Honestly I think the story of the Whooping Crane's recovery is a perfect way to show folks that bird watching is in fact INCREDIBLY powerful for conservation, and just for conversations about and for the environment. One of the biggest challenges with saving the cranes, if I recall right, is that for decades no one had ANY idea where the birds were breeding and nesting - even finding out that they were migrating from Texas to Canada was a big revelation at that time, because no one had really seen them (or perhaps had seen but not paid attention). When I think about how astonishing it is where even the most common birds can be found making nests (let's face it, would YOU live in a parking garage, or in a wreath on someone's porch??) it becomes even more important for us to listen to the enthusiasts and the scientists who go around finding that kind of information. It takes dedication and love to patiently hunt through hundreds of square miles of habitat in all sorts of weather to go track down a specific bird. Birders are super-heroes!
@woodsonjaneАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing whooping cranes sighting! Glad their population is growing!
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
@@woodsonjane thanks for watching!
@RoseGrace100Ай бұрын
They are beautiful birds. Sure love seeing the refuges.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
They really are a magnificent species
@ABirdersParadiseАй бұрын
I saw Whooping Cranes there at Necedah last year, which was great even though they were far out because I missed them (by a few hours) at Horicon Marsh. Necedah is really great, except the ticks were terrible last year. We walked Lupine Loop/Trail there and ended up with over 100 ticks on us. You could see them on the ends of the grass just waiting for you to walk by, and after checking ourselves, we still ended up finding some on us after we had traveled many miles (I think we were in Minnesota). But yeah, the bird part of Necedah is great! :D
@FlorafauneandoАй бұрын
It's good that you saw it, it is a magnificent bird. When I was a child I had read in a magazine and seen documentaries about its critical condition, although I didn't know much because it is many thousands of kilometers from where I am. Then in recent years I learned that their populations increased. Interesting video.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@NathanWebb-c5hАй бұрын
That was fun to watch. I've never seen a whooping crane.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@sandyjacobs7840Ай бұрын
I finally got to see this magnificent bird this summer near Calgary!
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Congratulations!
@toddleech1055Ай бұрын
another wonderful video. thanks guys
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@barbaracole709Ай бұрын
I only have seen them at the National Zoo in DC and the Audubon Zoo in New Orleans, but I would love to see them in the wild. They are such big and majestic birds! Congrats on the great views of them.
@sylviamaulding2237Ай бұрын
I saw Whooping Cranes in TX in Feb. 2012. 8 at Goose Island SP and 12 at Aransas NWR.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Arkansas was their last wintering stronghold when their numbers were low
@braydenpaulk5079Ай бұрын
I have seen whooping cranes at Necedah NWR and also Wheeler NWR in Alabama!
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Very cool!
@brighteyedbirdingАй бұрын
Is Ryan a Jaguars fan? A Packers fan? Something else? I guess we will never know 😉
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
That’s the real mystery here
@jamescady723Ай бұрын
Great find!! I new they were in trouble, but had no idea the population was about 1k.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
They’ve really had an amazing rebound as a species
@lukeocasio2784Ай бұрын
Great vids guys !!!
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@markshen3280Ай бұрын
Hi, again from Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR. I had been thinking 🤔, whether or not the Japanese Red-crowned Cranes and the Whooping Cranes could be sub-species of each other… 🤔Kindly please 🙏 let me know…. 🧐
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
I don’t believe they are related anymore than being in the same broad “family” of cranes although they do look very similar
@pataudalain7675Ай бұрын
I saw Whooping Cranes in TX in Apr. 2012. 10 at Aransas NWR with 1 not too far away.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
That’s awesome!
@markshen3280Ай бұрын
Ryan, interestingly enough, the Japanese Red-Crowned Cranes population, however, are non-migratory. And I did some searching on-line : Currently, there are two main populations of Red-Crowned Cranes : one is the non-migrating and lives in northern Japan 🇯🇵 on the island of HOKKAIDO. The other population breeds in Russia, north-eastern China 🇨🇳, and Mongolia 🇲🇳, migrating to eastern China 🇨🇳, and to North and South Korea , spending the winter there.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
That’s very interesting!
@markshen3280Ай бұрын
Hi, Ryan. Good morning to you from Hong Kong 🇭🇰 SAR. Please may I know whether the Whooping Crane (endangered crane species and native to North America), is the same as the Red-Crowned Crane found in Northern Japan 🇯🇵 and east Asia ? Looking forward to hearing from you……🤔🤔🤔🤔
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
@@markshen3280 hey! Although similar-looking they are different species!
@banetheoutdoorsman8484Ай бұрын
I hunt in Necedah Wildlife Refuge for deer. The reason why there was so much cut/blow down trees was because there was a huge windstorm in late July of 2022 and blew down a TON of trees, especially near the entrance and visitor center. They just started cutting/logging off the blowdown this past summer. Sweet video anyway!
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
Thanks for the insight! I was very curious about it
@1awesome180Ай бұрын
Why do you like to murder animals?
@diannajepson8708Ай бұрын
How exciting! I have not seen these before. I think one of my cousins lives near a wildlife sanctuary of some kind in Wisconsin. I wonder if it's the same one.
@BadgerlandBirdingАй бұрын
If it’s the sane one you’ll have to come visit!
@diannajepson8708Ай бұрын
@@BadgerlandBirding it's not. 😔 But she only lives about an hour and a half from there, so maybe next time I am out that way.
@marjake3147Ай бұрын
I have a puzzle. A few weeks ago, I had a pair if birds ( male and female so I assume a nesting pair?) show up at my bird feeders and I am not able to find them in any of my bird identification books. They were about the size of a goldfinch or sparrow, and the male was completely black with a yellow tip on his tail and another on his chest. The female was marked the same except she was a charcoal grey not black but had the same bright yellow markings. I couldn't see their beak they moved to fast to be able to see them clearly. I live on the border of MN/WI just east of the Twin Cities. Does anyone have any idea of what these birds could be? I haven't seen them since so I assume they were migrating-
@HuckleberryHimАй бұрын
Could they be American redstarts?
@marjake3147Ай бұрын
I looked up pictures of the bird you suggested and that wasn't it. I'm still looking for ID?
@HuckleberryHimАй бұрын
@@marjake3147 Could it be magnolia warbler or yellow-rumped warbler? Does it seem like it was some kind of warbler at all?