Coastal Bend Audubon Next

March 13, 2009

At 7:00 p.m. on April 7, 2009, the Coastal Bend Audubon Society will feature On the Wings of Cranes at their monthly meeting. For details proceed to AUDUBON

Looking forward to seeing you there.

Scarbaby…the famous Whooper

February 13, 2009

Click on SCARBABY to learn more about a once injured, now famous, Whooping Crane at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. Before he became a front page feature in the Feburary 10, 2009 Corpus Christi Caller Times, he was featured on page 211 of On the Wings of Cranes. In the book he is shown with both his family members and the authors.

MICHIGAN WILDLIFE CONSERVANCY tells of “A TRUE CITIZEN-SCIENTIST”

January 4, 2009

The Wildlife Volunteer of Michigan’s Wildlife Conservancy published the following article in their January-February 2009 issue on page 4. Picture credits belong to Mark Weldon of Fort Wayne, Indinia, Larry Walkinshaw’s companion. The article’s title, subtitle and a picture introduce the story.
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Biography of LAWRENCE WALKINSHAW based on the new book On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story

Lawrence Harvey Walkinshaw (1904-1993) …Who accomplished more, and for longer than any, to save three endangered species

Dr. Lawrence Walkinshaw was called by some "The greatest bird nest finder of all time." Here Walkinshaw is seen with one of 600 sandhill crane nest he found, mostly in Michigan.
Caption: Dr. Lawrence Walkinshaw was called by some “The greatest bird nest finder of all times.” Here Walkinshaw is seen with one of 600 sandhill crane nests he found, mostly in Michigan. [Michigan Sandhill Crane nest number 307, shown here, was located in Moscow Township, Section 24, T5S, R1W, in Hillsdale County on May 6, 1980.]
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Walkinshaw was born to Calhoun County, Michigan pioneer families on February 25, 1904. Birds fascinated him by age “five or six”, he said. After attending a one-room school, Bellevue High School and Olivet College, he earned an Honors degree in dental surgery from the University Michigan. Dr. Walkinshaw started a dental practice in Battle Creek in 1929. His practice spanned forty-years concurrent with leadership in Boy Scouts of America, Battle Creek Lions Club and three Michigan Dental Societies. In 1931, he and Clara May Cartland married. The Walkinshaws had two children James and Wendy.

Recognized as “The Father of International Studies of Gruiformes” in 1975, ‘Walkinshaw’ and cranes became synonymous. The Walkinshaw Wetlands, a 4,500-acre preserve within the Huron-Manistee National Forest and The Walkinshaw Award, the highest recognition attainable for crane scientists are among his honors. He served as Wilson Society President (1958-60) and held offices in Michigan’s Audubon Society and other ornithological organizations.

Walkinshaw, however, was not into honors or officiating. His passion was saving endangered species with knowledge, and by aiding worldwide habitat restoration. His forte was stalking reclusive birds from the Artic to Africa seeking nests to reveal their secrets. Presidents of leading ornithology societies proclaimed him the “greatest bird-nest finder of all time“and the “model” life history scholar on cranes, warblers and sparrows. Fieldwork for this self-financed amateur birder began before sunrise… tabulating data, typing and editing late into the night. He published nearly 400 works.

Larry considered the 1941 establishment of Michigan Audubon Society’s Baker Sanctuary his greatest achievement. Greater sandhill cranes numbered fewer than forty nesting pairs in the US in 1931 when Larry first discovered a nest there. He proclaimed it “a sight of cranes that completely changed my life.” He published The Sandhill Cranes (1949) followed by The Cranes of the World in 1973, both landmark volumes. These and related works established the foundation for all future crane saving programs. Five-thousand or more Sandhills now roost at Baker Sanctuary during CraneFest each October.

His whooping crane rescue efforts were as intimate as with sandhills. Rather than accept leadership of the bi-national Audubon Society research program in 1947, he instead volunteered. He searched for their Canadian nesting grounds, captured the first pictures of active nests in Wood Buffalo National Park, studied them at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, provided the first sandhill to be used as surrogates for whooper egg incubation, helped charter the Whooping Crane Conservation Association, and served on three national recovery committees.

