Blog Archives

Icy Lakeshore

icy superiorFriends, this icy sculpture was found at Stoney Point on Lake Superior yesterday.  We were owl hunting but found no owls.  The temperature was near zero Fahrenheit and the wind carried slivers of ice.  But this formation was irresistible to the photographer within me, the waves were moderate and occasionally broke over the top of this ice. The shutter speed of 1/5000 was used to freeze the water splashes.  This morning the temps are even colder and we are in a lodge on the shore of the Big Lake. til Tomorrow MJ

 

Winter Light on Lake Superior

winter lake superiorFriends, this is Lake Superior in the winter, but a very thin cover of ice.  We are going north again today to celebrate our 17th Anniversary, a little early but we felt the need to go owl hunting.  Trying out my new landscape lens, I love the early morning light on the Lake, so til Tomorrow MJ

 

More Gray Owls

gray in birchFriends, this Great Gray Owl was one of the many who migrated south in the winter of 2005-2006, they came south looking for food and such a migration is called an irruption.  They say the owls are irrupting again this winter and we did see two on the way to Two Harbors Minnesota on Saturday.  It was a sunny day so the yellow eyes did not show on our recent images, this owl and the one in the image below were taken on overcast days, so the yellow eyes were visible and the owls were very photogenic. til Tomorrow MJ

gray in pine tree

The rest of the story

owl flight22Friends, this Great Gray Owl flew out of a tree directly at me, at the last second he banked away and this image above was the result.  I think I ducked and he landed in the snow beside me, the image below was taken as he rested in the snow watching me, I wonder if he had been fed by the banders that in 2005 were roaming the bogs of Minnesota trying to determine the state of health of these birds that irrupted to the south.  Maybe he was expecting me to produce a mouse or other small rodent.  After a few seconds sitting on the ground, he flew back to his tree. Definitely a close encounter of the wildest kind, til Tomorrow MJ

owl snow

Great Gray Flight

flying owl

Friends, yesterday i showed you some Great Gray Owls from 2005, yesterday we saw two on our way to Ely Minnesota to visit the International Wolf Center.  Yesterdays birds were facing the sunrise so their eyes were very squinty, but this one flew right at me on a cloudy day, so yellow eyes were dramatic.  She flew straight at me and landed in the snow a few feet away, look at me for a few seconds while i leaned on the motordrive, then she flew back to her tree.  til Tomorrow the rest of the story MJ

Winter Owls

gray old owl

Friends, this is a Great Gray Owl from the land north of here, they sometimes migrate to the Sax Zim bog in the winter.  This image was captured in 2005 when we had an irruption of owls from Canada to the northern Minnesota/Wisconsin area.  I am processing with Photoshop with techniques that i have been practicing lately, blurring the background and sharpening the foreground, gives this bird a better isolation as the subject of the photo.  I love their bright yellow eyes that appear a bit cross eyed, maybe i was too close for the bird to focus correctly, hence crossed eyes.  Great Grays are large by bird standards but they are mostly feathers.  The owl in the image below is all fluffed up against the -20 degree day. A few owls migrate every year, but 2005 was special.  til Tomorrow MJ

owl resting

Wily Coyote

wily coyote

Friends, this is a wily coyote from the WSC in Forest Lake, and again a captive animal.  This male was adding his two cents worth to the wolves howling with some yipping and yapping. Many books have been written about the clever”trickster” of native legend, but the best in my estimation is God’s Dog written by Hope Ryden,  This researcher did her homework well and has written a definitive work on the natural history of coyotes.  til Tomorrow MJ

Quiet Time

quiet-wolf

Friends, this wolf is taking a nap on the snow, his coat is very thick and protects him from the cold.  He may look sleepy but his yellow eyes followed our every move. We have timber wolves in Crex Meadows but we rarely see them, they prefer the cover of darkness to hunt deer and teach their young how to hunt.  At night, we hear the howling at our house, the wolf pack that stalks the Clam River sometimes passes our place closely.  When we visited these wolves at The Wildlife Science Center, the chorus of howling was probably the only wildness left in these captive animals, but they sang of green forests and bogs where their relatives still roam free.  til Tomorrow MJ

Testing the Wind

testing the wind

Friends, this wolf is testing the wind, trying to detect whether us humans are well-intentioned.  Humans to these wolves are the bearers of food and so they cannot be allowed to run again in the wild.  I think the yellow eyes still speak of wild places and lifestyle, I empathize.  More wolves tomorrow, til Tomorrow MJ

Cougar eye

cougar3

Friends, this beautiful female cougar is a captive animal, two siblings (both female) were orphaned when they were very young.  We traveled to Forest Lake Minnesota (60 miles) to photograph the wolves as my husband needed new images for his wildlife painting.  The cats were a surprise and they looked surprised when all the wolves started howling.  I had a hard time working around all the fences, but this image succeeded so had to share it with you. til Tomorrow MJ