Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Hello Everyone,

Our nine weekends of the 2024 banding season seemed to go very fast this year. Again this season, we did not get the weather to cooperate. There were no major cold fronts to push down large numbers of migrating raptors on the weekends that we were banding. Also our numbers this year were slightly less than last year due to an extremely warm fall. And again this year, half of our team was unable to participate due to health issues.

Even so, socially this was a fun season at Hawk Harbor. We had a couple of groups that came up and we did get visitors and campers who made the nine weekends very enjoyable.

We are trying not to schedule large groups anymore. With increasingly uncertain weather patterns, we want to be able to make last minute decisions as to whether or not we will be going up north to band.

I would like to thank all the friends and neighbors who made this year so special, even though we had low banding numbers.

A very special THANK YOU goes to the Mattson family for letting us use their hay field for the 55th year in a row!

Also a big THANK YOU goes to Bob Crosbie for supplying our lure birds this year; all of them were returned home unharmed!

A GREAT BIG THANK YOU goes out to Trudi Taylor and Rick DuPont. Without your dedication and co-operation, we would not be able to do this thing we love so much, year after year. THANK YOU, Trudi, for editing all of our weekly banding reports.

Thanks to all of you who read our weekly reports for being such great friends and for sharing an interest in our modest program!

THANK YOU SOOOO MUCH!!!!!!

We banded a total of 82 raptors this season, compared with last year's total of 97 and 2022's total of only 70.

We had a total of 17 bounce-outs this year, compared to only 6 bounce-outs last year.

Here it is, the final breakdown.




















Sharp-shins - 58
Immys  27  . . . . Males 9   . . . . . Females 18
Adults  31 . . . . Males 17 . . . . . Females 14





















Cooper's - 2
Immys 1 . . . . Males 0 . . . . . Females 1
Adults  1 . . . . Males 1 . . . . . Females 0

























Goshawks - 1
Immys  1 . . . . Males 0 . . . . . Females 1
Adults  0 . . . . Males 0 . . . . . Females 0


























Red-tails - 10
Immys  6 . . . . . Males 2 . . . . . Females 4
Adults   4 . . . . . Males 1 . . . . . Females 3


























Rough-legs - 1
Immys  1 . . . . . Males 1 . . . . . Females 0
Adults  0 . . . . . Males 0 . . . . . Females 0






















Merlins - 7
Immys  6 . . . . . Males 5 . . . . . Females 1
Adults  1 . . . . . Males 1 . . . . . Females 0






















Kestrels - 3
Immys  3 . . . . . Males 1 . . . . . Females 2
Adults  0 . . . . . Males 0 . . . . . Females 0

Total Males . . . . . . . . . 38
Total Females . . . . . . . 44

Total Immys  . . . . . . . . 45
Total Adults   . . . . . . . . 37

Total for 2024 Season . . . . 82

Eagles - 0, Gyrfalcons - 0, Peregrines - 0, Harriers - 0, Broadwings - 0.

Please help hawks by supporting:
Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory ( https://www.hawkridge.org/ )
Midwest Peregrine Society ( https://midwestperegrine.umn.edu/ )
National Eagle Center ( https://www.nationaleaglecenter.org/ )
Raptor Resource Project ( https://www.raptorresource.org/ )
The Raptor Center ( https://raptor.umn.edu/ )
Twin Cities Metro Osprey Watch ( http://ospreywatch.blogspot.com/ )

Keep your eyes on the skies!

Trudi and Frank Taylor

Monday, October 28, 2024

Ninth Weekend of Banding 2024

Hello Everyone,

This is our ninth and last report of the 2024 banding season, covering the weekend of October 25th, 2024.

Friday, October 25th, 2024
Trudi, Rick, and I checked the weather for this weekend on Wednesday and decided the best days to go up banding would be on Friday and Saturday. We left home early Friday morning and met Rick at Hawk Harbor around 9:00 am. The wind was out of the West-north-west and by the time we were set up at 9:45 am, hawks were getting up all around us and starting to migrate.

At 9:50, we saw a Sharp-shinned Hawk take a shot at the fake owl. Rick pulled the lure line and the shin made a long slanting stoop right into the front net. Our first bird of the day was an adult male Sharp-shinned Hawk!

About a half an hour later, a dark phase Rough-legged Hawk made a stoop at the owl and hit it! We could hear the "thwack" all the way back at the blind! It made a couple more passes at the owl and then it saw our lure. It came in fast and low, hitting the front net, dead center. What a beauty! We banded it, took some photos, and Rick released it.

It was a nice warm sunny day and the big birds all started soaring up high, riding on the thermals. Almost two hours passed before we got our second shin. This one was a young female that was also taking a shot at the fake owl when we spotted it and lured it in. It had a full crop! We banded it, took some photos, and Trudi released it.

Another hour and a half passed before a young female shin that was passing to the South of us saw the lure and charged in. That was our third shin of the day. As we were taking it out of the net, Barb and Dave Arlander came up to see us. Dave is a model railroader friend from Rochester. They were up on the North Shore for that weekend to ride the excursion steam train out of Duluth. Barb and Dave, with two other couples, were scheduled to ride the steam train that was making a run up the shore on Sunday. While we were showing them that shin, another shin, this time an adult male, came in from out in front. We banded the fourth shin of the day, took some photos, then Barb and Dave each got to release a shin.

