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Minnesota Feb 2018 : Winter Specialties

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Mar 5, 2018 | by Adrian Binns

Minnesota provides a wonderfully-rewarding experience to birders who venture into frigid, snow-covered landscapes during the winter.

This February, Tom Reed guided Wildside Nature Tours’ 4-day tour into the north country of the state, highlighted quality over quantity, as species are sparse this time of year.

Owls are a big attraction especially during irruptive years, and we were thrilled to see more than 20 individuals, including 17 Great Gray, 2 Boreal, 2 Snowy, and a Northern Hawk Owl.

It was an exceptional year for the Great Grays, and we were amazed to see so many of them, including 3 in sight at one time, perched on low conifers surveying the snow-covered ground below, for any sign of a vole.

The usually-secretive Boreal Owl, by no means guaranteed on such a trip, showed impressively well. Two were seen hunting in broad daylight, one low in roadside shrubs, and one from a telephone wire!

The Northern Hawk Owl was actively flying between lookout perches, showcasing its unique, raptor-like flight.

Though a major snowfall curtailed our visit to the boreal forest, we traversed remote rural roads, and visited the famed Sax-Zim Bog to look for additional northern specialities, finding – Rough-legged Hawk, American Three-toed and Black-backed Woodpeckers, Gray Jay, Hoary Redpolls amongst Commons, Pine and Evening Grosbeaks, Sharp-tailed Grouse on a lek, and numerous Northern Shrike.

A Porcupine gnawing on branches in a birch and a thick-coated Red Fox walking steadily through the snow were among the mammals rounding out our trip.

all photos © adrian binns

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