Thursday, April 24, 2025

A Northwoods Almanac for 4/25 - May 8, 2025

A Northwoods Almanac for April 25 – May 8, 2025  by John Bates

Home Grown National Parks

         Planting time is on the horizon! If we want to attract wildlife to our properties, we all need to get on board with planting native trees, shrubs, and wildflowers. I’ve emphasized planting native species in the past (harped on it might be more accurate) for one simple reason – native plants co-evolved over millennia with our native insects, birds, and other animals, and non-native plants did not. The upshot of that? For instance, most of our native insect fauna cannot, or will not, use non-native plants for food. Thus, insect populations in areas with non-native plants will be smaller than in native plant areas, and a land without insects is a land without most forms of higher life.

         Aren’t fewer insects a good thing? Nope. Insects are great at converting plant tissues to insect tissue, and a large percentage of the world’s fauna depends entirely on insects to access the energy stored in plants. 

         Birds are the best example – 96%, or nearly all of the terrestrial bird species in North America, rely on protein-rich insects to feed their young.

Entomologist Doug Tallamy has written and spoken on this topic for decades, and his work has helped spawn the movement for restoring the habitats where we live, work and play – our lawns, gardens, woods, shorelines, et al – by planting native species.   

Tallamy calls this “reconciliation ecology.” He cites study after study that show the vital role of planting yards and gardens with native plants as the best means of saving wildlife.

Recently, he coined the name “Homegrown National Park” to describe making a difference in and around our homes.

He writes, “Our National Parks, no matter how grand in scale, are too small and separated from one another to preserve (native) species to the levels needed. Thus, the concept for Homegrown National Park, a bottom-up call-to-action to restore habitat where we live and work, and to a lesser extent where we farm and graze, extending national parks to our yards and communities.”

On his website (see homegrownnationalpark.org), Tallamy lists those native plants that are regional “keystone species” (the most productive) for wildlife, All you need to do is type in your zip code, and a list comes up of the most important species you can plant in your area.

Although Tallamy has written extensively about the large array of species that are of benefit to specific wildlife, I was surprised that the list on the website is constrained to a relatively small number. There’s a lot more species that we all can consider planting.

And remember it’s not just about food that plants provide. Wildlife species utilize plants for cover, too – for safety, for raising young, for protection from the weather, for breeding, and so on.

Here are the species of highest wildlife value I suggest you consider for planting on your property. For fruiting or masting trees, I recommend planting red oak, white birch, black cherry, pin cherry, crabapple, juneberry, and mountain ash, along with conifers like white pines, white cedar, and white spruce for cover and seed cones.

For shrubs, consider planting elderberry, nannyberry, winterberry, maple-leaved viburnum, highbush cranberry, dogwoods (red-osier, pagoda, gray), wild rose, blueberry, grapes, woodbine, and sumac, and sweet gale along shorelines. 

For groundlayer herbaceous plants, consider trying columbine, swamp milkweed, butterfly weed, common milkweed, jewelweed, sunflowers, coneflowers, bee balm/wild bergamot, asters, and black-eyed Susans.

            And again, make sure you plant native varieties specific to our area and not cultivars or exotics.

 

Sandhill Crane Count

            As we have done for over three decades, Mary and I paddled a section of the Manitowish River on 4/12 to count sandhill cranes as part of the Midwest Sandhill Crane Count. We were on the river shortly after 6 a.m. with the temperature at 28°, but the wind was light, which made all the difference in our handling the cold. The river level was quite low for this time of year, but not unexpected given how little snow we had this winter.

         The highlight was the number of trumpeter swans we encountered – 14! The cranes were far more circumspect, with “only” six being heard in the distance – three pairs duet calling from different areas along the river.

            Numerous song sparrows sang along the way despite the cold. And as always, being on the river so early in the morning and so early in the spring was absolutely beautiful. 


 

Sightings – FOYs (First-of-Year)

4/12: Joan Galloway reported seeing the FOY eastern phoebe in her yard.

Later that same day on Powell Marsh, we saw our FOY ring-necked ducks, great blue herons, and rough-legged hawks.

4/12: Again on Powell, we saw our FOY Wilson’s snipe, American widgeon, and a lifer for us – a Ross’s goose.

4/13: On Powell, we were fortunate to see our FOYs northern flickers, northern pintails, green-winged teals, hooded mergansers, northern shovelers, and a fabulous view of a peregrine falcon sitting on the marsh grass in perfect view of our scope. And we heard our FOY spring peepers.

4/15: Amidst the cold and new snow on Powell, we found our FOYs American coot and a small flock of greater yellowlegs .

4/16: One more time on Powell, we saw our FOYs buffleheads, blue-winged teals, and several swallows (couldn’t get a good enough look to ID  the species).

