Nebraskaland

March 2024 Nebraskaland

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/1516697

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28 Nebraskaland • March 2024 From my blind, I had a narrow fi eld of view of a short stretch of the stream, and none of the birds I saw were actually "in" the woods as much as next to them, walking within a few yards of thickets and grass-choked deadfall. I had, however, seen signs of cranes using areas with more cover. Forsberg had a diff erent view and watched birds, after they dropped into the opening, walk up and down the stream, even through wooded sections. He also saw them wander to and from the adjacent prairie. I didn't see that movement from my blind, but it could have been happening, as there were birds in the prairie to the south and the pasture to the north each time I visited. Cranes that spend the day in fi elds and meadows along the Platte might land close to a road, but they don't typically stay there when a car passes. The closest road to the section of stream where I spent my time is 200 yards to the north, and it is traveled by far fewer crane watchers than others in the region during March. That alone could explain why these birds like the spot. While working on his book, Great Plains: America's Lingering Wild, Forsberg said the places he saw the most wildlife weren't always the best habitat. "You know where they were? They were in the places that were the most quiet and had the least amount of us," he said. Sleeping So were the cranes I watched sleeping? Anne Lacy, Director of Eastern Flyway Programs with the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo, Wisconsin, has been studying cranes since 2000 and uses that term loosely. "I want to be careful about A crane rests next to the stream, bill tucked under a wing, balancing on one leg with its other tucked beneath its breast feathers.

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