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Hello, again, fellow Blue Bird enthusiasts!

Welcome to the 2009 – Week #12 Mississippi Gulf Coast Blue Bird Trail Update on the campus of the South Mississippi Regional Center, in Long Beach.

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A beautiful Blue Bird male, sitting on Nesting Box #7, which, it was revealed in this week’s Trail Survey, held the first babies of the Second Hatch of this season.

Activity during the Second Hatch is increasing, with today’s Trail Survey revealing the first 3 Blue Bird babies of this hatch.

Today’s Survey also noted a total of 25 eggs now incubating in the nesting boxes.

Unfortunately, it also revealed that a predator visited one of the boxes since last week, resulting in three missing eggs from last week’s count. Master Naturalist Buddy John and I are not sure what predator came by, although John did see a raccoon scurrying across the campus yesterday, during the day, when they are usually holed up in a tree somewhere sleeping.

Here are the results of Friday’s Blue Bird Trail Survey – May 22, 2009:

Nesting Box #1 – 4 new Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: Full Blue Bird nest built.

Nesting Box #2 – 1 Blue Bird egg; predator visit. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird eggs.

Nesting Box #3 – Nest built, no new activity. – Last Week: Nest built.

Nesting Box #4 – 5 Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: 3 Blue Bird eggs.

Nesting Box #5 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nesting Box #6 – 4 new Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: New Blue Bird nest built.

Nesting Box #7 – 3 new Blue Bird babies, 1 Blue Bird egg. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird eggs.

Nesting Box #8 – Some straw in box. – Last Week: Some new straw in box.

Nesting Box #9 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nesting Box #10 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nesting Box #11 – 5 Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird eggs.

Nesting Box #12 – Some straw in box. – Last Week: Some new straw in box.

Nesting Box #13 – 5 Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird eggs.

Survey totals this 2009 Blue Bird Season include: 28 Blue Bird babies flown from the nesting boxes, 5 sterile eggs, 25 Blue Bird eggs currently incubating in nesting boxes, 3 Blue Bird eggs lost to predators, 33 Blue Bird eggs produced in First Hatch, 31 Blue Bird eggs produced so far during Second Hatch, 64 Blue Bird eggs total produced so far during 2009 Season.

Have a great Memorial Day Weekend!

p.s.- 8 more days until the 2009 Atlantic Hurricane Season begins!

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Hello again, fellow Blue Bird enthusiasts, and welcome to Week #9 of the 2009 Mississippi Gulf Coast Blue Bird Trail Survey at the South Mississippi Regional Center in Long Beach!

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This magnificent Blue Bird male was photographed sitting on nesting Box #7 this week, which has a new nest under construction after the first hatch babies flew the nest.

Master Naturalist Buddy John continues to recovery from his leg ailment, and that is good news!

This week, we moved a little bit closer to the end of the first hatch of the 2009 season, when we noted that four more Blue Bird babies flew from a nesting box during the past week, bringing the total number of nest fliers to 27 for the season.

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A male Blue Bird brings some straw to nesting box #4, helping his mate build a new nest there.

The only remaining nesting box with first hatch activity is Box #1, which has 1 Blue Bird baby, and three eggs in it. We don’t know yet if these eggs are sterile or fertile, but it is looking like they may be the former. Another week should tell their status.

It has been enjoyable during the past week, to watch many of the new Blue Bird flier babies, “hanging around” their former nesting boxes, and in several cases, shadowing their parents within a foot or so when the parent is on the ground, searching for bugs and such, hoping the parent will still feed them.

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Two of the juvenile Blue Birds from the first hatch in nesting box #6, have been hanging around with each other all week within about 40 yards of the box.

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A closeup of one of the Nesting box #6 first hatch juveniles.

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Another of the nesting box #6 juveniles.

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And another Blue Bird juvenile.

A few of the nesting boxes already have new nest building activity in them, only a few days after the babies from the first hatch flew from the nests.

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Blue Birds commonly have a regular diet of various kinds of bugs, spending a lot of time on the ground searching for them.

Here are the results of Friday’s Blue Bird Trail Survey – May 1, 2009:

Nest #1 – 1 Blue Bird baby, 3 Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: 1 Blue Bird baby, 3 Blue Bird eggs.

Nest #2 – A few pieces of new straw. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, 1 sterile Blue Bird egg. Removed old nest, cleaned nesting box.

Nest #3 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #4 – New nest built. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest. Removed old nest, cleaned nesting box.

Nest #5 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #6 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, removed nest, cleaned nesting box.