 

Ross’s Goose

            As noted above, we initially misidentified the Ross’s goose on Powell for a snow goose – they’re very similar in shape and coloration, but the Ross’s is overall much smaller. I have to admit Ross’s goose wasn’t even in my consciousness to consider, which made it all the more enjoyable to have our misidentification corrected and converted into a species we had never seen before.


Ross's goose

            So, what makes the Ross’s goose of interest? Well, the species wasn’t described in detail for science until the later 1800s, and their arctic nesting grounds remained unknown for another 80 years until Angus Gavin, a manager with the Hudson's Bay Company, located them in the Perry River region of the central Canadian Arctic in 1940.

            The Ross's goose formerly only wintered in central California, and was sold in California markets between 1880 and 1913. So many were killed during this period that they were thought to be threatened with extinction. 

Hunting of the Ross's Goose became illegal in 1931, but poaching and incidental killing helped keep numbers to only 2,000 to 3,000 into the early 1950s, but enforcement of hunting laws and protection of habitats eventually helped the birds recover.

Now, over the past few decades, the bird has expanded its range and its numbers so much so that the continental population is estimated to exceed 2 million birds! And, as with many good things, their numbers, along with the equally expansive population of snow geese, have grown too large, and both species are seriously impacting arctic wetland habitats. Liberalized hunting regulations are attempting to bring the numbers under control, but with limited success.

So, why was this bird named after some guy named Ross? Well, the Ross's Goose was named in 1861 after Bernard Rogan Ross, a Hudson's Bay Company clerk and chief trader at various forts owned by the company in what was called in those pre-Canada days, The North-Western Territory and Rupert's Land. Ross was a keen naturalist who sent hundreds of specimens to the Smithsonian in Washington and the British Museum (Natural History) in London, along with excellent notes on the habitats and nesting habits of each species that he collected. 


Range map for Ross's goose

Oldest Known Common Loon Returns on 4/11!

ABJ, the oldest known banded common loon, has returned once again to his natal grounds at the 95,000-acre Seney National Wildlife Refuge in the U.P. of Michigan. He was banded as a chick in 1987 and turns 38 this summer. His former mate of 25 years, Fe, who has yet to return, was banded as a breeding adult in 1990 and may be at least 39 years old.

It took ABJ ten years before he acquired a territory and his mate, Fe. They hatched their first chick in 1998 and their last chick in 2020. They were together for an unprecedented 25 years, raising a record number of 32 chicks, many of whom have returned as breeding adults to Seney, until the two unexpectedly split in the spring of 2022.

They’ve been spotted together briefly since then, but both have also been with other partners since the split. Fe has had other loon suiters while ABJ has been in territorial skirmishes with other males. He’s suffered a broken beak, has nested unsuccessfully with Daisy, a loon 20 years his junior, and had a “brief dalliance with” Aye-Aye, the loon that is said to have “precipitated” his split with Fe (I wonder what she did!).

ABJ begins his 35th season with the same intent all adult loons have: Claim a territory, find a mate, fight off challenges from would-be usurpers, share egg incubation duties for roughly a month, hatch one or two chicks, and diligently feed and protect them until they fledge in the early autumn. 

In the meantime, common loons have returned to a number of area wetlands where the water has opened – we saw our first pair of loons on 4/15 on Powell Marsh – but most loons, as of this writing on 4/18, are still flying daily recon missions over frozen lakes impatient for the ice to disappear and open water to rein again.

 

Celestial Events

            The new moon occurs on 4/27.

            Planets in May include at dusk, Mars high in the southwest and Jupiter bright in the west-northwest.

            Before dawn, look for Venus brilliant and low in the east, and Saturn in the east south-east.

            Look after dusk on 5/3 for Mars 2° below the waxing crescent moon.

            May 5 marks the mid-way point between spring equinox and summer solstice. Look before dawn for the peak Eta Aquarid meteor shower – expect 20 per or so hour.

            

Thought for the Week

“Familiarity with things about one should not dull the edge of curiosity or interest. The walk you take today is the walk you should take tomorrow, and the next day, and next. What you miss, you will hit upon next time. If Nature is not at home today, call tomorrow, or next week.” - John Burroughs

            

Please share your outdoor sightings and thoughts: e-mail me at johnbates2828@gmail.com, call 715-476-2828, snail-mail at 4245N State Highway 47, Mercer, WI, or see my blog at www.manitowishriver.blogspot.com

 

 

Thursday, April 10, 2025

A Northwoods Almanac for April 11 – 24, 2025

 A Northwoods Almanac for April 11 – 24, 2025  

Yes! There’s Proof Maple Syrup is Good for You

            Given my addiction to maple syrup, this obviously HAS to be my lead story. In a study published in the October 2024 issue of The Journal of Nutrition (“Substituting Refined Sugars With Maple Syrup Decreases Key Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in Individuals With Mild Metabolic Alterations: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Crossover Trial”), scientists at Université Laval in Quebec tested whether maple syrup is a healthier choice than refined sugar. Researchers asked 42 adults with moderately increased risk of cardiometabolic disease to substitute maple syrup for some of the refined sugars in their typical diet, for example, by adding syrup to plain yogurt rather than eating presweetened products. 

