
TLS Guy
Audioholic Jedi
As some of you may recall I have been building an aluminum pontoon loon nesting raft for Benedict Lake.
The Loon is the Minnesota stat bird, and under severe threat.
This link will show you a video from a web cam in a raft on Big Mantrap Lake.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/stevemaanum/3592317926/
Today we was Ice Out on Benedict Lake. At 9.00 Am I called up the troops.
We started building the nest on the newly completed raft at 10.00 AM.
Once completed we loaded up.
Note this is the first year of deployment at this site, and so the fabric screen only goes 1' up the canopy, to shield the loon in the head down position. If the canopy is completed the loons enter and leave concluding it is a trap. Once they have used it the next season the canopy is completed.
I then made ready the anchor chains for the raft, and marker/warning buoy. I built snubbers for the fore and aft raft anchor chains, to act as shock absorbers when the raft pulls hard on the chains in the wind. So we loaded up all supplies including three 28 lb naval anchors.
Then I got my boat Tuscan out of the shop with my JD 420 tractor. Then hitched to one of the pickups, and headed for the access on the Benedict River.
We headed up stream and into Benedict lake, and selected the best spot for deployment, and deployed the raft, then the marker buoy and marker line.
We were battling 25 mph wind gusts, so I had to use all the tricks I leaned watching tug boat captains on the River Medway as a boy.
The we headed back to the Benedict River and pulled Tuscan out of the water, and returned, home. Tuscan was put back in the shop with the JD 420, and we cleaned up. It took us in total three and half hours.
I'm especially grateful for all the advice from the members of the Big Mantrap Lake Association responsible for developing their Loon nesting program. Special thanks is due Mr Lyle Laske.
After cleaning up I traveled along the shore to the deployment site in in my Willys Jeep and took this picture.
Now we will have to wait and see if a nesting pair of loons uses the raft.
The Loon is the Minnesota stat bird, and under severe threat.
This link will show you a video from a web cam in a raft on Big Mantrap Lake.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/stevemaanum/3592317926/
Today we was Ice Out on Benedict Lake. At 9.00 Am I called up the troops.
We started building the nest on the newly completed raft at 10.00 AM.

Once completed we loaded up.

Note this is the first year of deployment at this site, and so the fabric screen only goes 1' up the canopy, to shield the loon in the head down position. If the canopy is completed the loons enter and leave concluding it is a trap. Once they have used it the next season the canopy is completed.
I then made ready the anchor chains for the raft, and marker/warning buoy. I built snubbers for the fore and aft raft anchor chains, to act as shock absorbers when the raft pulls hard on the chains in the wind. So we loaded up all supplies including three 28 lb naval anchors.
Then I got my boat Tuscan out of the shop with my JD 420 tractor. Then hitched to one of the pickups, and headed for the access on the Benedict River.
We headed up stream and into Benedict lake, and selected the best spot for deployment, and deployed the raft, then the marker buoy and marker line.


We were battling 25 mph wind gusts, so I had to use all the tricks I leaned watching tug boat captains on the River Medway as a boy.
The we headed back to the Benedict River and pulled Tuscan out of the water, and returned, home. Tuscan was put back in the shop with the JD 420, and we cleaned up. It took us in total three and half hours.
I'm especially grateful for all the advice from the members of the Big Mantrap Lake Association responsible for developing their Loon nesting program. Special thanks is due Mr Lyle Laske.
After cleaning up I traveled along the shore to the deployment site in in my Willys Jeep and took this picture.

Now we will have to wait and see if a nesting pair of loons uses the raft.