Nature News

Watch this page for Updates on Bird Sightings at Goose Pond & Faville Grove, What's Happening in the Prairies, Nesting Bird Activities, and other Nature News!

Prior Entries 2009 2008 2007

Please Scroll Down for Postings, Pictures and Stories

(With special thanks to Dorothy Haines for helping keep all of us up to date)
  • Goose Pond Waterfowl Counts - Come Out and See The Migration
  • Fall Seed Collecting is Underway - We Can Use Your Help
  • "Open House on the Prairie" - Enjoy Sundays in June at Goose Pond

Goose Pond Waterfowl Counts (and other species)
- Come Out and See The Migration!

SpeciesOct. 5Oct. 22Oct. 31Nov. 7Nov. 14
Snow Goose55
Canada Goose1,5801,6002,0002,0002,500
Tundra Swan15128
Wood Duck
Gadwall1
Am. Wigeon5
Black Duck4050
Mallard1,7302,0002,0004,0005,000
Blue-winged Teal1580
Northern Shoveler151
Northern Pintail535
Green-winged Teal801553011
Canvasback51045
Redhead1520
Ring-necked Duck11090652520
Lesser Scaup51020
Bufflehead15205080
Common Goldeneye1
Hooded Merganzer1
Ruddy Duck601001156560
American Coot3709601,010235162
Sandhill Crane2952512
Bald Eagle1

A flock of 500 Snow Buntings was seen on Nov 13

Counts may be low this year due to high water and vegetation


Fall Seed Collecting is Underway!

Madison Audubon's own prairies provide seeds for added restorations. But they must be collected by hand, at the right stage of ripeness before they fall off the stems. This labor-intensive activity requires lots of volunteers. Anyone can come on out and help, there's lots to learn and do! Here are some of the helpers, and a few pictures....

On a windy, but sunny day in early October the Poynette High School Conservation Club and a whole bus-load of UW Biocore students spread out through the tall native plants. Their retrieved the treasure, to be planted this fall on the north side of Kampen Road, will be dried, threshed, mixed and sown by hand. Sanctuary Manager Mark Martin estimates that the day's harvest would have cost around $5,000 on the market.

More groups and individuals are needed on Saturday mornings through October to gather the produce of a warm and rainy summer that produced more than usual. They meet at 9:30 a.m. at the Sanctuary Manager's residence, W7503 Kampen rd, Arlington. No experience is necessary and tools are provided; but the wind on the prairie usually necessitates a warm jacket. Seeds are also being collected at Madison Audubon's Faville Grove Prairie just north of Lake Mills. See the home page links for more info.

Here are some recent photos that illustrate steps in the seed collecting activity -


Mark Martin (in tan jacket at left) demonstrates the clipping technique to UW -Biocore students.


Students clip pale purple coneflower seed heads while their leader, Janet Batzli, (left) learns the tricks of the trade.


Theresa Plenty, William Plenty and Brenda Johnson, Poynette, gather milkweed pods


Poynette High School Conservation Club volunteers in the field


Poynette High School Conservation Club volunteers pose for the record6.


The volunteers at the end of the activity are thanked and photographed


At the drying barn the harvest is spread out in all available containers in preparation for threshing


Meanwhile, over on Hopkins Road another crew loads their bags of treasure onto the truck.


"Open House on the Prairie" - Sundays at Goose Pond

   Dorothy Haines will be at Goose Pond's Browne Prairie on Sundays this June between 2 and 4 pm to help nature lovers, families and kids enjoy the new hiking trails through the prairie and learn about the ever-changing prairie blooms, habitat, birds, and wildlife. Welcome tables will provide trail maps and information under canopies on the Browne Prairie parking lot, which is on Kampen Road, west of Goose Pond Road, just south of Arlington.
Directions - Take Highway 51 north of Madison and just before Arlington turn south on Goose Pond Road. Then take a right on Kampen Road at Goose Pond and go half a mile to the parking area on the Browne Prairie hill. Speakers will be on hand to present special topics on Sundays in June. See below for details!

Grassland Birds and Prairie Blooms To Be Features of "Open House on the Prairie" Sunday June 27

Enjoy a Drop-in welcome at Goose Pond Sanctuary’s Browne Prairie. Arlington, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, June 27. This is the third June event, see below for writeups about the prior events. MAS Field Trip leader Peter Fissel will lead a periodic meander on the mowed trail into the prairie to find grassland birds, such as meadowlarks, clay-colored sparrows, savannah sparrows, as well as many other local species.

This event serves as an introduction to the recently established 57-acre prairie which is beginning to show off its full bloom. A mowed hiking trail guides the visitor through the prairie and to the hilltop on the horizon to view the restoration of the historic “Empire Prairie”. A new on-site exhibit provides ecological and historical information. Trail maps and current information will be left in the Information Box on the site, to enhance the visitor’s enjoyment of this educational experience at all times.   
When Fissel scouted the area on Sunday, June 20th, he noted the presence of the following: Red-winged Blackbird, Tree Swallow, Song Sparrow, Clay-colored Sparrow, Savannah Sparrow, Chipping Sparrow, Turkey Vulture, Rock Pigeon, Eastern Meadowlark, Common Yellowthroat, Mourning Dove, Pheasant, Barn Swallow, Brown Thrasher, American Robin, American Goldfinch, Red-tailed Hawk.

The Tree Swallows residing in the nest box provided on the Browne Prairie parking lot are busy catching insects in the air and feeding the young hatchlings with the help of four other swallows, presumably juveniles.

