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 Jackson Audubon Society

 The Audubon Society of Jackson County, Michigan

  • Monday, November 07, 2022 9:51 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    We had a spectacular moon rise as the sun was setting.


    (Don Henise)

    Crane Count: 3,461 (2,283 Stayed in Mud Lake Marsh)

    Canada Goose (Branta canadensis)  500

    Mute Swan (Cygnus olor)  4

    Trumpeter Swan (Cygnus buccinator)  2

    Wood Duck (Aix sponsa)  3

    Northern Shoveler (Spatula clypeata)  3

    Gadwall (Mareca strepera)  3

    American Wigeon (Mareca americana)  15

    Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos)  400

    American Black Duck (Anas rubripes)  8

    Northern Pintail (Anas acuta)  1

    Green-winged Teal (American) (Anas crecca carolinensis)  30

    Ring-necked Duck (Aythya collaris)  80

        Eagle Lake

    Hooded Merganser (Lophodytes cucullatus)  24

        Eagle Lake

    Pied-billed Grebe (Podilymbus podiceps)  4

        Eagle Lake

    American Coot (Fulica americana)  50

    Sandhill Crane (Antigone canadensis)  3461

        2283 cranes roosting in Mud Lake Marsh, 1178 flybys

    Ring-billed Gull (Larus delawarensis)  1

    Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias)  7

    Great Egret (Ardea alba)  1

    Turkey Vulture (Cathartes aura)  2

    Northern Harrier (Circus hudsonius)  1

    Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus)  1

    Cooper's Hawk (Accipiter cooperii)  2

    Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)  6

        Individually counted - 4 adults,  1 imm 1st yr, 1 near adult 4th year with dark terminal band on white tail

    Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus)  1

    Red-tailed Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis)  4

    Red-bellied Woodpecker (Melanerpes carolinus)  2

    Downy Woodpecker (Dryobates pubescens)  1

    Hairy Woodpecker (Dryobates villosus)  1

    Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus)  1

    Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted) (Colaptes auratus auratus/luteus)  1

    Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristata)  2

    American Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos)  5

    Black-capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus)  2

    Horned Lark (Eremophila alpestris)  3

    White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis)  1

    Eastern Bluebird (Sialia sialis)  3

    American Robin (Turdus migratorius)  6

    Cedar Waxwing (Bombycilla cedrorum)  4

    Purple Finch (Haemorhous purpureus)  1

    American Goldfinch (Spinus tristis)  10

    Dark-eyed Junco (Slate-colored) (Junco hyemalis hyemalis/carolinensis)  1

    White-throated Sparrow (Zonotrichia albicollis)  1

    Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia)  2

    Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus)  2000

        Estimate

    Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula)  50

    Crane counters:  Ross Green, Gary Siegrist, Don Henise, Robyn Henise 
    Compiler:  Don Henise
    Submitted by Steve Jerant

    Species count:  50

    View Don’s eBird checklist at https://ebird.org/checklist/S122052028

  • Tuesday, November 01, 2022 3:31 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    Eight members of JAS turned out this morning to see what wildfowl was coming through the Watkins Lake State Park.  This park is in Jackson and Washtenaw counties, the dividing line aligns roughly with Arnold Road. This road bisects the lake, so it's a great viewing platform for the water birds.


    (Steve Jerant)

    While the weather was a bit dreary, we were greeted by the local Northern Mockingbird that hangs out near the parking lot and road out to the west of the park.  As usual, we had lots of Canada Goose (3,000), Ring-neck Duck (2,000), and Ruddy Duck (150).  In total there were 18 species of waterfowl, gull and waders were observed.  A huge (2000) raft of Canada Goose came over. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYQkLhaS9pw ) 

    We noticed a school of fish coming up to the surface of the water to take a gulp of air.


    (Lynn Eckerle)

    This site has some NATIVE American Bittersweet (Celastrus scandens)on the roadside.  The berries are in clumps, generally at the terminus of the stem.

    (Lynn Eckerle)

    (Lynn Eckerle)

    At the end of the walk down the road a Bald Eagle was perched and caught the sun perfectly for a naked eye, binocular, and scope view.

    (Lynn Eckerle)

    See the eBird list at https://ebird.org/checklist/S121702014

  • Monday, October 31, 2022 9:36 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    Tonight, we had three teams counting at Haehnle and locations north of the sanctuary for the annual USFWS Fall Sandhill Crane Survey.  Haehnle volunteers participate each year to contribute to this nationwide crane count managed by the US Fish & Wildlife Service.  Data from this survey help wildlife managers make sound decisions about cranes based on population estimates.

