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Difference between revisions of "Bald Eagle-Otter Lakes Regional Park" - BirdForum Opus

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'''[[United States]], [[Minnesota]]'''
 
==Overview==
 
==Overview==
 
In White Bear Lake (also White Bear Township), MN there is a large section of Ramsey County open space land between Otter Lake and Bald Eagle Lake.  This parcel contains an interesting mosaic of lakes, ponds, islands, reed beds (cat tails), marshes, grassy fields and rolling wooded hills.  Google Maps marks it as "Bald Eagle-Otter Lake Park" but the only signs I saw were the generic "open space" property markers along the roads.  
 
In White Bear Lake (also White Bear Township), MN there is a large section of Ramsey County open space land between Otter Lake and Bald Eagle Lake.  This parcel contains an interesting mosaic of lakes, ponds, islands, reed beds (cat tails), marshes, grassy fields and rolling wooded hills.  Google Maps marks it as "Bald Eagle-Otter Lake Park" but the only signs I saw were the generic "open space" property markers along the roads.  

Revision as of 02:09, 18 August 2017


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United States, Minnesota

Overview

In White Bear Lake (also White Bear Township), MN there is a large section of Ramsey County open space land between Otter Lake and Bald Eagle Lake. This parcel contains an interesting mosaic of lakes, ponds, islands, reed beds (cat tails), marshes, grassy fields and rolling wooded hills. Google Maps marks it as "Bald Eagle-Otter Lake Park" but the only signs I saw were the generic "open space" property markers along the roads.

Birds

Notable Species

In February I only saw small numbers of the most common birds, such as American Crow, Black-capped Chickadee, Northern Cardinal, Downy Woodpecker, White-breasted Nuthatch, and Red-tailed Hawk. However, its location between two substantial lakes and the tight mosaic of open water, wetlands, fields and forests suggests that it might be an interesting bird area in the warmer months. (Beware, this is also the most mosquito infested part of town.)

Returning in October 2008 I also saw hairy woodpecker, red bellied woodpecker, winter wren, yellow-rumped warbler, (ruby-crowned?) kinglet, brown creeper and several hermit thrush in less than two hours around sunset.

Check-list

Birds you can see here include:

To do

Other Wildlife

To do

Site Information

This is a neat hiking area in the winter, because you can simply walk across the frozen lakes, ponds and marshes, whereas in the warmer months you need to find dry-land trails to navigate through the complex landscape. In warm months rubber boots would help you cross the reed and marsh areas that separate the dry forested hills.

History and Use

To do

Areas of Interest

To the Southwest there is also another large section of this open space land surrounding Tamarack Lake, bounded by I-35E, Otter Lake Road, Hammond Road and County Road H2.

Access and Facilities

There are no maintained trails inside, but an extensive network of organic foot and bike worn paths will take you all over the park. There were many unsigned access points along Bald Eagle Boulevard and Ash Street (County Road J), and I just parked on Bald Eagle Boulevard at N45.11190, W93.02704 and walked in where I saw an obvious path into the woods.

Contact Details

To do

External Links

Content and images originally posted by bkrownd

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