Early Summer at the Portage

The end of May brought the cicadas, the end of spring migration and a settling down into warmer temperatures and longer days. It portends a long summer season with a lot less activity and more leaves on the trees.

We have had so much more rain than last year’s drought, it seems as if plants are making up for it. That, combined with early warm weather, has accelerated growth and the flowering and fruiting season. Mulberries are already staining the cement. My currant bushes are laden with fruit. And it seems like after every rain, I have to eliminate more plants to walk through the backyard.

Here are photos selected from 3 consecutive visits to the Chicago Portage on May 25, May 28 and May 30.

On May 25, I was happy to see the Green Heron at one of its favorite fishing spots, hanging out on a log with the turtles.

An American Goldfinch was foraging in the duckweed.

And a House Wren was having a quiet moment.

On May 28, I saw the Green Heron again.

Cicadas were impossible to ignore.

Galls were already on the leaves of a hackberry tree. The galls provide a treat in the fall when the warblers come back through.

The bottomlands close to the Des Plaines River have been flooded most of the time.

I found another House Wren.

A distant Hairy Woodpecker

I often encounter American Robins along the trail.

On May 30, my first subject was a young doe.

Two Canada Geese were hanging out with the turtles.

A backlit Indigo Bunting looks nearly black.

I followed a female Brown-headed Cowbird. She matched the color of the branch she sat on.

I had an early Cicada pinup.

I caught a Gray Squirrel with cicada-mouth.

Swallows were flying over the marsh. I managed to photograph a Tree Swallow and then Northern Rough-winged Swallows.

Baltimore Orioles aren’t as easy to see now that they’re nesting.

I found a distant Northern Flicker scaling a dead tree.

Butterflies started to emerge.

Pearl Crescent

Red-winged Blackbirds are everywhere but not always visible either.

I found a female American Goldfinch in a tree.

And then another down by the water.

One more of the very blue-looking Indigo Bunting at the top of the post. In case I haven’t mentioned it before, their feathers are actually all black and the degree of blueness is what you see in light reflection.

The breeding birds are in place. The cicadas are everywhere. The days are getting longer and waking up at 5:00 AM now feels normal, unless I remind myself that had we not set the clocks ahead, it would be 4:00 AM. I’m going back to writing a book, in between navigating a calendar full of summertime concerts and gatherings. And gardening, looking for birds, playing piano, swimming and blogging, of course. Sometimes all I can do is take a nap.

4 thoughts on “Early Summer at the Portage

  1. Great shots of the Green Heron and all the Goldfinches that seemed to have spend the Spring in your yard and not at Portage. The cicadas are another issue. I stopped on Thursday and sat watching them fly every which way. With the warmer weather their numbers have exploded as well as the intensity of their song. Both the migrants and my interest in facing the cicadas have diminished. I stayed in the car and exited the parking lot.

    • Thanks, Bob. I still get a few local Goldfinches in my yard feeders but I suspect most of them are in the preserves now. I was at the Portage on Thursday too, maybe earlier. The Great Egret was standing down the Red-winged Blackbirds.
      It could be the cicadas bother me less because I am more accustomed to having little creatures flying around me. I am not so enamored of them to spy on their mating activities or rescue them from sidewalks as some people I have read are inclined to do. I am content to walk every morning somewhere for the moment and might try a grassland later in the week.

  2. Gosh, you do lead a busy life, and manage to produce excellent posts like this one too. I take my hat off to you. I liked the shot of the heron and the turtles at the top of the post in particular today. It had a Japanese art feel about it, I thought.

    • Oh I just like to tell myself I’m busy. I probably spend more time taking care of the indoor birds.
      I am always in awe of everything you accomplish on a daily basis.

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