Simultaneous with crane studies, Walkinshaw conducted extensive fieldwork on Kirtland’s warblers in Michigan and the Bahamas. He was first to band one, and later established Kirtland’s genealogies, studied Cowbird infestation control and habitat restoration techniques culminating in Kirtland’s Warbler: The Natural History of An Endangered Species (1983) and Nest Observations of The Kirtland’s Warbler (1988).
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Michigan Wildlife Comservancy Web site is accessable below. JOIN their nobel conservation efforts led by Dennis Fijalkowski, Executive Director of the Bengel Wildlife Center, P.O. Box 393, Bath, MI 48808. JOIN
Dennis related in his note announcing the article’s arrival, “I have so much respect for Dr. Walkinshaw. He was one of my heros. A true citizen-scientist. Contratulations on your book.”

A picture of On the Wings of Cranes is also shown at the article’s end along with related details.

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Seeing this article with his picture prompted Mark Weldon to write me January 6, 2009. “I enjoyed the book very much. I thought I knew Larry fairly well from our conversations during our trips but you presented so much more. You know I was a fledgling crane enthuasist when Larry and Ron Hoffman took me under their wing so-to-speak. Both shaped and influenced my life. Thanks for writing the book.”
Mark obtained his copy of ‘WINGS’ during Michigan Audubon Society’s CraneFest activities last October at Baker Sanctuary. Purchase your copy now… HERE.

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Learn interesting details about all of the Sandhill Cranes in Wikipedia’s free on-line discussion on the SANDHILLS> Interestingly, Walkinshaw, the acknowledged “Father of International Crane Research”, who led in the establishment of the world’s first crane sanctuary and who first published a technical treatise on the species plus 60 other articles, does not appear as a reference. One may think missteps and time have taken their toll as an oversight. Not really, however. Should one delve into to the references that are cited, the name Walkinshaw would repeatedly appear. Progress.

ARANSAS NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE program, JANUARY 24th

December 31, 2008

On the wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story will be presented by author Lowell M. Schake in the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge Conference Room, Austwell, Texas. The public is invited to this day-long event running from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. on January 24th, 2009 at the Rufuge Headquarters. Copies of the book will be sold by AMIGO (Aransas & Matagorda Islands Guardian/Orator). This ‘Friends’ group provides support for many Refuge activities including this lecture series. Proceeds from book sales of ‘Wings’ will be devoted to those activities as has been the case with all other book sales and events.

Mark your calander. Attend and see some of the record 270 Whooping Cranes returning from Wood Buffalo National Park, Canada this fall. Larry Walkinshaw and Robert Porter Allen were the first to investigate captive Whooping Cranes nesting at Aransas Refuge in 1949 and 1950 that led to the flocks striking recover of today. Discover how Walkinshaw, an amateur birder, worked from 1931 until the early 1990s to lead in the salvation of this and two other endangered species.

For more details proceed to ‘Upcoming Events’ at AMIGO’s website LECTURE SERIES.

Whooping Crane Scientists present “On the Wings of Cranes”

December 9, 2008

Reports of 2008 on the status of Whooping Cranes associated with the wild Wood Buffalo/Aransas flock and re-introduced ones in Florida assesses recovery prospects. Reflective of their optimism, the issue of re-establishing a flock in Lousiana is also discussed by authors Tom Stein, the USFWS Whooping Crane coordinator at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge in Texas, and Marty Folk with the Florida Fish and Wlidlife Conservation Commission.

Their reports appear at the WHOOPER STATUS button below. At the end of their reports they kindly included an introduction to On the Wings of Crane: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story. Thanks guys for the ‘plug’! Nonetheless, Walkinshaw earned the privilage by his contributions to crane conservation.

WHOOPER STATUS

“On the Wings of Cranes” featured at Binder Park Zoo

December 1, 2008

Binder Park Zoo

Bringham Audubon and Binder Park Zoo teamed up in October to feature Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story so essential to preserving Michigan’s birdlife while enhancing conservation and nature. Author L. M. Schake presented details at the Zoo’s Cross Administration Building, October 8, 2008.

Cranes, Loons & Quilts

If you’re thinking Larry Walkinshaw only studied endangered cranes and warblers, check-in at this report on Cranes, Loons and Quilts where it’s explained how On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story is available from the Michigan Audubon Society. I don’t know anything about the quilts but Walkinshaw’s work with loons spanned his adult life.

