Say Hello to Wampum!

Scott WeidensaulUpdates17 Comments

Here’s a great way to ring out the old year and usher in 2016. The newest Project SNOWstorm owl is Wampum, an adult female captured at Logan Airport in Boston byJeff Turner, Logan’s wildlife biologist, and relocated by Norman to a safer spot on Cape Cod earlier this week — with one of CTT’s new third-generation GPS/GSM transmitters on her back. She’s … Read More

A New Face, and an Old Friend

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The 2015-16 season of Project SNOWstorm is off to an exciting start, with our first new owl of the winter — and the return of one of the very first snowies that we tagged two years ago. New bird first…on Dec. 8, SNOWstorm collaborator (and longtime snowy owl researcher) Tom McDonald of Rochester, NY, caught an adult female snowy on … Read More

A Quiet Winter? Hardly!

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Welcome back to Project SNOWstorm. Our last update was back in early May, when only one of our tagged snowy owls was still far enough south to be in cell range. That bird, Chippewa, headed north around May 1, and since then all’s been quiet, as the snowies returned to the Arctic breeding grounds. We’ve been busy since then — … Read More

Last Owl Standing?

Scott WeidensaulUpdates2 Comments

Thursday and Friday were a one-two punch for our transmitters. Thursday evening was the regularly scheduled check-in cycle, about 8 p.m. EDT. And the units are also programmed to do an “emergency” check on the first of each month. No matter how thin the reception, regardless of whether there’s enough connectivity to actually transmit data, they’re supposed to send the … Read More

The View from Paradise

Scott WeidensaulUpdates2 Comments

It may look and feel like spring in a lot of places, but on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan there’s more than a little bit of winter still hanging on. The spruce woods are full of old, crusted snow drifts, while the portion of Lake Superior that wraps around Whitefish Point is still jammed with immense expanses of ice, thick … Read More

Alma and Monocacy

Scott WeidensaulUpdates5 Comments

One of the frustrating aspects of the kind of telemetry study we’re doing with Project SNOWstorm is losing track of an animal. Sometimes we find out what happened, like the two tagged snowy owls last winter that were swamped by a nor’easter and drowned on the Massachusetts coast. Other times we don’t. Two birds that have been longstanding puzzles this … Read More

Go North, Young Owl (and the Old Ones, Too)

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Although it’s been more than a week since the last post, we’ve been really busy — and so have the owls, which is why this is a long post. We’re seeing some spectacular spring flights, and hearing from owls that have been off the grid for a while. And the grid — that is, the extent of the GSM cellular … Read More

All Kinds of Shaking Going On

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Spring is really working on our tagged owls — even if 35 square miles of ice, up to eight feet thick, doesn’t sound much like spring to you. Up in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, where the snow is still waist-deep in places, Chippewa has finally budged from her winter-long home territory, where she’s been burning a hole in the … Read More

From Great Lake to Great Lake

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The latest round of check-ins show that more and more of the tagged snowies are getting the itch to move — some in quite dramatic ways. For instance, Whitefish Point, who has rarely moved more than one section road from her winter territory on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan this winter, took a long ramble on March 31, flying about … Read More

North, South, East and West

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Last time we updated you on the movements of Baltimore, whose northbound migration included a stop in New York City. But we’ve had some real surprises from our other tagged owls, too, some of whom can’t seem to figure out which direction they want to go. That’s not unusual as spring starts to come on, and the owls are feeling the … Read More