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Posted On: 01/09/2025 7:50:35 PM
Post# of 149741
Not sure if this will heal souls. But cool as heck from the East Coast. We get Loons here from the Great Lakes in the Winter. They travel in marriage pairs, coo like On Golden Pond, dive underwater for fish, and have a tear duct or something that allows them to be freshwater birds, but also excel in saltwater. They are called common loons but they are endangered. They are ‘common’ bc they exist in Europe and Eastern Americas. The local birds are many, kingfishers, brown pelicans, ducks, sea gulls etc.
I say all of that, to say all of this.
Today, looking out of my glass doors after a very long day, I saw Loons diving for dinner in the salty water. The thing I’ve never seen before is the following.
The married couple of Loons dove to eat, and their effort scrambled of some bait fish or something. Menhaden, or mullet minnows. The loons scared up a bunch of bait and out of nowhere, 3 pelicans, and 12 gulls dive bombed the scene. I guess the Loon missed, but they came I full assault mode.
It reminded me of Cytodyn. Scare up the feeding, and the rest will follow.
I love the Loons. Not supposed to be here. But getting it done.
I say all of that, to say all of this.
Today, looking out of my glass doors after a very long day, I saw Loons diving for dinner in the salty water. The thing I’ve never seen before is the following.
The married couple of Loons dove to eat, and their effort scrambled of some bait fish or something. Menhaden, or mullet minnows. The loons scared up a bunch of bait and out of nowhere, 3 pelicans, and 12 gulls dive bombed the scene. I guess the Loon missed, but they came I full assault mode.
It reminded me of Cytodyn. Scare up the feeding, and the rest will follow.
I love the Loons. Not supposed to be here. But getting it done.
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