CRANES, LOONS & QUILTS

“…the exemplar of the term “citizen scientist.”

The Ledger of Polk County, Florida chronicled the usefulness of On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Waklkinshaw’s Life Story on November 17, 2008. Its environmental editor, Tom Palmer, laments his not knowing Walkinshaw better saying, “I was concentrating on seeing as many species as I could rather than learning a lot about just a few, as he did.” His admission highlights why Walkinshaw became an exemplar citizen scientists rather than ‘just’ another amateur birder. Palmer appropriately linked Walkinshaw to leadership roles beyond those of worldwide scope to local ones in Florida such as leading the Ridge Audubon Society.

Palmer’s complete rendition appears in his Nature of Things column below.
THE NATURE of THINGS

Whoopers are stars…

November 24, 2008

Whoopers are stars of birding festival” proclaims the 2008-09 Visitors Guide published by the South Jetty newspaper of Port Aransas, Texas. Their November, 2008 Visitors Guide explains that thousands of nature and bird lovers will flock to the 13th Annual Celebration of Whooping Cranes and Other Birds February 26 to March 1, 2009. Early registration begins December 1, 2008 with the $20.00 fee entitling one to special discounts throughout the weekend program.

Port Aransas South Jetty

Whooping Crane topics will be presented at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute. Ann Vaughn, Port Aransas Chamber of Commerce leader, will present each speaker with a copy of On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Live Story. Lowell M. Schake, the book’s author, will introduce his newest volume between the presentations of two prominant Whooping Cranes experts; Tom Stein of the Aransas Refuge and George Archibald of the International Crane Foundation. Throughout the four-day event Schake will be in a booth with Aransas National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) personnel. AMIGO, friends of ANWR will sell copies there with all proceeds going to the ‘Friends’ group to support their nature preservation work. Schake welcomes the opportunity to sign copies.

Whooping cranes may be see at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge at Austwell, about 45 miles north of Port Aransas, or by taking a tour boat provided as part of Celebration activities. Almost 300 Whoopers are expected to winter at Aransas Refuge this year, an amazing new record number!!

REGISTER EARLY by by clicking here!! Proceed to the second page for the role of On the Wings of Cranes.

Another feather in our cap… Corpus Christi, Texas

November 7, 2008

CORPUS CHRISTI’S'S FEATHERED CAP

Living in this “Birdiest” of regions not only offers much daily satisfaction, but enhances my appreciation for those who worked to understand - and salvage - the natural world. Without their assistance, my family and friends could not enjoy the many birds gliding over the sand dunes at sunrise. The once threatened Brown Pelicans proceed in ‘V’ formed squadrons starting the day. My mid-day beauty takes flight as Roseate Spoonbills appear. Once they were the assigned species to be rescue by Robert Porter Allen before he and Larry Walkinshaw studied the Whooping Cranes, America’s Symbol of Conservation. Together they searched Canada and studied at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, Austwell, Texas to save those majestic icons. Across the day Humming Birds, Grackles, Doves and Laughing Gulls cheerfully fill the air. Yet the signature songs of Whistling Duicks at dusk seem special when orchestrated by rapid wing beats in yet another ‘V’ formation taking them somewhere. Where? Why? What’s their hurry?

Walkinshaw always claimed their were “Human stories to be told…” if we could understand bird behavior.

Northwest Library To Spotlight Pioneering Bird Researcher… WALKINSHAW

The news release of November 3, 2008 proceeds:
The Northwest Brach Public Library’s Clif Moss Nature Education Center invites birders of all levels of interest to a series of programs focusing on the newly released book, On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story. The first program will be held at 2p.m. Saturday, November 15, 2008 at the library.

Dr. Larry Walkinshaw, who died in 1993 at the age of 88, was one of the nation’s leading authorities on a number of bird species, including Whooping Cranes and Sandhill Cranes. Among other things, he was involved in the recovery efforts of the Whooping Crane population, which winters in South Texas each year at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge.

The discussion of the book will be led by its author, Lowell M. Schake, son-in-law of Walkinshaw. Schake is a retired professor who now lives in Port Aransas. The topic of the first program will be: Overview of Walkinshaw’s Life Accomplishments. What Motivated Him and Why?