Nest #7 – New nest partially built. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, 1 sterile Blue Bird egg, removed old nest and sterile egg, cleaned nesting box.

Nest #8 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, removed the old nest, cleaned nesting box.

Nest #9 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #10 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #11 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #12 – 4 Blue Bird babies flew from the nest, no eggs in old nest; removed old nest, cleaned box. – Last Week: 4 large Blue Bird babies.

Nest #13 – Empty nest, no activity. – Last Week: Empty nest, no activity.

Other critters and flora spotted during the week, on the campus of the SMRC, include:

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While I was leaning against a small tree, trying to photograph one of the Blue Birds on a nesting box, I heard a scowling noise directly above me in the tree. Looking up, I spotted this little rascal looking straight down at me, probably wondering what the heck I was doing.

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We have lots of Mockingbirds on the campus, making all kinds of racket during the day.

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Another Mockingbird on the other side of campus.

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We have lots of Lagustrom bushes on the campus, too.

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Of course, there are also tons of Magnolia trees in Mississippi, especially since it is the state tree.

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We have lots of stumps on the north part of the Campus, thanks to the strong winds of Hurricane Katrina.

Totals thus far for the first hatch of the 2009 season include: 27 Blue Bird babies have flown from nests, two eggs have been sterile, with possibly another three more eggs sterile, in a nest, and 1 remaining baby still in a nest, growing.

Oh yes, only 29 more days until the gulf coast hurricane season begins.

Have a good week!

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Hello again, Blue Bird enthusiasts, and welcome to Week #8 of the 2009 Mississippi Gulf Coast Blue Bird Trail Survey at the South Mississippi Regional Center in Long Beach!

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One of the resident male Blue Birds residing on the premises of the Blue Bird Trail at the SMRC in Long Beach, suns himself during this past week, and provides your author the opportunity to snap an image or two for this post.

It has been an exciting time here for us on the Blue Bird Trail, where 23 Blue Bird babies flew from the nesting boxes during the past week! In last year’s 2008 Week #8 Trail Survey, only 8 Blue Bird babies had yet to fly from the nests.

What an amazing increase in nesting activity over last year at this same time in the season!

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The male Blue Bird grabs a bug from the grass to help feed his nearby growing babies, here on the Blue Bird Trail.

In addition, we still have 3 Blue Bird eggs from this first hatch still in incubation in one of the nesting boxes, as well as 5 young Blue Bird babies growing in the boxes.

Potentially, if 3 remaining eggs hatch, and the (then) 8 babies all are able to survive and fly from the nests, we could end up having a total of 31 new Blue Bird babies fly during the first hatch!

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The 4 Blue Bird babies in nesting box #7 flew this week, leaving one sterile egg that didn’t hatch, behind.

In the 2008 season, we only had a total of 45 babies fly the nests. Thus, we are guardedly optimistic about the final results that this season could end up achieving.

Needless-to-say, Master Naturalist Buddy John is very pleased about how the 2009 Blue Bird breeding season is progressing.

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These very large Blue Bird babies still residing in nesting box #12, will probably fly from the nest within a few days.

Here are the results of today’s Blue Bird Trail Survey – April 24, 2009:

Nest #1 – 1 Blue Bird baby, 3 Blue Bird eggs. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird eggs.

Nest #2 – 4 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, 1 sterile Blue Bird egg. Removed old nest, cleaned nesting box. – Last Week: 4 large Blue Bird babies, 1 Blue Bird egg.

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This image shows how packed down the growing babies make the nest (box #8), just prior to flying from it.

Nest #3 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #4 – 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest. Removed old nest, cleaned nesting box. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird eggs.

Nest #5 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Removed old nest – cleaned box.

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In addition to getting mashed down by the growing babies, the nests in the nesting boxes tend to get pretty “dirty” while the babies are in the nest, as nesting box #4 shows in this image.

Nest #6 – 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest. Removed nest, cleaned nesting box. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird babies.

Nest #7 – 4 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, 1 sterile Blue Bird egg. Removed old nest and sterile egg, cleaned nesting box. – Last Week: 4 Blue Bird babies, 1 Blue Bird egg.

Nest #8 – 5 Blue Bird babies flew the nest, removed the old nest, cleaned nesting box. – Last Week: 5 Blue Bird babies.

Nest #9 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Removed old nest – cleaned box.

Nest #10 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Empty box, no activity.

Nest #11 – Empty box, no activity. – Last Week: Removed old straw – cleaned box.

Nest #12 – 4 large Blue Bird babies, will probably fly from the nest during the coming week. – Last Week: 4 small Blue Bird babies.

