This afternoon (Saturday), there was a shrike scouting the farm fields at the intersection of Hwy 56 (Randolph Boulevard) and 302nd St. in Randolph, Goodhue County. It perched at intermittent intervals along the telephone wire, facing first one way, then the other, and moving eastward. At one point it dropped swiftly to the ground, as though pursuing something, and disappeared from view. Within several seconds it popped back into sight---apparently "empty-handed"---and perched right beside the highway on a tall weed stalk. It then resumed its wire-hopping, with short sorties over the field, in an undulating flight pattern, with brief bursts of wing-flutter, that seemed reminiscent of woodpecker movement. Close by on the same road (302nd), there were horned larks feeding, making forays between road and field. There was one quick episode of larks seeming to dodge something, but we never did confirm that the shrike was after them. The many horned larks we encountered further east seemed be in a safer position, however.
On the way home we were called by Laura Coble, who was at Frontenac Park. She had spotted 6 swans sunning on the ice by a small patch of open water on the Wisconsin side (I think) of the river. We spent some time observing them in our scopes, and were gratified that a few of them finally untucked their heads from their wings and stretched out those long necks! Linda Whyte -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20080301/dc3d2af8/attachment.html