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I go a little farther and I see it in its glory: Thompson Lake! A lake which had completely vanished under farm land has been reborn. You can see Prairie Road leading to The Nature Conservancy on the right.
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Pumphouse Road runs through the lake now. You need a canoe to cross to the other side when it isn't frozen. Today I supposed I could walk across, but I didn't try that.
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I look to the south, and I see Havana's powerplant, steam billowing into the air.
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To the north I see frozen lake covered in snow with the bluffs in the distance.
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As we drove north on 78, an American Kestrel flew from the wire to the other side of the highway.
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We drove along Emiquon Prairie Road past The Nature Conservancy.
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We saw a hawk on the side of the road. When he took off we could see that it was a female Northern Harrier. I wasn't prepared for that! Photos are fuzzy, but here they are:
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We found six hawks along Clark Road. Of course I was driving, and by the time I would get out of the car to take a photo, they were gone. They seemed to be in pairs, hunting the fields on the east and the bluffs on the west side of the road.
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This guy posed briefly before flying to the other side of the bluff.
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This guy, most likely a Red-tailed Hawk, landed way out in the prairie, with the sun providing a back light that made him or her a mere silhouette.
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This guy, a Rough-legged Hawk, flew directly over my head while I was out of the car.
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Emiquon is a delight, no matter the time of year or time of day. Conditions continually change and the landscape changes with it. I eagerly await the open waters of spring!
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