Nature's Notebook

Spring bulbs are beginning to stretch toward the sun again (one has to admire their willingness to give it another go, after the earlier "false spring" that burned their tips). It is to be hoped that a wet blanket of snow won’t come later this week, as threatened.

A little snow probably won’t bother the fur-covered bear that David Osborn photographed last week, after it enjoyed a snack at the Falls Village birdfeeder owned by his mother, Amelia Wright.

Jennifer Kronholm and James Clark of Lakeville didn’t see a bear, but they could certainly tell one had been visiting.

"The birdfeeder in the front yard was torn off the pole and the one in the backyard was bent down to the ground," Kronholm said. "After we cleaned that up, the bear came back the next night and broke into the garbage bin. We were chasing trash across the whole yard."

Pieter Lefferts and Claudia Cayne of Sharon also saw a bear.

"We just got back from our morning dog walk on our favorite dirt road near the Miles Sanctuary in Sharon," they said in an e-mail to The Journal. "The splashing we heard in the  fragmites turned out to be a black bear of moderate size. The  excitement of that sighting was shortly followed by the sight of not one, but two bald eagles! Maybe a soon-to-be nesting pair? It’s great to witness the awakening of spring!"

Don Grant of Danbury sent in two amazingly clear photos of what are probably those same eagles.

"I saw them on the West Cornwall Road in Sharon," Grant wrote in an e-mail. "They were on the ice in the Roy Swamp Wildlife Management Area. This is only the second time I have seen bald eagles in Connecticut. I saw a pair in February on the Housatonic River in West Cornwall. I have been an outdoorsman hunting and fishing in the area for more than 30 years. My wife [the former Betty Nodine] is from Sharon and she has never seen them. So I would call these birds rare."

— Cynthia Hochswender

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