In addition to the November 15th program, Schake will lead other discussion at 2 p.m. Saturday, December 13, 2008 and at 3 p.m. Saturday, January 10, 2009. The Audubon Outdoor Club of Corpus Christi will have copies of On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story available for purchase at the library for $24.95. The Proceeds will be used to support local birding and conservation activities.

Contact: Lynda Whitton, Northwest Branch Library 361-241-9329.
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The Northwest Branch Public Library of Corpus Christi premiers as the city’s ‘birding library’ in the “Birdiest City in America”. The ornithological honor represents a three-year running record of 241 or more species spotted and verified by local birders, mostly representing local Audubon Outdoor Club and Coastal Bend Audubon members.

“The library wishes to encourage youthful participation in birding and nature in general,” Head Librarian Lynda Whitton told me in April, 2008. Fourteen children and their families completed a birding class sponsored by the library in July. The five-week Saturday series that commenced at 5 p.m. at the library located at 3202 McKinzie Road in Corpus Christi included field-trips to nearby Tule Lake to assit in identification of bird calls and other details of avain life history.

The current series of monthly educational programs evolved from my previous contacts with the General City Librarian for Corpus Christi, Texas. Herb Canales introduced me to his ‘Friends of the Library’ group to stag a signing event for my La Charrette: A History of the Village Gateway to the American West in 2003. By 2005 it was reissued by publisher iUniverse, Inc., by then taking on a life of its own.

In July 2008, I met Herb in the parking lot of his Flour Bluff branch library. “Hey, you’re the book guy” was his attempt to grasp my name. We visited about the upcoming release of On the Wings of Cranes and my desire to establish another signing event. One thing led to another and soon Herb had provided the necessary contacts to establish the upcoming November-December-January series of programs. Herb also aided my introduction to local Corpus Christi Caller-Times bird columnist Phyllis Yochem. Her “Rave Review’ was previously featured in this blog series.

Not only do I owe Herb “Thanks” for that much appreciated assistance, but for all the diligent work completed over the last ten-years by his staff. Those at his Main downtown library, as well as at Flour Bluff, processed at least a thousand request of mine - interlibrary loans, routine retrievals, reorderings, and obtaining rare or difficult to locate volumes.

Perhaps we can all extend “Thanks” by attending the many excellent birding programs offered by my local Corpus Christi libraries.

Hero of American Ornithology

November 3, 2008

Shown above is Dr. Lawrence H. ‘Larry’ Walkinshaw (1904-1993) when searching the Kirtland’s Warbler nesting grounds associated with the Mack Lake burn of 1980, Crawford County, Michigan. Nonetheless, neither the exact location of the amateur Michigan birder when this portrait was taken nor its phototographer are known with certainty. During this interval Walkinshaw was asked to contribute to a research project funded by the USFWS and administered by Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources to help salvage another endangered species. The author was told by Kirtland’s Warbler experts that he was the only one who could find their nests with any regularity.

Phyllis Yochem concluded her review On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story saying the book exposed “one of the heros of American ornithology”. Certainly she was correct but if Larry Walkinshaw had heard or read such laudable praise he would downplay it in the extreme. Walkinshaw was a very reserve and unpretentious individual… perhaps even to a fault.

So much so that his modesty even became a motivating factor in the origins of his biography. Everyone in the Walkinshaw family knew how hard he worked, how he loved birding, traveling to study them in the wilds of nature and the long hours devoted to recording field notes, and writing. What we did not know was the eventual impact of it all. Did his sacrificing actually make a difference? That’s why Wendy, my wife - Walkinshaw’s daughter - asked that his biography be compiled.

Discovering for the first time the full reality of his species conservation successes places his family in Yochem’s camp…he really was one of the heros of American ornithology. Better than that however, the cranes and warblers he worked to save offer living testiment well beyond any other acclaim.

The Cover Story “On the Wings of Cranes”

October 30, 2008

You can never really judge a book by its cover… or can you?

The origin of the ‘Cover Story’ and its message both followed what I had researched, written and later submitted for publication. What followed could only have been the work of serendipity.