Nest #13 – Empty nest, no activity. Last Week: – Removed old nest, cleaned box.

Oh yes, only 37 more days until the gulf coast hurricane season begins. Oh, goody!

And, I saw the first “love bugs” of the spring season flying around today!

Have a great weekend!

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Yesterday and today, I had the pleasure of hanging around with Master Naturalist Buddy John and Emily, the Tree-Climbing Wonder Dog, out at John’s home north of Pass Christian, Mississippi, on Bayou Arcadia, north of The Bay of St. Louis.

You got a bit of a look at John’s place in my recent post, “Week #13 – Mississippi Gulf Coast Blue Bird Update.”

The weather this weekend has been pretty nice, with daytime highs around 88 or so, with moderate humidity; not nearly so nasty as it has been the past couple of weeks and will be again soon, as we slide more into the heat of the gulf coast summer.

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A rain shower passes by John’s home on Bayou Arcadia, north of Pass Christian, Saturday afternoon.

I had done quite a bit of work for John last summer and fall, helping to build a new bathroom in a ground floor room (he calls it his ‘shed’) at his home, and he and I were doing some more modifications to his ground level area this weekend.

As you can see from the images in “Week #13 – Mississippi Gulf Coast Blue Bird Update,” John’s home is quite a ways up off the ground on wood pilings, but still not so high that he could escape having 5 feet of storm surge during Hurricane Katrina in the living area of his home. That amount of water made it necessary to completely gut the inside of the home up to the ceiling level.

John had the foresight to have had flood insurance on his home structure, and that allowed him to repair it after Katrina finished with it, much of it done with volunteer helpers. He has been frugal in choosing the materials and sources for re-doing his home, and has been able to end up with a beautiful home to live in.

He has planted a large number of flowers, plants and trees on the property, especially in the back yard, between the home and the pier on the bayou. One of the most interesting things he has growing on the ground floor area, above the fish-cleaning table and lower back deck, are the young Banana Spiders. The largest one he has there at the moment, is about the size of an old half dollar. John advises that they will grow to be the size of a canning jar lid, and be beautiful. Yeeeeaaaaaaahhhhh, I can hardly wait…

While cutting some boards this afternoon, we chased a Brown Recluse female spider down through the deck floor boards, where the Black Widow spiders hang out. Maybe some of you would like to come and help the next time I go out there to work, huh? If not, I’ll understand.

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The beach next to Pass Christian harbor on Sunday.

John doesn’t let Emily out in the back yard now without watching her so she doesn’t go near the pier and water, since he saw a gator measuring about 6′ in length swimming around there two days ago. If the gator hangs around, he will call the Game & Fish to come and trap it and transport it to an safer location.

After finishing working yesterday afternoon, John and I went over to Kimball’s Shrimp Cafe in The Pass for lunch. They have giant cheeseburgers and great shrimp po-boys. While there, we ran into a fellow I work with and his sister, who is rebuilding her home in The Pass, which Katrina totally destroyed.

This afternoon, with most local cafes closed, John and I went to Shaggy’s Cafe on the beach, in the Pass Christian Harbor, for lunch. Shaggy’s Cafe is located right in the middle of the harbor, on the water, up high on pilings, with various private boats and shrimpers moored nearby.

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Shaggy’s Cafe in the harbor at Pass Christian, Mississippi.

They had a pretty good size crowd when we arrived, and we ended up sitting at a small table out on the deck in the sunshine, directly overlooking the water and boats.

John ordered some Gumbo, while I had the Shrimp Po-Boy, and we dined watching various boats come and go all around us.

A big thrill was when a 39′ banana boat with three engines pulled in and docked directly below our table, and we got to watch the crew unload several large yellow-fin tuna from the fish hold, into the lower portion of the restaurant. The six people on board had been out two days and caught the tuna halfway to Mexico.

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Part of the harbor in Pass Christian, Mississippi.

After we sat down at our table, a young waitress who John knew, named Katie, stopped by our table and said hello to John. He introduced me to her, and advised her that we had been working at his house earlier in the afternoon. I told her I was from Wisconsin, and when I did that, she grabbed my arm and punched me in the shoulder. Then she said she was from Wisconsin, too!

I said, “You’re kidding, where from?” And she says, “Most recently, Madison. My mother just got back from there last week.” I said, “Girl, my home is just south of Madison. What a small world!”

The next time she walked by us, I asked her, “Where are you from originally in Wisconsin?” She replied, “Tomah.” I said, “Really, I used to eat at the supper club in Tomah, ‘The Teepee.’” She says, “No way! My family and I went in there to eat all the time!” Then she said, “I’m going in and call my dad and tell him about this; this is amazing!”

