Our brook. |
We walk often in the winter. When the snow is deep
enough that the dogs bog down, the plowed logging roads become our choice on
weekends. But the favorite is below Camp Grouse, a path that follows where the
flat wetlands meet the craggy hill before turning back and following the brook.
Most of its course is beneath softwoods or a mixed canopy, and with regular
walking the path is packed enough that snowshoes aren’t necessary. Underneath
the softwood trees the dogs can usually manage without sinking into the snow too.
The
path can be walked every day for a week without a new animal track crossing
anywhere, then, as if in chorus, a half dozen species will have traipsed about.
Snowshoe rabbits are the most common, which are hares really. Lately turkeys
are probably the second in number. Then there’s a mix of coyote, beaver,
bobcat, mice, otter, small birds, deer, and an occasional moose.
Grouse tracks |
The
track I am always looking for is Mr. Grouse. Sometimes he is close to our house
and sometimes further away. Seldom is he deep into the softwoods, but more
likely along the edge where hardwoods mix in. The dogs will sniff the tracks
and follow, but they almost never find him on the ground. Occasionally he
bursts from a softwood tree high up overhead and the dogs get excited at the
sound. I am sure that most often we pass beneath Mister or Misses Grouse and
they just watch.
The
population is down this year though, so hearing a grouse isn’t as common as it
should be, nor are there as many tracks as some years.
Colby among the long shadows. |
When
the weather is bitter and the birds are struggling, it is a shame to have them
wasting energy on useless flushes to avoid no real danger. I neither encourage
nor discourage the dogs. The older one is happy to stay on the packed trail and
would be happy for us to move to where winter never would come. The younger dog
dashes about, oblivious to the snow and cold. When a grouse does flush out of a
tree I cringe a bit, hoping it doesn’t fly far or burn too many calories.
Last
year little snow fell and snow roosting would have been impossible for the
grouse. Snow roosting, where the birds dive and borrow into soft snow, keeps
the birds warmer on cold nights and hides them from owls and hawks. Perhaps
that is part of the reason the grouse population plummeted.
This
year the snow cover is sufficient for snow roosting and, so far, there have
only been a few really cold nights. Hopefully the grouse that are in the woods
now will still be there to breed in the spring.
With
the lengthening days we should hear the drumming soon.
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