Its composite picture was, at least to me, something of an accident. When I submitted the manuscript for publication only the picture of cranes flying across the face of the moon was to appear on the cover. Michael Boyce, Resident Manager of Michigan Audubon Society’s Baker Sanctuary had only recently photographed them. When Wendy, my wife - Larry Walkinshaw’s daughter, and I visited there in August 2007, Mike graciously offered it to us for the cover. Walkinshaw’s portriat beneath the cranes is the work of celebrated LIFE photojournalist Alfred Eisendstadt when assigned to Larry during week-long studies of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska in the 1950s. It was submitted to iUniverse the publisher as the book’s Frontiespiece.

Unbeknown to me the iUniverse, Inc. graphic artists thought otherwise. They combined the two images to creat the stunning one appearing on the front cover (more subdued here than in actuality). Little did they know the interwinning of aesthetic beauty and history they had created!

The essence of this is its poignancy. For years, Walkinshaw led the charge as Chairman of Michigan Audubon Society’s Crane Sanctuary Committee leading to establishment of Baker Sanctuary in 1941. At that time it represented the world’s first and only sanctuary devoted exclusively to saving cranes. During the 1930s Walkinshaw and Aldo Leopold, the preeminant academic conservationist with the University of Wisconsin, Madison, thought fewer than 40 pairs of Greater Sandhill Cranes nested in the United States. Once there were thousands. After Larry published The Sandhill Cranes in 1949 and Cranes of the World in 1973, everyone knew he had established the foundation upon which all future crane research and salvation would reside. Thus Baker Sanctuary… within walking distance of Larry’s boyhood home, where he first sighted Sandhills and encountered their first nest providing him inspiration … represents the very genesis of all worldwide crane recovery - for Larry and for cranes.

Today, thousands of crane lovers flock to Baker Sanctuary each October when attending CraneFest. Thanks to the foresight and actions of Larry Walkinshaw they sometimes see as many as 8,500 roosting Sandhills in a single day… a new Michigan record.

Restoring the World’s crane populations… It all started at Baker Sanctuary. As noted on the front cover, the return of the cranes is “the wildlife equivalent of putting a man on the moon“, according to John Christian, USFWS, 2003.

Everyone knows you can’t judge a book by its cover… or can you now that you know the rest of the ‘Cover Story’? To proceed with rest of Larry Walkinshaw’s improbable Life Story,, obtain a copy and probe beyond its cover.

Copies available across the Internet, call the publisher at 1-800-288-4677 or purchase several from your favorite conservation organizations: International Crane Foundation; World Birding Center; Aransas National Wildlife Refuge; Corpus Christi Audubon Outdoor Club; Michigan Audubon Society; The Port Aransas South Jetty newspaper among many other commercial outlets.

First Fall of 2008 Whooper Arrives at Aransas Refuge

October 27, 2008

Captive nesting Whooper ‘Jo’ shown with Walkinshaw’s daughter Wendy Ann in 1950. The entire Walkinshaw family, along with Robert Porter Allen, studied two nesting pair at Aransas Refuge in 1949 and 1950.

My latest copy of the Port Aransas South Jetty reported that the first Whooping Crane arrived at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge on October 20, 2008, that according to USFWS Whooping Crane coordinator Tom Stein. More are expected soon, concluded Klein who was instrumental in providing me access to the Refuge archives when researching On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story. When Larry Walkinshaw initiated their salvation in 1937, only 13 Whooping Cranes remained in the wild.

Today, around 250 arrive at Aransas from Wood Buffalo National Park in Canada each fall, thanks to a half a century and more of struggling by a handful of concerned individuals like Robert Porter Allen, Walter ‘Bud’ Tholen, J. J. Pratt, Walkinshaw and others. Walkinshaw, Tholen and Allen first became so-called Whooper Pen Pals, then attempted to locate their Canadian nesting grounds in 1947 and 1948. Later they became founding members of the Whooping Crane Conservation Association, the first association devoted exclusively to saving a single species from extinction.

The South Jetty is soon to carrying copies of On the Wings of Cranes in their office at 141 W. Colter, Port A, Texas. Drop by or call 361-749-5137 to place your order.

On January 24, 2009, a day-long program will be hosted at Aransas Refuge near Austwell, Texas featuring On The Wings of Cranes. Friends of Aransas & Matagorda Island National Refuges of Austwell will offer copies for sale. Those buying a book from them helps to support activities important to programs held at the Refuge. Arrange to attend, purchase several copies… the beautiful book makes a great gift. Both the ‘Friends’ and the Refuge staff may be contacted at 361-286-3559.