    Gary Siegrist and Don & Robyn Henise worked Haehnle per the usual Monday schedule. The other two teams of Ron Hoffman & Ross Green and Lathe Claflin &  Steve Jerant worked two portions of a neighboring property north of the Sanctuary.  No counts were done in the Hawkins & Dalton Rds. area as the crane counts these past weeks have been low. 

    Gary and the Henise’s reported 1,297 cranes observed, of which 779 remained in the marsh for the evening.  Lathe & I counted 1,755 total with 1714 staying on the property. Ron & Ross counted…0.  This was we thought odd as they were in an area we saw many cranes moving towards from our station, but alas, they did not have any land for the evening.

    Crane counters:  Ross Green, Gary Siegrist, Don Henise, Robyn Henise, Lathe Claflin, & Steve Jerant
    Compiler:  Steve Jerant & Don Henise
    Submitted by Steve Jerant

    Crane Count: 1,297 (779 Stayed in Mud Lake Marsh)

    Species count:  39

    View Don’s eBird checklist at https://ebird.org/checklist/S121653630

  • Monday, October 24, 2022 9:25 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    We had great weather for our biggest count of the season.  The temp was in the 70’s with a light breeze.  A bit more sun to bring out the colors would have made it perfection.  Cranes came in from all directions tonight, and we had about half a dozen flights over the observation area.  In addition to the crane overflights, we had a pair of Mute Swans put on a bit of a show flying over us twice.  The second time reminding us that even though they are called mute, it’s not because their wings are silent.

    A single, Big Brown bat came early and stayed late tonight.  It flew back and forth over the grassland to the west of us.  I really think it was seriously checking out our newly installed bat house…

    360 cranes were observed with 294 of them staying overnight.  And only about half of those 66 were long distance observations, so fewer cranes are coming in and then leaving.  Conditions are looking very good for high numbers this year.

    We’ve released an updated Crane hotspot map, available HERE.

    Next week, some of use will be doing the annual USFWS counts around Jackson County so I’ll try to get some of those numbers on next week's report. 


    (Steve Jerant)

    Crane counters:  Ross Green, Gary Siegrist, Don Henise, Robyn Henise, & Steve Jerant
    Compiler:  Steve Jerant
    Submitted by Steve Jerant

    Crane Count: 360 (294 Stayed in Mud Lake Marsh)

    Species count:  26

    Species       Count

    Species

    Count

    Canada Goose

    21

    Mute Swan

    4

    Trumpeter Swan

    2

    Wood Duck

    25

    American Wigeon

    3

    Mallard

    40

    American Black Duck

    15

    American Coot

    10

    Sandhill Crane

    360

    Killdeer

    1

    Great Blue Heron

    1

    Northern Harrier

    4

    Bald Eagle

    1

    Red-bellied Woodpecker

    1

    Downy Woodpecker

    1

    Hairy Woodpecker

    1

    Blue Jay

    10

    Tufted Titmouse

    1

    Carolina Wren

    1

    European Starling

    3

    Eastern Bluebird

    3

    American Robin

    50

    Cedar Waxwing

    30

    White-throated Sparrow

    1

    Red-winged Blackbird

    2000

    Rusty Blackbird

    1


    View eBird checklist

  • Tuesday, October 18, 2022 11:30 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    On Tuesday JAS restarted tours with the Michigan Nature Association after a long hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  The McCulley-Bastian Nature Sanctuary is a property adjacent to the River Raisin near Adrian.  This was named by early French settlers due to the amount of grapes seen on its bank.  But the traditional name for this river is the Nummasepee, the River of Sturgeon.

    One of the property owners, Barb McCulley, joined us for our walk. It was a treat not only to meet the previous owner but get some insight into the history of the property.

    In addition to lots of Tulip poplar (my favorite tree), mature sycamore, red oak,  and maples, there were some interesting understory plants that were new to some of us.


    Moonseed Menispermum canadense
    (Steve Jerant)


    Palm Sedge MCarex muskingumensis
    (Steve Jerant)

    Robyn was able to get close enough to this puffball for a game ball photo for us.


    (Steve Jerant)

    Rachel Maranto led us up and down the high slopes along the river.  We transitioned from a mature riparian forest to a tract transitioning from old agricultural field with trees planted in the 1980's.


    (Steve Jerant)

    Oh, the birding? Well there was not a lot of activity, but we had a wonderful trip and finished up with some cider and donuts, compliments of our hosts, Barb & Duane!

