Changing The Minneapolis Beekeeping Ordinance

It's currently illegal to keep bees in Minneapolis, one of the many reasons I share a beekeeping operation with Mr. Neil.  There's been a move with the Minnesota Hobby Beekeeper Association to change the law so people could keep a hive in their yard.  There's an article in the Star Tribune and I noticed commenter BeeGirl was quoted: "Kathleen Connelly, a longtime city resident who's temporarily living just over the border of Golden Valley, said she's waiting to see whether the proposal passes before deciding where to buy a house. She now keeps her colonies in Zumbrota.

She called bee prohibitions a relic of efforts by developing suburbs to shed their agrarian pasts. With hiving season at hand, the city hopes to accept applications by June 1 if the measure passes as expected on April 25."

You can read the full article here.

Mystery Nest

st-paul-peregrine-2 Boy, spring hormones are kicking in with the local peregrine falcons. I was walking from the Mississippi National River & Recreation Headquarters to the visitor center in downtown St Paul when I heard a familiar "Per-chup per-chup per-chup." Sure enough, the local breeding peregrines were circling and diving towards each other. It didn't look like territory battle, but more display and pair bond reaffirmation.

While I was at headquarters, a co-worker showed me a nest that had been collected on one of the islands in our national park near the Twin Cities metro area.  She found it last fall and when she first described it to me, I couldn't figure out what was going on.  It was a nest that was covered with cotton, but had a perfectly round hole on top.  What could that be?  I finally got to see it today.

double-decker-nest

At first glance, I realized that it was two nests, one stacked on top of the other.  This could have been done for a couple of different reasons, maybe a bird decided to build on a nest from the previous year? Or, I wondered, if the bottom nest started as maybe a warbler nest and then a cowbird laid an egg and the warbler decided to start over with a new nest on top?  I asked my co-worker if I could pull them apart and she seemed hesitant, but then said it was okay.

hidden-eggs

I pried them slightly apart and low and behold, there were two eggs hidden in the bottom nest.  Now, here was the question, are these cowbird eggs or are these the original nest builder eggs?  For the non birders who read this blog, brown-headed cowbirds do not raise their own young, they are a parasitic birds and lay eggs in other species' nests.  Sometimes you will see a small bird like a yellow warbler feeding a brown bird twice its size.  That is a young cowbird that has been raised by unknowing birds.

mystery-egg

I set one of the eggs on a ruler to measure it.  It looked to be about 5cm long.  I'm going to have to go home and look up the length of cowbird eggs vs warbler and sparrow eggs.  Based on where the nest was found, the most likely candidates for who made it would be song sparrow, yellow warbler, or common yellowthroat.  I'm not that great at nest id and I don't have any of my nest books with me.  Are these the nest builder's eggs or are these cowbird eggs?

mystery-nest

We looked into the nest on top where there was some cotton looking material and a hole. At first I wondered if a mouse had covered up the top cup and used the double nest as a home, but then realized that the cotton looking layer was  mostly likely the lining for that nest, put in by the birds that built it.  The hole was probably made by a mouse or rodent, perhaps it could smell the eggs underneath and went to investigate? Perhaps there were originally more than two eggs and the mouse ate some (then decided they were old and nasty and not worth eating more).

So many questions left unanswered with this mystery nest, but quite a few stories in there as well.

A Minneapolis Sage Thrasher

Man, this was a busy Tuesday: I started with a volunteer shift at The Raptor Center, then on to some grocery shopping, did a little bike riding, saw an off course Sage Thrasher, then made dinner, and off to a Minnesota Hobby Beekeeper's Association meeting to get geared up for the spring season. lake-harriet-sage-thrasher

The highlight of the day was definitely the sage thrasher, it was only a few blocks from my home.  It was so close, I loaded up my digiscoping equipment onto my bike and rode over--exercise and a cool bird, now that's multi-taskng.

sage-thrasher

This bird is a tad off course. Perhaps it spent the winter in Texas and when it headed north to its breeding grounds, got mixed in with a rogue flock of robins and ended up a little further east than planned.  Perhaps this bird was originally hatched in the far western reaches of South Dakota and in the grand scheme of things, isn't that far off.

where-am-i

Who knows how long it will stay.  The bird has been at Lake Harriet for a few days, hanging out near the canoe racks at the Rose Garden, feeding on hackberry with the robins.  If you're in the Twin Cities area and want to see this bird, just look for the people with the binoculars, that should lead you to the thrasher.

Speaking of which, there were two really nice people already on the bird when I arrived, one named Chris works for a Twin Cities company called Fetch Delivers--a pet and wild bird delivery company. They currently have no minimum order and no delivery fee.  So, if you want one suet cake, you get just the suet cake, no delivery fee.  They carry some feed I would actually use like C&S Peanut Suet and Wild Delight--plus some rabbit chow.  We might give them a try--can't beat no minimum and no delivery fee.

Mysterious Robber Bees

junco We still have juncos moving through, many were starting to sing some of their territory songs over the weekend.  Some even chased each other through the brush piles as the flocks start their northward migration.

frames

Lorraine has been gleaning honey from the remainders of the Kelli and Kitty hives.  As she put the wrecked frames outside, we got some robber bees coming in to them!

robber-bees

Little honeybees came in to claim what honey we had not.  We currently have no active hives in our beeyard...where are these girls coming from? Is it possible that these are bees from our first summer that swarmed off of the Kitty hive?  Or is a neighbor also keeping bees?  Honeybees will fly 2.5 - 5 miles away from the hive in search of food, so it is conceivable that these are from a neighboring hive.  But it's more fun to think them being the Kitty bees.  Oh, how I wish I had a little robotic, remote-controlled, helicopter bee cam!

Kroening Interpretive Center

kroening-interpretive-center Saturday, I did a Spring Birding Program at Kroening Interpretive Center and discovered a great little park, mere minutes from my home.  The center is in North Mississippi Park, a small park right on the river (and part of the National Park I work for, the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area).  I can't believe I haven't been here before.  There's a great view of a heron rookery and now is the best time to go see it.

great-blue-heron

Since the leaves are off the trees, the birds and their nests are easily visible.  Also, it's just the start of the mating season, so there's lots of activity as the birds put their nests together.  Once the leaves grow in, the nests will be almost impossible to see.

nest-gathering-heron

If you are interested in getting any photos of the birds, the afternoon is the best time, the sun is behind you from the trail and you can get some decent shots.  I may go back on Tuesday afternoon.

lasar-kesterl

We saw several other birds like this male kestrel, tree swallows, and song sparrows.  I just saw my first of year yellow-rumped warbler today and I bet this park will be chock full of warblers since it's right on the river.  I can't wait to go back.

They have some great programs coming up at Kroening, so be sure to check it out.