MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 57,415
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
When I was born in the early 60s, the US population was about 180 million. It's pushing 350 million today. That has to have an impact.
As for our little corner of the world, I just mailed off my 3 month wildlife report that I volunteered for through Purdue. They asked me to count the number of deer, fur bearers, chipmunks and squirrels, songbirds, waterfowl, that I saw every day for 3 months. They also wanted to know how much time and money I spent on feeding each of those species (ZERO) each day, and how much time and money I spent protecting my property from those species (again ZERO) each day.
It was an interesting study to participate in.
The most populous songbirds here, get this, ARE CROWS! We get several thousand that fly over our house every morning and return in the evening about Halloween through sometime in March every year for the past 30+ years. Other than those, we get mourning doves, blue jays, and snow birds. And tons of sparrows! The only waterfowl we see are occasional overflights of geese. Thousands of sandhill cranes, but they are neither songbirds or waterfowl, so were not part of the study.
We have 5 does in the neighborhood that pass through almost daily, sometimes twice. There is a young buck, so I'm guessing more deer this spring. The does usually have twins every year. We'll see.
We get a few squirrels up by the house, but most stay back in the woods, same as the chipmunks, so not many to observe.
Plenty of rabbits, skunks, raccoons, opossums.
And lots of woodchucks.
Last year was the first year we had NO tree frogs. That was sad. We usually have hundreds.
Every summer we usually see a couple garter snakes.
So what I've noticed over my life here:
- We rarely saw deer in the 60s. They are in every subdivision and farm field today.
- We never saw a turkey in the 60s. They are in every subdivision and farm field today.
- We rarely saw Great Blue Herons in the 60s. They are in every waterway today.
- I could go on... osprey's, red tailed hawks, peregrine falcons, bald eagles... all on the uptick.
- Turtles, frogs, salamanders, newts, all amphibians are all on the downturn.
- Songbirds are on the downturn.
- There used to be flocks of grackles each fall. Now hardly ever.
- Robins seem to be thriving.
Anyhow, that's what I observe around here.
As for our little corner of the world, I just mailed off my 3 month wildlife report that I volunteered for through Purdue. They asked me to count the number of deer, fur bearers, chipmunks and squirrels, songbirds, waterfowl, that I saw every day for 3 months. They also wanted to know how much time and money I spent on feeding each of those species (ZERO) each day, and how much time and money I spent protecting my property from those species (again ZERO) each day.
It was an interesting study to participate in.
The most populous songbirds here, get this, ARE CROWS! We get several thousand that fly over our house every morning and return in the evening about Halloween through sometime in March every year for the past 30+ years. Other than those, we get mourning doves, blue jays, and snow birds. And tons of sparrows! The only waterfowl we see are occasional overflights of geese. Thousands of sandhill cranes, but they are neither songbirds or waterfowl, so were not part of the study.
We have 5 does in the neighborhood that pass through almost daily, sometimes twice. There is a young buck, so I'm guessing more deer this spring. The does usually have twins every year. We'll see.
We get a few squirrels up by the house, but most stay back in the woods, same as the chipmunks, so not many to observe.
Plenty of rabbits, skunks, raccoons, opossums.
And lots of woodchucks.
Last year was the first year we had NO tree frogs. That was sad. We usually have hundreds.
Every summer we usually see a couple garter snakes.
So what I've noticed over my life here:
- We rarely saw deer in the 60s. They are in every subdivision and farm field today.
- We never saw a turkey in the 60s. They are in every subdivision and farm field today.
- We rarely saw Great Blue Herons in the 60s. They are in every waterway today.
- I could go on... osprey's, red tailed hawks, peregrine falcons, bald eagles... all on the uptick.
- Turtles, frogs, salamanders, newts, all amphibians are all on the downturn.
- Songbirds are on the downturn.
- There used to be flocks of grackles each fall. Now hardly ever.
- Robins seem to be thriving.
Anyhow, that's what I observe around here.