Showing posts with label Sharp-tailed Grouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharp-tailed Grouse. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

Monday Morning Meeting - Sharp-tailed Grouse

Earlier this week I was able to sneak away early one morning for what will probably be my last lek morning of the year.  It was a very pleasant way to close out the season.  There was no wind, it was fairly warm for a late April morning and the sky was clear. I was back at a Sharp-tailed Grouse lek and there were probably close to forty birds stomping....





rattling....






cooing....



and fighting (lots of fighting) around me.


















I also had a few other creatures besides the grouse join me at the lek. This Pronghorn wandered through, had a bite to eat on a sagebrush, scratched an itch, expressed his opinion, and wandered over the edge of the hill.




The Western Meadowlarks were also pretty active and singing vigorously from various perches around my blind.



On my way home I stopped by to check out the Mountain Bluebird nest boxes and found this guy.





* Here are some bonus photos from a morning at a different lek earlier this month.







Friday, December 24, 2010

Happy Holidays

As close as I could come to a partridge in a pear tree is a Sharptail Grouse on a Rocky Mountain Juniper..



or in a Plains Cottonwood...



or just getting tired of the whole thing and flying away.



I hope everyone has a great holiday season.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

The Other Grouse



Sunday morning and another early start. The winds late last week were atrocious and although the weather forecast for Saturday suggested it would be calmer, a quick peak out the door early that morning suggested otherwise. Sunday the clouds were supposed to increase, but the wind was supposed to not be quite as strong so on Saturday evening, with no wind and clear skies, I set up my blind.



Sunday morning looked great when I left the house. I could see lots of stars and the flag was hanging limply from the flagpole. A few clouds were present on the eastern horizon as the eyelid of night slowly pulled back from the horizon. There was a fingerpaint smudge of an orange crescent moon on the horizon as I pulled off the highway to open the gate. By this time the wind was picking back up but not a lot. So far so good.



When I got into the blind there were no birds on the lek and the wind was blowing harder than I would have liked. By the time I could start to see features on the lek I could hear the birds start to arrive and display and as the light grew stronger the birds became apparent in front of the blind.



The clouds continued to build as the morning progressed but the sunrise managed to leak through gaps in the clouds early in the morning and once again I was privileged to have a front row seat at the best show in town (or in this case - out of town).



There weren't many hens on the lek this morning and I suspect that the peak attendance for females has come and gone so the males were a bit sluggish in displaying when they weren't around. It didn't stop them from scrapping a bit though.








The End.