We caught one more shin while they were visiting, our fifth one of the day. It was out over the woods North of us when it saw the lure and made a high approach over the front net and into the back net. We banded it, took some photos, and then I showed them how you can falsely hypnotize a bird. You place it down on the ground on its back while pulling your hand away slowly. It usually stays put, and then you clap your hands to wake it, letting it take off from the ground.

An hour and a half had passed after Barb and Dave left and we were thinking of closing down, when a Rough-legged Hawk that was passing high over us, started an almost vertical stoop at the lure. Before it could get all the way down to our nets, an adult Red-tailed Hawk shot in from the South, hitting the front net and scaring off the rough-leg! We banded it, took photos, and I got to release it.

We got a total of 7 birds and no bounce-outs on Friday.
5 Sharp-shinned Hawks, 1 Rough-legged Hawk, and 1 Red-tailed Hawk.

Saturday, October 26th, 2024
Saturday was a "nice" day on the North Shore, but not so good for hawk banding. The winds were light out of the Southwest and were going to change to the South later in the day. We set up early thinking we might catch a hunting bird before they all started "thermalizing" and going up out of sight. Later, Mary and Don Mattson, who own the farm we have been doing our hawk catching on for the last fifty-five years, came up to say hello. They have been so supportive of our banding efforts for all these years!

We stayed at it from 8:30 am to 1:00 pm without catching a single bird! We did have an adult Sharp-shinned Hawk come in and bounce out around 10:00 am. Sometime after the bounce out, I saw a bird with a long tail fly up out of the draw and come right over the bind. It was a Black-billed Magpie! We also saw a couple Golden Eagles pass over that day. We closed down at 1:00 pm and cleaned out the blind and locked it up for the season. Trudi and I stayed over at Hawk Harbor on Saturday night and went into the Culver's in Two Harbors for supper.

We got a total of 0 birds and 1 bounce-out on Saturday.
Skunked Day

7 total birds and 1 bounce-out for the weekend.
82 total birds for the season.

Sunday, October 27th, 2024
Sunday morning, Trudi and I went into Two Harbors for breakfast at Judy's Cafe. After that we went back to Hawk Harbor so we could clean out our trailer and prepare it for winter storage.

We were all packed up and ready to leave Hawk Harbor at 10:00 am. If you know me, you know I LOVE TRAINS! So, with cameras all charged up and a steam train heading our way, we drove down to meet it and get some run-by photos. We paced it up the shore, getting passing shots at several crossings. We even got pictures of Barb and Dave as they waved back at us from the Vista Dome car. (I'll be putting up a short train video on my YouTube channel soon.)

Please help hawks by supporting:
Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory (www.hawkridge.org)
Midwest Peregrine Society (https://midwestperegrine.umn.edu/)
National Eagle Center (www.nationaleaglecenter.org)
Raptor Resource Project (https://www.raptorresource.org/)
The Raptor Center (www.raptor.cvm.umn.edu)
Twin Cities Metro Osprey Watch (http://ospreywatch.blogspot.com/)

Keep your eyes on the skies!

Trudi & Frank Taylor

01. Our first bird on Friday was an adult Sharp-shinned Hawk.

02. It buzzed the owl and came right in.

03. Frank banding the shin.

04. An adult male Sharp-shinned Hawk.

05. Trudi, Rick, and Brynn with the shin.

06. An adult male Sharp-shinned Hawk.

07. Brynn holding the shin.

08. Brynn releasing the shin.

09. A dark phase Rough-legged Hawk buzzing the owl.

10. The Rough-legged Hawk coming in.

11. A dark phase Rough-legged Hawk.

12. Rick holding the rough-leg.

13. A dark phase Rough-legged Hawk.

14. Frank banding the rough-leg.

15. Frank, Brynn, Rick, and Trudi with the rough-leg.

16. Trudi getting a photo of Rick holding the rough-leg.

17. Rick releasing the rough-leg.

18. Another shin coming in.

19. Our second shin of the day.

20. Rick holding the young female shin.

21. Trudi about to release the shin.

22. Trudi releasing the shin.

23. Our third shin of the day.

24. Our fourth shin of the day.

25. Frank, Rick, Trudi, Brynn, Barb, and Dave with the two shins.

26. Dave and Barb holding the shins.

27. Barb releasing one of the shins.

28. Dave releasing the other shin.

29. Our fifth shin of the day.

30. A Red-tailed Hawk coming in.

31. An Adult Red-Tailed Hawk.

32. Frank banding the red-tail.

33. An adult Red-tailed Hawk.

34. Brynn, Rick, Trudi, and Frank with the red-tail.

35. An adult Red-tailed Hawk.

36. Frank about to release the red-tail.

37. Frank releasing the last bird of our 2024 banding season.

38. Rick, Frank, and Trudi with Don and Mary Mattson,
who own the farm we have been doing our hawk catching on for the last fifty-five years!
They came out on Saturday to say hello, but we didn't catch any hawks that day.

39. A fuzzy far-off photo of a Golden Eagle going over.

40. We saw very few young red-tails this year!

41. A rare Black-billed Magpie flew right over the blind!

42. We saw lots of Rough-legged Hawks going by.

43. We cleaned out the blind and closed it up for the winter.

44. Fetching the fake owl is always the last thing before leaving.

45. Pacing the steam train.