This weekend the wheat was harvested on the grounds of the Rock River Thresheree. I take pictures for them and they let me run around and look at the wildlife whenever I want on the property. I'd just come up to the north field with my camera when overall sporting Gaylord Hooker called, "Donna come over here. Hurry up!" So off I went trotting between the stalks and there, miraculously, nestled under a sheaf of wheat, untouched by all the machines, wagons, and feet that had passed by, were ten large eggs.
See what I mean?
The binder (above) no doubt, being there is a sheaf practically on the eggs, had passed directly over them with nary a crack. But the hay wagon and its contingent of gathers with pitchforks would very very soon be round to pitch the sheaves onto the wagon. What to do???
Suddenly a young man, who I didn't know, came up to ask what I'd found. He said, "Eggs, eggs, we've got to do something." And he took off and came back with a dented plastic barrel with dayglo pink streaks. Quite noticeable actually.
I took off. I found a tall stick, grabbed a file folder out of the car, a pen and, proceeded to write EGGS in large letters on the folder, poke the stick through the folder, and into the ground.
And just in time as the crew is on their way back. Not that they'd intentionally squash them, though they'd tease me that they might, but they're working and eggs aren't exactly the first things on their mind at the moment.
The two gentleman on the ground with the pitchforks are, left, Gaylord Hooker who pointed the eggs out to me in the first place, and on the right is Larry Langer.
Which is a great stroke of luck. Larry is a very interesting man. He was raised on a farm--one of the last of eleven children. His woodland craft is incredible. Nearly all of it is from absorbing what is around him with an acute perception as opposed to the study of books or specimens. So as I'm standing there with my sign and barrel, Larry outpaces the wagon and asks what I've found.
I show him and that's when he does "it". He stands very still, becomes almost limp and absorbs everything. It isn't at all like someone who is thinking, this is different. It's as if all the stimuli flows to him, he isn't searching it out with his eyes. He just is and the immediate scene enters him like a sponge absorbing water. I've never seen anything like it.
Then he quietly mulls over a few possibilities for species verbally, letting me in on the process.
He was raised on a farm and was one of the younger kids in a family of eleven of them. Commonly these sort when coming to a possible hypothesis, verbalize their last thoughts just in case somebody else (the siblings in childhood) wants to present an alternative idea. Farm kids from big families are innate team players. I'm not forthcoming with anything brilliant having seen the eggs of very few ground nesters. That's when he finally moves.
Larry bends down and points out the comparative size of the eggs, the brown speckles, and the fact that the eggs lay on bare ground without nesting material. His conclusion? Wild Turkey.
He then goes further. This nest is likely abandoned. The first clue is the egg farthest to the right. It is smeared with mud. Highly unlikely if it were being tended. And by now, this year's poults should be half grown. I ask if Turkeys ever second clutch. Unlikely, particularly as like Red-tails, they don't lay more eggs if there are still eggs to be sat on. If the eggs don't hatch they eventually give up and go about their business. And it was a terribly cold, wet spring. Neither of us has spoken to anyone who has even seen young poults this year.
That dealt with, he goes back to pitching sheaves on the wagon, which has done a lovely curve around the eggs--just in case. One never knows with birds exactly what they'll do and Mom just might be in the woods waiting for us to leave. Not likely but maybe.
And bringing in the sheaves continues.
Today I went back to look and they had taken the barrel and sign away so as not to scare a possible mom as they'd promised. No bird. And no eggs either. Without a hen to protect them or the tall grain to hide the eggs, a raccoon, a fox, someone, had had a very fine dinner.
In nature nothing is ever wasted.
Donegal:
Sorry I haven't been posting. I'm between PCs and was just able to get my imaging software to work. Here's the latest from the NYBG:
On June 17th, I saw a funny looking bird with no neck that I'd never seen before, hanging out in the green waters of the twin lakes. After looking it up when I got home, our mystery bird turned out to be a male, black-crowned night-heron. The attached photo of my new friend was taken on June 24th. Notice the red eyes.
A very vocal Blue Jay
Also, on the same day I came across three wet furballs. Baby muskrats! I'd always seen the adults swimming and enjoying themselves, but this was a first for me. The attached two photos were taken yesterday, Tuesday, June 30th.
But the kicker was the SCARY snapping turtle in the wild wetlands.
Pat Gonzalez
Thanks Pat!
Thanks Pat!
And in from longtime contributor Robin of Illinois-one of nature's beauties, though perhaps the nose might be best better hidden the next time--
And sweet too. Not nearly as dangerous looking as his yellow eyed glossy parents.
Photo by Karen Anne Kolling
The sparrows like to take baths in this shallow basin at the edge of my neighbors' koi pond.
House Sparrows seem to do everything in gregarious and highly vocal groups. It is certainly working for them when it comes to survival. There isn't a bit of stealth in their little feathered bodies. Pluck, speed, and strength in numbers are more their strong suites.
Donegal Browne
2 comments:
wow, great story with the eggs. certainly a mystery as to what happened to the mom. maybe she was a first timer and didn't know to put some padding underneath them. and amazing pix of the baby muskrat
Fascinating isn't it? I love a mystery. Indeed Mom could have been young and didn't quite have it right. As we know first time parents of any and all species don't necessarily get it completely correct the first time through.
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