Showing posts with label loons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loons. Show all posts

Friday, 8 September 2023

Last summer patio meal?

I am watching the Lich/Barber 'Freedom Convoy' trial with some hope. These are the instigators and leaders, who told angry protestors to 'Hold The Line,' and encouraged the dirty, noisy, filthy, remorseless occupiers to remain for weeks. 

"The charges against Tamara Lich and Chris Barber include mischief, counselling others to commit mischief, intimidation and obstructing police." 

It is a trial by judge for 16 days. The high priced lawyer (💰 Lawrence Greenspon) claims we cannot refer to it as an occupation, in deference to Ukraine. Weird point of view. People couldn't get their groceries, medications from the pharmacy, they couldn't sleep, were harassed leaving their homes. Wrote Shakespeare, "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers.


🔥 The weather has been horrid for many, I know. We've had this heat wave. We knew rain was on the way for Thursday and/or Friday. JB suggested we go out for a patio meal. Most of the tourists have left us, but many don't close up cottages until October. We are happy to see them go. Loons are gathering in flocks for their migration trip south. A couple of teens were seen harassing them on the lake nearby, doing stunts around them. Freedom, me arse. The loons are needing all their energy for the trip south.



Wednesday, Sept. 6th
OK, dinner out. We took off for the patio, hopeful to get a seat. In fact, we snagged our favourite corner table. There was a bit of a breeze, which was delightful. We only saw a vulture circling and soaring in the wind. We shall miss the birds.


This was with my cell phone, but there were 3 Le Boat rentals passing by. What could go wrong with this? Well, there were a couple of disasters in the summer with one getting grounded, another staff put diesel into the canal. 
1.  LE BOAT CLEANING UP RIDEAU CANAL AFTER DIESEL SPILL

Here are three Le Boats in a row. You can tell my iPhone photos aren't as good as with my camera. I'm not sure why, maybe I shake too much! 






Here we are! Caesar Salad with salmon, and a hamburger with salad. 



🍁Autumn, bring it on!

Friday, 13 November 2015

Narrows Lock Rd. Big Rideau

Sunday drive - Nov. 8th

This was a lovely day. This is part 3 of our day trip.

  1. Rideau Ferry; Canada Geese
  2. Westport Harbour: cold, clear lake and blue sky

We've had 10 C. temperatures, and 16.51mm (0.65") over a couple of days and, of course, grumpy cats. How nice to look back on this fine trip! Normally, our November temperatures bring freezing rain, or snow, hovering nearer 5 C. than 10!

There were 45+ loons and mergansers. Mostly the latter! They moved slowly away from little ol' me!


Archival summer photos of same! Soon enough these waters will be mostly frozen.



Cottages are obvious with the fallen leaves and nude deciduous trees.


Someone was burning leaves on the other side of the Big Rideau.

Thursday, 26 June 2014

Cottage country fun and water frolic

We're off to the city for more medical stuff. I doubt I'll have time to canoe on this, National Canoe Day! The appointment isn't until the afternoon, they always run late, and it takes us 2 hours to get home from the city. Here is a post for canoeists...
Bambi peeks out from behind a tree,
Buster watches, wagging his tail.
I posted the video of it below!
It was a good day's work outside.
My cap caught 22 deerflies!
Popped my cap upside down
 in the goldfish pond,
they had a feast!

Sadie on the path leading to the meadow.
She was watching for her friend, Chipmunk.
Bambi following Buster
Buster and his twin, Felix, used to go walkies with me.
Buster wasn't the same when Felix was killed.



Off I went for an afternoon canoe ride. Four loons, boaters, worried Eastern Kingbirds nesting on an island in a tree, and a heron flew by.

Hubby bought me a 'close eyes!'
He made me go out to the car,
while I closed my eye,
he opened the trunk!
What a treat!
Daisy in the daisies.
I couldn't get her any closer. The deerflies are
totally harassing her, she preferred the shade.
Back home, there was a surprise!

Thursday, 5 June 2014

It is a wonderful time of year: canoeing, bird watching!

She's good to go!
I put her indoors,
we took the canoe to its spot!
She is such a good assistant!

Daisy canoes from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.
I was set to take my canoe over to it's dock. Daisy had to check it out.

Aren't they beautiful?
After I launched, I went for a short canoe, on a windy day. The loons laughed as I frantically paddled.


Back at home, I've been following these robins, who heckle me from the dying Elm tree. There is a nest, well-hidden in this patch of forest, nicely populated by a kazillion mosquitoes. I gave up looking for it!
They have a nest, but I cannot find it!
Food for thought!
A wee painted turtle
Once newspapers go the way of Do-do bird,
there will be many unhappy cats.

