The freeze/thaw cycle is part of winter where I live in southeast Michigan. It’s one reason why our roads so terrible by the end of winter. Warm spells mean water fills the cracks and joints. The ice that forms on refreezing expands and breaks, first small, then larger, pieces of asphalt and concrete. For the lakes and wetlands I frequent, it means a changing cast of waterfowl. Shorelines freeze first, meaning dabblers must move on, but leaving deeper water for diving ducks. A prolonged cold spell will freeze even those areas. Fast moving rivers rarely freeze over, and so become a gathering place for ducks, geese and swans. That doesn’t happen every year, but when it does, the Bald Eagles come to where the prey is.
THE DAILY BUCKET IS A NATURE REFUGE. WE AMICABLY DISCUSS ANIMALS, WEATHER, CLIMATE, SOIL, PLANTS, WATERS AND NOTE LIFE’S PATTERNS.
WE INVITE YOU TO NOTE WHAT YOU ARE SEEING AROUND YOU IN YOUR OWN PART OF THE WORLD, AND TO SHARE YOUR OBSERVATIONS IN THE COMMENTS BELOW.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE PURPOSE AND HISTORY OF THE DAILY BUCKET FEATURE, CHECK OUT THIS DIARY: DAILY BUCKET PHENOLOGY: 11 YEARS OF RECORDING EARTH'S VITAL SIGNS IN OUR NEIGHBORHOOD
Kensington Metropark
I wrote a Bucket recently about the change in temps effecting the water at Kensington Metropark in December. Temps had been mild for most of the fall, leaving lots of open water. A December cold spell froze much of the shallow water, which meant the ducks had largely moved on. Since then, we had a warm up with three days of rain, followed by a recent cold blast of consistently below freezing temps. The temps are a little below the average range, but not by much. I’m happy we avoided the worst of the early winter storms, at least so far.
The lakes at Kensington are formed by dams, so the water is relatively shallow and freezes quickly.
The title photo is Kent Lake on January 3, 2025, as is the photo below. Although the temps had been below freezing for a few days, the warm up had unfrozen the lake and the refreeze was just starting. It was still ice free enough that Sandhill Cranes could pick along the shorelines.
Lake St. Clair
Lake St. Clair is a shallow lake that lies between Great Lakes Huron to the north and Erie to the south. The St. Clair River flows between Lake Huron and Lake St. Clair, and the Detroit River flows between there and Lake Erie. On January 1, 2025, the water was open with too many ducks to count.
I visited again just over a week later, on January 8th.
Lake Huron and the St. Clair River
As noted above, north of Lake St. Clair is Lake Huron, with the St. Clair River between them. As one of the Great Lakes, Lake Huron is sizeable and it takes a long period of cold temps for lake ice to form. The St. Clair River, like the Detroit River, moves fast enough where it generally does not freeze.
One winter visitor I look forward to is the Long-tailed Duck. There are thousands of them in a good year. This week, there were small rafts flying from the St. Clair River into Lake Huron, and then drifting back with the current as they dove. Further south along the river, there were huge rafts.
Three years ago, we had a really long spell of cold weather. Long and cold enough for the Detroit River to freeze in spots. Ice breakers had to be deployed to keep the shipping lanes open. The ice forced ducks to congregate in small areas, which brought Bald Eagles and other predators. As crazy as it sounds, even to me, I hope for cold weather for this reason.
Now it’s your turn.
What’s up in nature in your neighborhood?