Book signing starts at 9:00AM and runs until 3:00PM with a noon break. Over the noon hour, I will make a power-point presentation in the Refuge Conference room and share salient experiences when researching for the book. Join us, bring friends and family. The Whoopers are staging a magnificant comeback! Be there! The Refuge is a wonderfully unique wilderness area that offers everyone an opportunity to see the best of nature first hand.

Don’t forget to stop by and see the Whoopers from the tower at the Refuge. Wendy Ann Walkinshaw Schake, my wife of almost fifty years, will try to join us too. She remembers being at Aransas Refuge with her mother Clara, brother Jim, and her dad, Larry. They all stayed in one of the little white cabins immediately north of the Refuge at Hopper’s Landing. See you at Aransas.

Kalamazoo Gazette Killian interviews Schake & Tatar

October 15, 2008

14th Annual CraneFest kicks off this weekend in Belleview

This special article by reporter Chris Killian announced CraneFest on Monday, October 6, 2008. Killian relates the details of our interview and upcoming crane festivities.

BELLEVUE - When a baby bird hatches, it latches on to the first thing it sees.

Larry Walkinshaw had a similar experience nearly 80 years ago.

While hiking through some wilderness areas in 1931, Walkinshaw came upon a pair of cranes and their nest. What he saw and experienced there changed him forever, said Lowell Schake, Walkinshaw’s son-in-law and author of a newly released book, “On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story.”

“The cranes he saw started scolding him for finding their nest,” Schake said from his home near Corpus Christi, Texas. “And at that moment, Walkinshaw was imprinted by cranes forever. The sight of them completely changed his life.”

Walkinshaw, who practiced dentistry in Battle Creek for decades, died in 1993 at the age of 88, but not before he became the world’s foremost finder of bird’s nests and traveling the world to document all 15 crane species, Schake said.

Walkinshaw was also a leader in the push for formation of the Baker Sanctuary in Bellevue, located in northern Calhoun County. The sanctuary is now one of the most populated sandhill crane destinations in the country.

Those who are enamored by cranes, or just curious about these creatures, will have a chance to see them up close October 11 and 12 at the 14th Annual Michigan Audubon Society’s CraneFest at the Battle Creek Kiwanis Youth Area, next to the Baker Sanctuary.

The majestic birds can reach 4 to 5 feet tall, with a wingspan of nearly 7 feet.

In the 1940s, DDT and other chemicals cut hard into the sandhill crane population in Michigan, with only 17 pairs documented in the state [by Walkinshaw in the mid-1930s] at that time, said Wendy Tatar of the Michigan Audubon Society.

Now, thanks to conservation and educational efforts, the population has soared to never before seen heights, with 16, 707 pairs documemted in the state and 8,528 pairs seen at Baker Sanctuary in November 2007 — a new record for cranes at one location.

The cranes gather at the location due to the high amounts of food — mostly frogs — that are located there, as well as the copious amounts of shelter present. The sanctuary serves as a kind of pit stop where the birds fatten and nest before migrating south for the winter.

People are taken aback by the cranes distinctive call, as well as their ability to fly extraordinairly high, Tater said. She said the Michigan Audubon Society is expecting nearly 5,000 people to attend the weekend event.

Schake, a retired Aniimal-Food science professor, will be at Baker Sanctuary October 7 to 11. He said he is hoping for a large turnout for the festival and that people who attend capture some of the same feelings for cranes that Walkinshaw did so many years ago.

“He saw extraordinary beauty in cranes,” he said of Walkinshaw. “They are truly remarkable birds.”
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Previous to CraneFest a Prefest dinner was held at 6:30 PM, Friday October 10 at Convis Township Hall. The event featured Lowell Schake’s discussion on his book, “On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story.”
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Hit www.cranefest.org for related events and opportunities.

Yochem’s Rave Review ‘On the Wings of Cranes’

Book explores life of hero of American ornithology

I am reading the fascinating biography of a remarkable man who researched and helped to preserve several species of birds, among them the greater sandhill crane, the whooping crane and the Kirtland’s Warbler.

He was Dr. Larry Walkinshaw, member of a pioneer Michigan family. His life and achievements are all the more impressive because they took place against the background of the Great Depression. His hard-earned formal education included the difficult choice of first becoming a dentist to support his family. Ornithology research and field documentation were not a second choice but a co-choice by him for a career.