Friday, 13 December 2013

Loon on the frozen field – missed the 'go south' memo

Chompy –and what a beak!
I don't know why I volunteer to do these things. We had some time. My regular Thursday morning volunteer gig was cancelled, tutoring teen girls. I totally forgot, in the emergency, that I was to participate in a Webinar on Dementia for my volunteer work. People needed to have a rescued loon delivered from Perth to Napanee, and they had to get it back into water within 24 hours. Napanee has a wild bird centre. I thought I could do it.

There were mistakes.
Plan A 
Firstly, they told me it had to go to the Wild Bird Centre in Napanee. I checked with hubby. It's only a 90 minute drive, and the sun was out. Sure.
Then, when I made the phone call to the Nepean centre in Ottawa, they said it had to go to Nepean. No worries. That's only an hour away.
Plan B 
I asked the Nepean Wild Bird Centre if there was anything I needed to know. Did I need to wear gloves, as was suggested by the rescuers?  It's not good to get human and/or foreign goop on their feathers. The person answering the phone told me no. No special instructions. She gave me their address, and I wrote it down. We'd often driven that way to visit the kids.

The rescuers said they would put it in a box, since it could get its neck stuck in a dog crate's bars. They didn't have a box, but it was sitting in a dog crate. We had a cat crate, and that wouldn't be a problem. I put towels in the bottom. When we arrived to pick it up, they corrected us. Not going to  Nepean. No nice lunch in the city. We were off to Napanee. Sure. Change back to Plan A.

My video of Lake Effect Snow
Skywatch Friday
It was unable to fly. It's rear legs appeared frozen.  The wings were damaged. The brave man who had caught Chompy (in his shirt sleeves, in a frozen farmer's field, using his coat to capture it), was called back the office. It was sitting quietly in a dog crate, and he began to load it up for me. He grabbed its neck with his gloved hand, it grabbed his coat sleeve with its large beak, and he lifted it up and popped it into our crate.

Along we drove on centre bare highway, with storm clouds looming from Lake Effect Snow. After 20 minutes Chompy seemed rather upset. We were miles from anywhere. It seemed as if Chompy had thawed out and was good to go. My instinct was to stop at an open river, there were a few on the way, but not many, and throw it in. They need open water to run fast enough to become air borne, the lakes are mostly frozen over. But what is it WAS injured?
Powerful wings - on Lower Rideau lake


Eventually, it calmed down. During another pit stop I was afraid to look. I regretted our decision to volunteer. When we arrived in Napanee, a staff member picked the crate up and took it into the back room. She said that she needed to know where it was found, and that we should return it to the open water. We had to stop twice for pit stops. It was a terrible drive. It was happy in the enclosure. What was I thinking to put hubby through this? He adores animals of all kinds.

The staff member called in her supervisor, who inspected the bird in the private back room. She came back out to lecture me, telling me that I should not have used the crate. Chompy had smucked her beak and wing on the bars trying to get out. Lesson learned. I was just trying to help. The boss was terribly harsh. Yes, it had blood on its beak from trying to escape.
No, I didn't mean for this to happen, but how could this have been prevented? It just shows me that we shouldn't interfere in wild life. We rescue so many wild things, hopefully take them to registered wild animal sanctuaries (it's illegal to keep them otherwise), but are we doing them a favour?

Someone with knowledge and education could have told the people who captured it to bring it to some open water after checking on its condition before we spent three hours on the highway.
Or, on finding it seemed OK after it thawed, taking it to the nearest open water, which is where the Centre said it had to go back to eventually. I'm not so sure. It's supposed to fly south across hundreds of miles, surely it could find its way south? There was no way we were making that drive back. Why didn't someone tell someone? Why didn't someone, with information and authority, tell me what to do properly before we left the house? I asked.

Why did they let me use my time, gas, and energy, only to chew me out upon arrival?
Happily fishing in summer
Loons at the beach
This is not how to treat a volunteer. I am angry and frustrated. I feel badly for Chompy, but I made the right decisions at the time with the information I had been given.

 Let them use their anger on those who abuse animals, seniors and children. This bird could have frozen to death in the field, or been eaten by the wolf or coyotes. That would have been nature. The people who run these non-profits need to read the recent literature on how to treat volunteers. We retired volunteers and shadow boomers (at 43% of the population) carry the weight of many programs. My hubby has had worse injuries trying to get our rescue cat, Mitzi, into this crate to take her to the vet. Abused by one family's dog, she had huge mental issues. She eventually died of aspiration pneumonia, but after some good years with us. R.I.P. dear Mitzie. Hubby had to go to the doctor to get a tetanus shot.
The things we do for animals!

calm in the crate
They change colour in winter
Arrival in Napanee
There is nothing more haunting than the sound of a loon.

Loon on Otty Lake, Lanark County from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.