As a control, half of the participants ate a sucrose solution with artificial maple syrup flavor. 

After eight weeks of swapping maple syrup for refined sugar, participants had reduced blood pressure and less fat around the belly and upper body. They also regulated their blood sugar levels better in a glucose tolerance test. Together, these responses reflect improved cardiometabolic health via a small dietary intervention – about two tablespoons of maple syrup daily.

         Following the maple syrup diet, participants also had lower levels of gut bacteria from species associated with infection, high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease. Meanwhile, beneficial bacteria such as the probiotic Lactobacillus casei became more abundant, probably because they thrive on plant compounds found in maple syrup.

         Like table sugar, maple syrup is mostly sucrose, but unlike table sugar, maple syrup also contains all the above benefits. So, for sweetening your morning coffee or tea, consider a spoonful of maple syrup rather than refined sugar. Or use maple syrup for sweetening yogurt, making a smoothie, or wherever your sweet tooth leads you. You’ll be supporting both a local maple syrup producer and taking better care of your own health.

         It’s always essential to look at who funded a study, so I should note that the study was jointly funded by Québec Maple Syrup Producers (QMSP) and the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food of Quebec. Quebec leads the world in maple syrup production, producing 67% of all the world’s supply. Eleven million gallons of maple syrup annually come out of sugar shacks in Quebec, accounting for more than 90% of all Canadian domestic production. More than 13,500 maple syrup producers work in some 7,600 sugar groves in Quebec.  

         So, Quebec is indeed very serious about their “liquid gold,” and thus is highly motivated to find good study results. With that I mind, perhaps take these results with a grain of, well, salt.

 

Not All Springs are Created Equal      

         Of course, not every spring produces a good maple sap run. When Mother Nature is generous, it can result in production surpassing demand, but when weather conditions are unfavorable, producers can’t supply all the maple syrup that consumers want. This unpredictability is why the Québec Maple Syrup Producers established its “Global Strategic Reserve” by pasteurizing surplus maple syrup and then storing it in food-grade barrels. In a poor harvest year, syrup in the reserve is then made available to buyers, ensuring that Quebec is virtually never out of stock and the markets remain supplied. 

         Three warehouses in Quebec hold this reserve of maple syrup. With a combined capacity of 133 million pounds (216,000 barrels), the three warehouses can hold the equivalent of 53 Olympic-sized swimming pools of maple syrup. At full capacity, this represents a value of $400 Million US ($557 million CAD).



         The United States is the second-largest worldwide producer of maple syrup, accounting for approximately 29% of global production. Vermont leads the way by far with 48.9% of United States production, followed by 17.9% from New York, and 11.2% from Maine. Wisconsin is a distant fourth with 5% to 10% depending on the year.

         The U.S. doesn't begin to make enough maple syrup to fulfill the needs of our domestic market, so we very much need Canadian syrup. In 2024, Quebec exported around $450 million worth of maple syrup to the U.S. 

         With the possibility of a 25 per cent or greater tariff looming on Canadian imports, manufacturers who utilize maple syrup, along with all of us addicted consumers, are worried about where the prices may be headed. I’m hoping our government sees the light on this, and our pancakes and waffles will not, by dint of too high of a price on the real stuff, be subjected to one of the great crimes of humanity – fake maple syrup.

 

The Sticky

         Oh, and if you want to get really carried away about all this maple syrup stuff, watch the new Amazon Prime TV series “The Sticky” which is very, very loosely based on the “The Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist” of 2011 when $18 million worth of maple syrup, nearly a half million gallons, was stolen from the Global Strategic Reserve. The syrup was stored in unmarked white metal barrels, inspected only once a year. The thieves used trucks to transport the barrels to a remote sugar shack, where they siphoned off the syrup, refilled the barrels with water, and then returned them to the facility. Eventually, the thieves began siphoning syrup directly from the barrels in the reserve without refilling them, and found a way to sell the syrup via a black market.

         (This is my kind of heist!)

         An investigation by Quebec provincial police, however, led to the arrest of 26 individuals, including the ringleader behind the scheme, Richard Valliere. In April 2017, Valliere was found guilty of theft, fraud and trafficking stolen goods. He was sentenced to eight years of prison and was fined nearly $9.4 million.

