The Very Hungry Heron

So as I was driving home the other afternoon, low and behold, a Great Blue Heron was standing RIGHT BY THE EDGE OF THE WATER with a fish in his beak!

I WAS SO EXCITED!!!

I EVEN HAD MY CAMERA!!

BUT…the car frightened him. And he flew away.

No problem!!! I’ve got a good lense!!!

SO FUN.

He flew away…but not too far.

Preparing for the feast.

Gotta get the proper grip.

Isn’t it cool? Well…not for the fish, I suppose.

It’s a process…

You can still see the buldge…just a little!

A very satisfied tummy.

Pelicans on Lake Bella

My Minnesota bird book doesn’t think that we have pelicans in this state. And, while it’s true that I live about 20 seconds – on foot – from Iowa, I do still reside in Minnesota…and so do these pelicans on Lake Bella!

These are, I believe, American White Pelicans. And, I’m sure anyone living in Worthington has seen them on Lake Okabena in town. On Lake Bella and Lake Ocheda, however, they stick around all summer…which is terribly fun, I think!

I hope you enjoy this sure sign of spring!

They're back!

Aren't they fun?








Walking in the Footsteps of the Animals

Last fall my children and I went somewhere we’d never been before…and neither had any other humans for quite a long time.

We walked on the dried-out lake bed of Lake Bella.

Now for those of you who don’t know, Lake Bella is not supposed to be dried up. This isn’t some prehistoric lake bed, filled with fossils or some such. It was, unfortunately, very dry due to the serious lack of rainfall we’ve had here in SW Minnesota in recent months. (We’ve gotten a little here in the last week…and a little snowfall helped, too…but the water levels are still not what they ought to be.)

We chose to make the best of the dryness. We had a very fun time, finding animal prints, seeing places up close that we’d only ever seen from far away, and exploring an area close to home that we’d never before gotten to explore.

This is what it's supposed to look like - and did in October. The rest of the pictures were taken in November.

Dry all the way to the island.

Grass on the island.


We made a few prints of our own...and yes, she had her boots on the wrong feet.

Birds, too.

Bird birds...but not Big Bird.

I'm clueless.


Something...that I don't know.

A dog?

Don't know what this is. I'm so not an expert. Any ideas?


The kids decided this is a dinosaur print. I didn't argue.

Deer, too...

I'm guessing a raccoon?


A few of the local creatures were actually still around.


There's the island today - a bit more wet! But still...we need more rain...

Seine Fishing in Southwest Minnesota

Hard at work.


I was driving home “the back way” today, as I do always now that hwy 60 is being worked on, and I took the dirt road past Lake Bella rather than the tarmac. I love going that way because it’s much more scenic and one is apt to see eagles as opposed to semis.

Team work.


As I drove past the lake, I had to brake and back up and turn onto a side road, for there in the water at the edge of the lake were fishermen. And not just any old fishermen. Seiners.

Half a mile of net...organized and at rest.


They were standing in the shallow water at the edge of the lake, mending their nets. They had not gotten the work done they’d wanted to that day, as the nets proved to have issues.

Mending the nets.


Needle work.


Scott Deslauriers, Steve Schmidt, and two other guys they’d hired just on a part-time basis (and who chose to remain anonymous) were mending their half-mile long net there at the edge of the water. The Daily Globe had an article about these guys last fall. They’re fishing for Common Carp – the kind of carp that most people around here DON’T want to catch. The kind of carp that, if you catch one, you’re not allowed to throw back into the lake because they’re so unwanted.

The second day. He went all over the lake, banging with a stick on the side of the boat...to stir up the fish, I suppose?


But these guys want them. And so do their customers.

The second boat - out of three. He was on one side of the lake, the boat with the stick was on the other...and the nets were laid.


The net, spread out.


And just exactly who are their customers? Kosher restaurants and groceries in New York City, as well as Asian markets, where they sell the fish live. All of the fish travel to NY in a “live tank”, which, when you think about it, makes total sense as anything with the label “kosher” has to be killed in a kosher way in order to be, well, kosher – so no one else but a rabbi can oversee the death of these fish!

Hauling in the net.



Tightening the nets.


Scott said that as soon as he gets his load of fish, he’ll head down to Omaha, Iowa, and the fish will be on a semi truck within hours of leaving Lake Bella. Within 28 hours of leaving Omaha, they’ll be swimming in New York City.

The fish had a little to say about this activity.



It's a long process, tightening the net...


But, before that could happen, they had to get those nets mended and the fish caught.

The nets narrowed and the fish roiled.


Throwing out the small ones.




Tightening the noose.



So, hoping for good news, I stopped by again the next day. Three times, in fact. They probably thought I was a deranged stalker.

That day brought good luck. Between 5 and 6 thousand pounds of good luck. Which, at an average weight of 7 pounds per fish, makes approximately 850 Common Carp heading to New York City.
I asked how they get 6,000 pounds of fish into the live tank and Scott said, “With a load this small we’ll hand-dip them into the tank.”

There a big guy, thrashing around.


Not exactly a job I’d relish. In fact, the truth is, I’d be incapable of doing any of what they do – it takes a lot of muscle and a lot of silent working.

I’m too wussy and I talk too much.

Narrower and narrower...



And the net is cinched.


Scott and Steve – who only talked when I asked questions and never offered information otherwise (though they didn’t seem to be irritated by me and were perfectly friendly) – were hoping to seine again the next day, which, as everyone around here hates the carp, came as exceedingly good news.

Hauling the catch - all 6,000 pounds.


Several cars and trucks stopped along the road during the time I stopped to watch the seiners. It’s not every day that we see such things, you know. In fact, one old timer with whom I struck up a conversation, said that he remembers seeing them seine in the winter, way back when. “They’d cut a big hole in the ice and thread the nets down in and do it that way,” he told me. I had trouble picturing how that would work, but I’ll take his word for it.

A stick marks the spot.


How about that? Little old Lake Bella, Minnesota…providing food for Passover to the Orthodox of New York.

You just never know what’s going on right around your very own corner, do you?