Lowell M. Schake, author of the book, is another remarkable man. He was Walkinshaw’s son-in-law. He and Wendy, his wife are residents of Port Aransas [Texas]. The book, “On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story,” will be featured in Corpus Christi Northwest Library’s Amateur Birding Series, the first of which will take place Nov. 15. Schake is a retired Texas A&M University college professor.

Schake, in writing this biography, fully used the abundant notes and documentation of research by his subject, a dedicated scholar, and worked it into the minute history of the family.

Walkinshaw’s interests began early and he was faithful to them all his life. A favorite book in boyhood was “Two Little Savages,” by E. T. Seton. Walkinshaw was later able to tell the author what inspiration he had found in his works.

One of his most remarkable skils was his ability to inspire others to cooperate and work with him. He led with total enthusiam in many public projects, was a dedicated Boy Scout leader, and was a member of many boards, including service as president of the Wilson Ornithological Society.

Walkinshaw’s pioneer ancestors settled around the Big Marsh in Michigan, so he spent many of his early years exploring the territory. Here he found bird nests and observed the development of their habitants. He felt a strong conviction and a compulsion to learn more about everything natural that came his way. As an adult he almost single-handedly saved the marsh from a fire.

On another occasion, he and his wife, Clara, found an anbandoned cranelet and raised it to adulthood. The little chick was named Brownie and became totally imprinted on human beings. Wendy (Walkinshaw’s daughter and Schake’s wife) was 3 years old at the time and remembers her little bird sister well.

Of special interest is a chapter on Walkinshaw’s field techniques. Dr. George Archibald said of this aspect, “His mother taught him how to take field notes.”

Another friend commented, “I swear Larry never filled his boots, he glided through the cattails with his hands folded…never getting stuck in the mud. He reminded me of St. Peter, walking on water.”

Accounts of sometimes perilous adventures always enjoyed by Walkinshaw make this book a page-turner. It has extensive extras including the catalog of acronyms and abbreviations, a list of characters who are famous or well-known friends and fellow scientist with whom Walkinshaw worked. Black and white snapshots and family portraits add to the insider feel given to the reader.

Of special interest are the chapters about Walkinshaw’s research at Aransas Wildlife Refuge and with the whooping crane. There are anecdotes of revelance to his writing two books, “The Sandhill Crane” and “Cranes of the World.” The book was edited by Walkinshaw’s son James R. Walkinshaw. This very complete, yet readable, book was obviously a labor of love, collecting the episodes and work of one of the heros of American Ornithology.
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Published in the weekly BIRD WATCH column of the Corpus Christi Caller-Times, Saturday, October 11, 2008, City Edition, Home & Garden Section, page 8E. Authored by columinist Phyllis Yochem, a Corpus Christi resident in ‘America’s Birdiest Region’, who has studied birds since 1960.

Amateur Birding Series features “On the Wings of Cranes”

October 5, 2008

The Corpus Christi Northwest Branch Library offers a five month series on Amateur Birding highlighting On the Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story. Appropriately, Larry Walkinshaw, an amateur birder of extraordinary ability and motivation, represents a perfect match for the Northwest Branch Library that serves as the community focal point for amateur birders of all persuasions and all ages.

The program series start at 2:00 PM on November 15, 2008 in the Library’s Conference Room, 3202 McKinze Road, Corpus Christi, Texas. An overview of Walkinshaw’s life of birding contributions will kick-off the series. Author L. M Schake will narrate the entire series and be available to sign copies. Copies will be offered for sale to the public with all proceeds going to the Audubon Outdoor Club of Corpus Christi to support their nature conservation programs. For additional details on the series contact Lynda Whitton, Librarian at 361-241-9329 or lyndawh@cctexas.com, Jo Creglow with the Library and an Outdoor Club officer at bjcreglow@att.net or Pat Botkin the Outdoor Club member in charge of book sales at larbot@str.rr.com.

“This series of presentations is designed to inform and inspire those interested as private citizens to enhance the natural world,” according to Schake. Walkinshaw always believed that in the end,
concerned citizens made the difference. The winter programs are designed to be of special interest to visiting ‘Winter Texans’ residing in this ‘Birdiest of Regions’ in the nation. All meetings will conviene in the Library.

