The outdoor wonders you weren’t expecting
I’m a big fan of being sidetracked when outdoors, whether fishing, hunting, hiking or birding. The last week brought sharp reminders from readers and my own experiences.
On Thursday, Dan Rogers and I watched two big white birds fly in low over a wetlands behind Steve Palmisano while we duck-hunted in Lawrence County. Could it be? Oh, it was: the first sighting of wild whooping cranes for all of us. A freaking marvel. Downstate biologist Paul Skoglund had mentioned that whoopers had been spotted recently. But I sure didn’t expect to see any. All the years I’ve scoped out sandhill cranes and never saw a whooper mixed in . . . then I spot a pair while duck hunting. Go figure.
† Mark Simpson sent in this week’s Fish of the Week (see right column) from southern Lake Michigan. At the end of the message, he added, “Oh, and we saw this guy out there as well.”
He attached a good photo of “this guy,” a snowy owl.
In my business, that’s called burying the lede.
It has been a good fall for snowy owls on the lakefront. On Friday, Ray Cote sent a photo of another.
“This afternoon on the wall south of the gap at Chicago,” he wrote.
I suspect snowy owls are seen in those areas because they can avoid some of the human contact of urban areas. Years ago, snowy owls used restrictions around the exclusive airport, now Northerly Island Park, for that isolation.
† On Sunday, my wife needed to be at church early for choir. After dropping her off, I went for a
mile-plus walk. Only 50 yards in, a big buck moseyed across the trail, then disappeared fast enough that I never got a photo.
That was just the beginning. By the end of the first half of my hike, I had seen the big one, a decent buck and two small bucks with does.
It’s no surprise that non-hunters think deer hunting should be a snap. Just a tip: Deer in the wild act far differently than those roaming the forest preserves.
Illinois hunting
Speaking of deer, when
harvest numbers come for the muzzleloader-only season, they will post at chicago.suntimes.com/ outdoors.
Wild things
Considering it’s mid-December, a lot of sandhills are being sighted around Chicago. I suspect flirting with record warm temperatures has something to do with that.
Stray cast
Watching the Bears play becomes like cheering on a kid his first time fishing.