         The lesson of that sentencing? Don’t mess around with the suppliers of maple syrup in Quebec.

 

Sightings – FOYs (First-of-year)

         3/20: We had our FOY Cooper’s hawk appear at our feeders and scatter our songbirds hither and yon. 

         3/20: Mark Westphal sent me a wonderful photo of three flying squirrels, and noted, “They were seen peeking out of a nest box that had been designed for  screech  owls. Although I never really expected to attract any owls in this particular box, I am glad it is getting some use. I know flying squirrels are primarily nocturnal, but  their curiosity got the better of them as I passed by the nest box in the middle of the afternoon. Apparently the crunch of my boots in the snow was a sound they needed to check out.”


flying squirrels, photo by Mark Westphal

         3/21: Our FOY American robins appeared in Manitowish.

         3/23: Starlings made their first appearance in Manitowish.

         3/27: Somewhere around a gazillion birds – mostly pine siskins and American goldfinches – swarmed people’s feeders all around our area as a big snowstorm rolled through and covered up easy sources of other food.

         4/3: Our FOY fox sparrow found its way to beneath one of our feeders and began its characteristic hopping back and forth while scratching the ground with its claws to expose seeds.


fox sparrow, photo by Bev Engstrom

         

Why Does Ice Appear Blue?

I read this recently: Ice appears blue because the dense, compacted ice absorbs longer wavelengths of light (red and yellow), while shorter wavelengths (blue) are scattered and reflected back, creating the blue hue.

 

Plantings for Birds

         It’s nearly time to do spring planting, and one consideration in what to plant should always be providing native foods for the birds we all so enjoy seeing at our feeders. 

         With that in mind, the Audubon Society has produced a database of native plants specific to wherever one lives. Just enter your zip code, and up comes a list of the best plants, what birds are attracted to them, and where to buy them (see https://www.audubon.org/native-plants). 

         So, I entered my zip code, and up came a lengthy array of plants. For instance, I clicked on “Service-Berry” (also known as Juneberry and one of our favorite small trees that we’ve planted), and it listed 10 families of birds that are attracted to the fruits: cardinals/grosbeaks/buntings, chickadees, mockingbirds and thrashers, nuthatches, blackbirds and orioles, sparrows, thrushes, vireos, waxwings, wood warblers, wrens, and woodpeckers – one heck of a list!


Juneberry flowers, photo by John Bates

         It also provided a statewide list of where to buy Juneberries, including our local ClearView Nursery on Fawn Lake Road, off of Hwy. 182. There are, however, many other plant nurseries in our area one could call to see if they carry native Juneberries. Please be sure to ask for our native species, given that our native insects and birds have co-evolved with them, and you will get the most birds from planting the native plant species they prefer.

 

2025 State of the Birds report 

Speaking of birds, the 2025 State of the Birds report, produced by a coalition of leading science and conservation organizations, was released in March, and revealed continued widespread declines in American bird populations across all mainland and marine habitats. Some 229 species were listed requiring urgent conservation action.

Key findings included that more than one-third of U.S. bird species are of high or moderate conservation concern, including 112 “Tipping Point” species that have lost more than 50% of their populations in the last 50 years.

According to the report, bird populations in almost every habitat are declining. Most notably, duck populations have declined, which is surprising because they have been a bright spot in past State of the Birds reports.

On the positive side of things, proactively working to protect America’s birds boosts the U.S. economy. Nearly 100 million Americans engage in birding activities. Findings from the 2022 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, demonstrated that the total economic output related to birdwatching activities is $279 billion, and birding related activities support 1.4 million jobs. 

The report can be found at https://www.stateofthebirds.org/2025/

 

Celestial Events

            The full moon occurs on 4/12. Variously called the “Awakening Moon,” the “Grass Appearing Moon,” and the “Maple Sugar Moon,” this will be our most distant full moon of the year, appearing 14% smaller than our closest full moon which occurs on Nov. 5.

            On 4/14, we will now be blessed with 13 hours and 31 minutes of sunlight..

            Ice-out on most area lakes “should” occur with the next two weeks. According to Woody Hagge’s 52 years of data, the average ice-out date on 39-acre Foster Lake in Hazelhurst is April 16. Foster Lake averages 224 days of open water, or if you’re a glass-half-empty type, 141 days of ice cover – 61% to 39%. 

            Look predawn on 4/22 for the peak Lyrid meteor shower – average is 10-20 meteors per hour.

 

Thought for the Week

             “Heaven is beneath our feet as much as over our heads.” – Henry David Thoreau 

 

Please share your outdoor sightings and thoughts: e-mail me at johnbates2828@gmail.com, call 715-476-2828, snail-mail at 4245N State Highway 47, Mercer, WI, or see my blog at www.manitowishriver.blogspot.com