make a home in dens which are usually a small hole in the ground made by the skunk or another animal. They will also live in hollow logs, under a pile of brush, or in barns and small outbuildings. Sometimes they will burrow under a house that people live in! Skunks sleep during the day and come out at night to hunt and find food.

The skunk is a very brave animal and will not run away from danger. This is because the skunk has a secret weapon: beneath its bushy tail are scent glands that can spray horrid smelling stuff that burns the eyes and chokes the nose and throat of anything that gets sprayed. This stinky stuff does not do harm, but it is very hard to get the smell off and anything that gets sprayed goes around smelling like a skunk for days. So it is wise to give a skunk plenty of room. If it starts bouncing around and standing on its front legs, it is time to get away fast! Some animals, like deer, can run very fast to escape danger. Others, like rabbits, have colors that blend into the things around them, this is called camouflage, so that they are hidden and that is how they escape danger. Skunks have a counter-camouflage. They are vividly black and white and animals learn fast that black and white means: "Stinky! Stay far away!"

One time when I was a kid my older brother and I were out roaming around in the woods and fields exploring. We were in an overgrown grassy field when we saw the grass moving a little way from us. We just had to find out what kind of animal was making the grass move, so we walked over to see. That was a big mistake! The grass was moving because we had scared a skunk and it was bouncing around warning us to stay away. The grass was too tall for us to ever see the skunk, but we smelled it when it sprayed. Suddenly our eyes began to burn and water, our noses were filled with the stink of skunk and began to burn, and our throats burned so badly that all we could do was choke and cough!

When we could see and talk again (the skunk had wandered off after paying us back for scaring it) we were very surprised, because neither of us could smell anything at all. We knew that we had been sprayed by the skunk and had to stink, but we couldn't smell skunk! I sniffed my brother's shirt and he sniffed mine...nope, we couldn't smell a thing. Now, my brother and I were kind of rascals and this was too good to keep to ourselves, so we headed home to see what would happen when we came into the house smelling like stinky skunks. (Don't ever do this to your mother if you get sprayed, okay?) We walked into the house where our older sister was sitting reading a book. No sooner had we entered the room than she let out a shriek: "Yuk! Get out! Mom...they got sprayed by a skunk and won't get out!" Well, the truth is we were laughing too hard to move!

Our Mom came and hustled us out of the house and straight into a tomato juice bath. Tomato juice is what was used in those days to get rid of some of the skunk smell. We had to bury our clothes, and after all that we still smelled like skunks for a long time. Nobody liked to be close to us because we stank! Good thing it was summer vacation and we didn't have to go to school smelling the way we did. We thought it was pretty funny, but after that we were careful to stay far away from skunks.

Skunks are good animals because they eat lots of bugs and mice that can do damage in the garden and around the yard. But if you see a skunk, watch it from a distance and if it starts standing on its front legs, run away fast.