A Double Duty Debut - Open House on the Prairie - June 13 Event Report

Around the canopied “open” house, pictured here, the hiking trails are mowed, trail guide posts installed, and a new permanent display informs all comers about the past, the present and the hopes for the future on the most recent prairie restoration at Goose Pond Sanctuary. Madison Audubon Society hopes that visitors will find it an educational opportunity and return with families to enjoy its ambience as it changes through the season.

Mammals – mostly the underground communities – were the focus of the invited specialist of the day on Sunday, June 20. Mammologist Loren Ayers displayed some live examples of life on the lower level, and told about how they organize their lives.

Open House on the Prairie Opening Day

Sunday, June 13, was the debut for the trails and the signs. Visitors were welcomed at the conversation setting and they learned much on short trail hikes. They were looking for insects, but the highlight of their day was watching a marsh hawk (harrier) catch a mouse, twice. The marsh hawk is an uncommon raptor that nested in the Goose Pond Sanctuary for the first time last summer.

Goose Pond Sanctuary is owned by the Madison Audubon Society, and managed by the resident naturalists, Mark and Sue Martin, who reside at W7503 Kampen Rd., and may be reached at 635-4160.

Cleaning Kestrel Boxes -
Pictures and Slideshow by Jeffrey Durbin

Posted May 2010

In this educational slideshow Jeff shares information about American Kestrels and the work Brand Smith, Jill Stevens, Jeff, and other Madison Audubon Society volunteers are doing to provide much-needed Kestrel nest boxes. Jerry Martin built the original boxes and Boy Scouts have helped to build more, for a current total of over 40 Kestrel boxes.

Click the picture to view the slideshow. You can use the controls at the bottom to pause the slideshow, read the titles and set the speed.

Goose Pond Prairie Burn - Spring 2010

This series of photos illustrates a Prairie Burn - the crew, technique, and spectacular blaze of prairie management by prescribed burning. Native prairie plants have deep roots and survive these burns and thrive, while the regular burns every few years help prevent the invasion of plants that would change and overwhelm the prairie ecology. Native Americans historically managed large expanses of native prairie in southern Wisconsin with fire to benefit from the wildlife that benefitted from the prairie. Species of birds that depend on large expanses of open prairie habitat have declined alarmingly in Wisconsin over past decades, and they benefit from these fire-managed restored prairies.

MAS has helped purchase, restore, and manage large numbers of acres of prairie habitat in this area with help from Audubon members, partners, and the public. Your generous donations and volunteer assistance are an important part of continuing this work. Get involved today!

1. The Goose Pond crew of resident managers and volunteers start the burn at an upwind location
About the annual burns Since native prairie maintenance requires burning of the accumulated dried vegetation every few years, Goose Pond Sanctuary managers follow a routine burning program for portions of each of the Sanctuary’s prairies about every three years. For safety and completion, a successful burn requires specific weather conditions including a satisfactory wind direction and velocity, the humidity of the air, and dryness of the duff to be burned. All of this is supervised by the manager, Mark Martin. Madison Audubon Society is issued a burn permit from DNR fire control. An experienced crew supplied with equipment is necessary to assure that the fire does not escape.

2. The fire quickly becomes a wall of flame moving downwind through the prairie
A good burn in April 2010This burn was done at the Madison Audubon Society (MAS) Hopkins Road Prairie near Arlington north of Madison off Highway 51. After several days of waiting, it all came together on the beautiful morning of April 10, 2010. A light breeze from the west wafted across the Hopkins Road Prairie toward the east. The crew was outfitted with yellow fire retardant protective suits, helmets, face masks, and back pack water containers fitted with water-spraying devices. Shortly after 10:00 a.m. they took off in pick-up trucks for Hopkins Road, which is just one mile east of Goose Pond Road. This 40-acre restoration, planted in 1998-90, offers an interesting rolling terrain on the east side of Hopkins road. A service drive traverses the boundary, and hiking trails are maintained through the vegetation.

Strip by strip the fire line made its way across the prairie, reducing about one-third of the whole restoration to a solid black blanket. Only the hiking trail and the ephemeral wetland in the middle retained the dull colors left from winter. (Other parts of the restoration will be burned in subsequent years.) The flames at times reached about six feet in height, and the dark gray smoke blew off to the east.

3. The safety-outfitted crew manages the fire with a tanker, portable water sprayers and hand tools to prevents spreading beyond mowed fire lanes
Managing the Fire The leading crew accompanied the “Mule”, an especially equipped vehicle carrying a 200-gallon tank of water that was pressurized and fitted with a hose for spraying or refilling back packs. After a carefully controlled fire-break was burned along the eastern edge, Burn Boss, Mark Martin (clad in the only red protective suit) carrying a burning drip torch, ignited a strip to the west of the break strip. (Photo 1) With the wind blowing to the east, the smoke and the fire burned well with little danger of escape or hampering traffic on the road, which was posted with “Prescribed burn – do not report” signs.

4. When the roaring blaze has reached the other side of the prairie and burned itself out, the crew gathers to celebrate a job well done!

5. One week later new shoots of green growth are already taking off.
The photographer recorded from her perch atop the hill in the middle of the restoration until moving to Hopkins road for the final flicker. A photo one week later shows the green plants peeking through to start their above-ground life which will provide a show in full color from late May to October. The procedure was repeated several times at other Madison Audubon Society Goose Pond and Faville Grove sanctuaries in April, sometimes in the evening after the wind died down.

The rows of trees in the background are part of a University of Wisconsin research plot