Yes, it is a small world, at times.

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Shaggy’s Cafe at the harbor in The Pass.

As we dined at Shaggy’s, I couldn’t help buy notice the many shrimp boats which were tied up at piers in The Pass Harbor, rather than out in the sound or gulf shrimping. Shrimping season started during this past week, but many shrimpers were not going out, due to the high cost of diesel fuel and the current low price of shrimp, due in part, to the competition from shrimpers in southeast Asia.

Like I said, it is a small world, at times, and what happens on the other side of it, does affect us on this side, more and more as time passes.

Rebuilding Pass Christian, and the rest of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, is proceeding along, and much has been done to repair and replace homes, businesses, schools, churches and public buildings damaged or destroyed by Katrina. However, much remains to be rebuilt, as evidenced by the large numbers of empty home slabs remaining, as well as the large numbers of Katrina Cottages and FEMA trailers still left around the coast. Those are families without permanent homes, still waiting to get their lives back.

It is that challenge which brought me to Mississippi Gulf Coast a year and a half ago, and which I will continue to play a small part in the rest of this year.

Thanks for stopping by!

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Another week nearly through the gate, here on the recovering Mississippi gulf coast. Strangely, there seems to be an armada of airplanes flying directly over my trailer at this very moment. Hmmmm… someone making a movie…??

This past week saw two good friends and fellow volunteers of many years from Wisconsin, Dwight and Dale, spending the week here, helping rebuild a home damage by Hurricane Katrina, over in Biloxi. When they arrived last Saturday morning, I took them on a tour of the coastal area from Gulfport over to Pearlington, on the Louisiana border, so they could get a real good feel for the number Katrina did here on the coast. They worked hard all week, had a good time joking and joshin’ with each other, and seemed to enjoy their week away from the monster Wisconsin winter.

Thursday evening, we got together for supper and conversation, as they related their week’s experiences doing carpentry, re-installing windows that someone else had previously installed rather incorrectly, and trying to install and match siding, something neither had attempted before in their lives. It was a good evening, good food, good conversation, and good fellowship among friends. It was also awesome to be able to spend some quality time visiting with friends from back home, in Wisconsin. Friday evening, after working all day on their project, they packed up and headed back north, to the cold and snow.

Before leaving, the fellows said they would be back; Dale with a Lions Club group, and Dwight, hopefully in October, depending upon his work demands. Dwight says that next time, he would probably prefer to leave the comfortable accommodations of Camp Biloxi, and opt to stay and work over in almost forgotten Pearlington, where no home or structure escaped Katrina’s flood surge. Herbie Ritchie and Larry Randall, Co-Directors of the Pearlington Recovery Center, have organized a grassroots recovery operation there on the Mississippi-Louisiana border, mostly without government help and red tape, to help the families in their small, unincorporated community, to rebuild their homes, one at a time, with volunteer workers and volunteer financial assistance. They have their work cut out for them, but they know that, having dealt with constant delay and disappointment in the rebuilding process during the past 32 months since Katrina paid them a watery and windy visit.

As Katrina swept into his community that dark, stormy morning in August of 2005, and the storm surge waters rolled up his driveway and rose into his home, Herbie and his family had to swim for a boat he had been trying to sell, still parked in his front yard, the only saviour close enough to help the family stay alive. They all finally made it into the boat, just barely. Their home still sits unoccupied, still needing final repairs, before they may leave their nearby travel trailer, and, one again, be home.

Dwight and Dale had the opportunity to meet and briefly talk with Herbie last Saturday, about his continuing efforts to help his community get back on its feet. Our two Wisconsin volunteers will be back, this time to help Herbie and his neighbors, and they can use a lot of help from other volunteers from back in Wisconsin.

The Pearlington Recovery Center is pretty much a self-contained volunteer work camp, having bunks, showers, toilets, a tool room, and a kitchen and a large food tent. It’s not fancy, and is probably what you might call ‘rustic,’ but you can stay there very inexpensively (they ask for a $5.00 donation per each day of your stay) while you are volunteering to help breathe life back into the community. They also need financial donations to help purchase building materials for the homes of families of limited financial means. One thing you will love about the place is all the Spanish Moss growing on the Live Oak trees! Absolutely beautiful!

So, to Dwight and Dale, thanks again for coming down to help out families in need, as you have been doing now for at least 10 years in Mississippi. You are to be commended for your generous, caring hearts and terrific human spirits!

Pearlington Recovery Center

Good job, gentlemen, and y’all hurry back now, hear?

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