Tag: Lake Michigan


Winter Opportunities

30
December
Snowy Owl

Snowy Owl

I want to encourage people to get out and see what this time of year has to offer. It is easy to traverse the woodlands with the lack of snow this year and these are great places to see and enjoy some friendly birds like Chickadees, Nuthatches and other song birds. Skunk Cabbage should also be poking through and be seen with its pointed mottled hoods in wet areas. Watch along gravel roads and farm fields for the Horned Lark and Snowy Owls. Just the other day I saw four Snowy Owls between Hudsonville and Hamilton, just look for the clump of white sitting on the ground or sometimes on a perch.

With the lack of ice in the rivers and Lake Michigan, ducks are not necessarily as confined to the openings in the ice as they might normally be this time of year. They can be found in sheltered river mouths or along the sheltered side of the piers when it is windy and rough on Lake Michigan. While fishing from the piers in Grand Haven the last couple of weeks I have seen an Eider, some Long-tailed Ducks, Redheads and Golden Eyes close to the pier in the calmer water. Be careful if venturing out on the piers as the colder temps set in, any water splashing on the pier will quickly freeze making it quit slippery.

Cork Elm

Cork Elm

This is a great time to get out and work on winter botany. Learn to identify plants that are still standing. You can learn to identify trees by their bark and buds. Some have very unique limbs or twigs like the Cork Elm pictured above with its thick layer bark and ridges. One goal I have is to find and identify the Shellbark Hickory in bud, this will give all four of our Hickories listed in the Michigan Flora.

Even though the temps are forecast to be colder the next week or so, the lack of snow and ice make much easier to get out and look for birds and other natural features that would normally be buried under the snow in winter. Who knows, you could even see some rare or not so common birds for our area or add some new ones to your life list.

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Ice On The Big Lake

23
January
Grand Haven Pier

Grand Haven Pier

Even though it was in the teens along the lakeshore and very cold with a slight northerly breeze, the sun finally came out today. I have been wanting to do some ice and lighthouse photos this winter but it has been almost constantly cloudy here and at the lake. Today was cold but perfect for light and the lake affect clouds stayed out over the lake making for good lighting and contrast, something we don’t always get with snow. You will notice in the photos that the ice extends as far as you can see except for a few small openings here and there. This is because Lake Michigan is frozen almost quit a ways out and with the prolonged arctic blast we are in, it will likely continue to build ice further out. It is predicted that this will be a record year for ice on the great lakes. One benefit from this is that the lake levels will stay up and we should start seeing less lake affect snow as there won’t be the evaporation with the ice cover like there is with open water. If going to the beach, be extremely careful as the ice is not always as safe as it may look.

Lake Ice

Lake Ice

As I traveled down the lake to Port Sheldon I say an immature Bald Eagle. In the open water of Pigeon Lake there were good numbers of Buffleheads and Canvasback Ducks. These and other northern breeding species can often be found in open waters of and near the great lakes in winter. The problem this year is that there isn’t much open water since it has been so cold. If you find open water on the rivers or drowned river mouths, you should find plenty of water fowl.

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