    3 Canada Goose
    2 Sandhill Crane
    1 Great Blue Heron
    4 Turkey Vulture
    1 Sharp-shinned Hawk
    1 Red-bellied Woodpecker
    2 Blue Jay
    2 Black-capped Chickadee
    1 Golden-crowned Kinglet
    1 White-breasted Nuthatch
    1 Carolina Wren
    2 American Robin
    1 Northern Cardinal

    Number of Taxa: 13

    Trip eBird list 

  • Monday, October 17, 2022 9:43 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    At 4:37 PM the sun came out.  Then at 4:41 PM, it clouded over and started to drizzle again.  But it was a beautiful moment.  Although it did get very dark, we had some openings, then a rainbow, a little one, but it came down just some hundred yards north of the apple tree below us.  Around 6:30 the sun broke through and lit up the marsh and the trees in the far distance.  Haehnle is really a great place to watch weather.

    Ross and I worked the crane count this afternoon till after sundown. We saw 197 cranes with 147 of them staying the evening. We had several direct flyovers but most of the traffic came from the west.  We had some ducks in the close water and Trumpeter & Mute swans in the back water.  A pair of Wilson’s Snip did two flyovers for us. American Robins and of course blackbirds were in great abundance tonight. The robins buzzing over our heads and the blackbirds in the marsh. We even saw a few small murmuration.

    Six visitors braved the conditions for a view of the cranes tonight.  The best viewing time for cranes in the last hour before sunset.

    Crane counters:  Ross Green & Steve Jerant
    Compiler:  Steve Jerant
    Submitted by Steve Jerant

    Crane Count: 197 (147 Stayed in Mud Lake Marsh)
    Species count:  29

    Canada Goose 6

    Mute Swan 4

    Trumpeter Swan 2

    Wood Duck 19

    Mallard 32

    American Black Duck 5

    dabbling duck sp. 20

    Ring-necked Duck 12

    Pied-billed Grebe 1

    Sandhill Crane 197

    Killdeer 1

    Wilson's Snipe 2

    Double-crested Cormorant 1

    Great Blue Heron 1

    Turkey Vulture 2

    Northern Harrier 5

    Red-bellied Woodpecker 1

    Downy Woodpecker 1

    Northern Flicker 1

    Blue Jay 6

    American Crow 1

    Tufted Titmouse 1

    European Starling 20

    Eastern Bluebird 3

    American Robin 250

    Cedar Waxwing 27

    White-throated Sparrow 2

    Red-winged Blackbird 825

    Common Grackle 6

    blackbird sp. 100

    Yellow-rumped Warbler 2

    View Ross’s eBird checklist at https://ebird.org/checklist/S120869202

  • Monday, October 03, 2022 10:41 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    Ross did an abbreviated count last week (09/26) in the rain, all by himself. He had only 3 cranes for his effort.

    This week, better weather brought out a full crew to count cranes at Haehnle Sanctuary.  The team counted 45 species.  The 41 Ross tabulated plus American Bittern & Blue-winged Teal seen by Don and 2 Bald Eagles & Turkey Vulture seen by Robyn.


    Crane counters:   Don & Robyn Henise, Mike Bowen & Ross Green
    Compiler:  Ross Green
    Submitted by Steve Jerant

    Crane Count: 19
    Species count:  45

    View Ross’s eBird checklist at https://ebird.org/checklist/S119930208


  • Tuesday, September 20, 2022 5:00 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    Four members of JAS made the drive downriver today to take in the raptor migrations happening over the Detroit River from Canada.  The hot raptor today was the Sharp-shinned Hawk.  Our group saw probably 50 of these during our visit at the Erie Park boar launch area.  Volunteers there have their annual counting station setup and are available to identify raptors as they migrate through.  While the Broad-winged Hawks are generally plentiful this time of the year, our group only saw a few.

    As we usually do, some of us took a loop walk through the woods and wetland to see if we could observe some other species farther down the food chain.  There were large groups of Wood Ducks and Egrets in the park.  We got a few warblers, as well as other passerines and some more ducks.

    In addition to the raptors moving south there were lot and lots and lots and lots of Blue Jays running south.  I put in 500 into my eBird list but the counting team there posted over 10 time as many (http://hawkcount.org/285-2022-09-20).

    Our raptor species count was 10 for this trip.

