Strange Bird Sightings
Posted: Thu Jul 15, 2004 11:44 pm
Two fridays back I saw something interesting. I was trolling home along a sloped shoreline when up ahead I spotted an eagle perched atop a tree. The tree was near dead. Once I got closer the eagle broke the branch off that tree, swooped down a little towards the shallow shoreline water, dropped the branch in the water, quickly swooped back upward doing a loop-to-loop, and then dove at the water. The eagle then moved on a little ways upriver from me and stopped on another tree.
Strangely, that eagle repeated the exact same sequence twice more, leaving me awestruck to have been witness to such a unique style of fishing. Yes, I do believe he was fishing, and ultimately resorting to this style because of the murkiness of the water posing limits to his visibility.
Then, after he had taken off and I made my way closer to home, a cormorant buzzed just fifty feet over my head. It was the first cormorant I had ever seen in person, but I knew that's what it was the second I saw it. Turns out, others have seen them as well.
Lastly, I listened for hours to a mockingbird while on the nightshift. I had never heard one before, and my god, are they ever loud and annoying. A co-worker who grew up in the Pembroke area thought that that bird must be about 800 kms north of it's usual range. I think we need to send it back. Yes, it's a rarity, but it doesn't shut up for hours, and it really pee pee me off when it mocks me

Strangely, that eagle repeated the exact same sequence twice more, leaving me awestruck to have been witness to such a unique style of fishing. Yes, I do believe he was fishing, and ultimately resorting to this style because of the murkiness of the water posing limits to his visibility.
Then, after he had taken off and I made my way closer to home, a cormorant buzzed just fifty feet over my head. It was the first cormorant I had ever seen in person, but I knew that's what it was the second I saw it. Turns out, others have seen them as well.
Lastly, I listened for hours to a mockingbird while on the nightshift. I had never heard one before, and my god, are they ever loud and annoying. A co-worker who grew up in the Pembroke area thought that that bird must be about 800 kms north of it's usual range. I think we need to send it back. Yes, it's a rarity, but it doesn't shut up for hours, and it really pee pee me off when it mocks me

