Nebraskaland

Nebraskaland March 2021

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1342681

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 65 of 79

66 Nebraskaland • March 2021 out to customers who, if they wish, can spend the night. A few do. Later that year, he asked me what I thought about putting another blind on the island. When I'd camped there, I would've preferred to set up on the east end of the island, knowing it would be closer to the cranes. But there wasn't enough cover to conceal movement between the tent and blind. And I'm too old to spend a night in that cozy little blind. "When can we start?" I said. We wanted the blind to be big enough to sleep two, with a little room to spare, so it's just shy of 8-feet square. I wanted lots of windows, both high and low. It has 12, four on each side facing water: the main channel to the north, the smaller side channel to the south and the wide open river to the east, facing directly into the rising sun. The lower windows are located a foot or 2 above the waterline. That crane's- eye view allows you to capture photos with a perspective not off ered by other photo and viewing blinds on the river, which are typically built on the bank 4 feet, give or take, above the waterline. A friend of Chad's took our notes and drew up plans, and his cousin framed the blind, which we bolted together on the island just in time for the cranes to arrive in 2018. Anyone can see the cranes during the migration, and plenty do, coming from around the globe to witness this world-class spectacle. Drive down almost any county road within a few miles of the Platte and you can see thousands of cranes feeding in the fi elds. Stand on the bridge over the Platte on the hike-bike trail at Fort Kearny SRA or one of the viewing decks along the river in the morning or evening, and you can watch thousands fl y overhead. Visit a riverside blind, however, and Cranes stand on a submerged sandbar on a foggy morning as others leave the roost.

Articles in this issue

view archives of Nebraskaland - Nebraskaland March 2021