    Species List:
    65 Canada Goose

    127 Wood Duck -- Large group (75) off trail coming out of boat launch area.

    4 Blue-winged Teal

    40 Mallard

    11 Pied-billed Grebe

    2 Mourning Dove

    1 Common Gallinule

    2 Sandhill Crane

    8 Killdeer

    2 Lesser Yellowlegs

    30 Ring-billed Gull

    1 Herring Gull

    1 Caspian Tern

    30 Double-crested Cormorant

    9 Great Blue Heron

    112 Great Egret -- Majority in wet area nearest entrance.

    6 Turkey Vulture

    1 Osprey

    8 Northern Harrier

    22 Sharp-shinned Hawk

    1 Cooper's Hawk

    2 Broad-winged Hawk

    1 Bald Eagle

    1 Belted Kingfisher

    2 Downy Woodpecker

    1 Northern Flicker

    7 American Kestrel

    5 Peregrine Falcon

    1 Merlin

    500 Blue Jay -- Many more, did not count

    1 Black-capped Chickadee

    1 White-breasted Nuthatch

    1 Carolina Wren

    9 American Robin

    3 American Goldfinch

    18 Red-winged Blackbird

    9 Common Grackle

    1 Common Yellowthroat

    1 Palm Warbler

    9 Yellow-rumped Warbler

    2 Nashville Warbler

    3 Northern Cardinal

    Number of Taxa: 42

    My eBird Checklist

  • Friday, September 09, 2022 10:48 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    From Marsi Darwin 09/09/2022

    See the Haehnle page for details, photos and any updates.

    Four beautiful artworks have been generously donated “to benefit the birds” and will be sold in a silent auction this fall.

    They are an acrylic painting of a vernal pond with Sandhill cranes by Toni Stevenson, a trio of leaf prints by R W Domm, a framed photograph of an oak in mist with black eyed susans, and a framed collage of four seasonal photographs by R W Domm.

    If you wish to bid on an item in our auction, please email your name and phone number to marsi@ChelseaDepot.com and a bidding number will be assigned to you.

    Each item will be lettered A, B, C and D and each will have a minimum starting bid.

    If you’d like to bid, simply email the letter of the item you want, your bidding number, and the amount you’d like to bid. A running tally will be kept until the auction goes live at the Chelsea Depot Artisans Show on Saturday, November 12, 2022, from 10-4, where the items will be on display and where visitors to the show may also sign up to bid.

    You may bid in person on November 12 on a bidding sheet at the show at the train depot, 125 Jackson St., Chelsea, or by emailing marsi@ChelseaDepot.com that day. Emails will be checked hourly. Any last minute bids must be received by 4 p.m. on November 12. Winning bidders will be notified by Sunday afternoon, November 13 and arrangements for payment and picking up artwork must be made at that time.


  • Thursday, September 01, 2022 12:21 PM | Steve Jerant (Administrator)

    Lathe Claflin and I did an inventory of the grassland under development at Hahenle Sanctuary.  This section of the property is part of the Peter and Gwyneth Schroder Tract which was acquired in 2018.

    A USDA EQIP grant was started in 2018 and the section was planted in May, 2021.  The seed mix contained prairie grasses and forbes selected for their value as hosts for pollinator species.  Of the 24 plants that were seeded in 2021, we were able to find 14 specimens.

    Most of the prairie grasses were found as well as Aster, coneflowers and sunflowers.  I was pleased to find an Indian Hemp plant, which was not in the seed mix.

    List of plants found on survey

    Common Name

    Species Name

    Aster, New England

    Aster novae-angliae

    Big bluestem grass

    Andropogon gerardii

    Black-eyed Susan

    Rudbeckia hirta

    Coneflower, Purple

    Echinacea purpurea

    Coreopsis, Sand

    Coreopsis lanceolata, L. Var. lanceolata

    Evening Primrose (Common)

    Oenothera biennis

    False sunflower/
    Oxe-eyed Sunflower

    Heliopsis helianthoides

    Indian grass

    Sorghastrum nutans

    Little bluestem grass

    Schizachyrium scoparius

    Milkweed, Common

    Asclepias syriaca

    Partridge Pea

    Chamaecrista fasciculata

    Sunflower, Maximilian

    Helianthus maximiliani

    Switch grass

    Panicum virgatum

    Wild bergamot, Beebalm

    Monarda fistulosa

    Fleabane Daisy

    Erigeron strigosus

    Indian Hemp; Hemp Dogbane

    Apocynum cannabinum

    Ironweed, Common

    Veronia fasciculata

    Yarrow, White

    Achillea millefolium



    Maximilian Sunflower
    (Steve Jerant)

    Indian Grass(Steve Jerant)

    Oxe-eyed Sunflower(Steve Jerant)

    Indian Hemp
    (Steve Jerant)

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