The 3:00 PM December 13th event addresses Christmas Bird Counting. Walkinshaw published on this event, one he loved and participated in for almost 70 years. At 2:00 PM on January 13th, 2009, Kirtland’s Warblers capture stage center as the last species Walkinshaw rescued from extinction. February will feature Whooping Cranes, another of three species Walkinshaw did more to save for longer than any. This Whooping Crane program will coincide with the Port Aransas, Texas Whooping Crane Celebrations of Febuary 26 thru March 1, 2009.

The March and April programs remain under discussion but tentatively include topics of special interest to youthfull naturalists. Come and participate. Helping everyone understand nature, helps us all. See you at the Library!

CraneFest first to feature “On the Wings of Cranes”

October 4, 2008

The Michigan Audubon Society’s Baker Sanctuary near Bellevue will be the public’s introduction to On The Wings of Cranes: Larry Walkinshaw’s Life Story. The October 10, 11 and 12, 2008 events feature the book along with thousands of Greater Sandhill Cranes roosting there. Proceed to http://www.cranefest.org/prefest.html for some of the details. The general public is invited to enjoy this spectacle as well as the works of many naturalists, artists and authors. The story behind the origin of this event is poignant.
All of Larry Walkinshaw’s ancestors were Michigan pioneers who settled around the ‘Big Marsh’. Three generations later Larry was born and grew-up within walking distance of this marsh of some 500 acres. By age 5 or 6 his interest in birds aroused him, at thirteen he first saw Greater Sandhill Cranes glid overhead as he worked in a nearby corn field. Then, shortly after he became an Honors graduate from the University Michigan School Denistry at age 25, he saw another Sandhill family. But in 1931 he discovered a nesting pair of Sandhills that, as he said “completely changed his life.”
What changed?
Walkinshaw and Aldo Leopold declared the cranes endangered. They thought fewer than 40 pair nested in the US where once thousands had lived. Larry led the cause for the Michigan Audubon Society to establish Baker Sanctuary in 1941, a k a the ‘Big Marsh’, as the World’s first sanctuary devoted to cranes. Subsquently he published the life histories on all the crane families in the world leading to his becoming The Father of International Crane Research and ‘the model life history scholar for Cranes, warblers and sparrows’! His 40 years of serving nearby Battle Creek as a dentist allowed him to finance his compulsion that led to him having done more for longer than any to save endangered Greater Sandhil Cranes of the east, the Whooping Cranes as America’s symbols of conservation and Michigan’s unique Kirtland’s Warblers.

La Charrette ‘Approved’ by National Park Service

August 27, 2006

La Charrette A History of the Village Gateway to the American Frontier Visited by Lewis and Clark * Daniel Boone * Zebulon Pike has gained another notable distinction with its approval by the National Park Service for two of their interpretative centers in and around St. Louis, Missouri. The Jefferson National Expansion Memorial (Gateway Arch) in St. Louis at http://www.nps.gov/jeff/ and the Camp River Dubois site of Hartford, Illinois from where The Corps of Discovery started their westward journay at http://www.campdubois.com/ will both offer La Charrette at their interpretative center bookstores.  

These sites represent two of the 385 National Park System centers across the nation. ”I am excited about this decision allowing interested parties visiting these sights to acquire this detailed history of this frontier village from where Lewis and Clark departed civilization. They will discover a missing-link in our national heritage revealed by its rich history,” stated author Lowell M. Schake upon learning of the decision on August 21, 2006. He added, “The review process leading to approval took well over six-months.”

Lewis & Clark re-enactors at La Charrette

August 20, 2006

“Paddling Back on Lewis & Clark Path” was a headline in a recent Warren County Record article. “We are part of something on a national scale” said Al Puknat, one of three local re-enactors planning to come down the Missouri this September to arrive at La Charrette on September 20, just as did the Corps of Discovery 200 years ago. Puknat is joined by Darrell Dinger and Joe Tesson in this adventure. The three local men, as members of the St. Charles Corps of Discovery, have worked diligently for 10 years on plans and construction of a beautiful 20-foot, 41-inch cedar boat to be employed for the occassion. 

Join in the excitement! Be at the La Charrette village site, near present day Marthasville, Missouri, for their arrival this September. 

La Charrette Commemorative Plaque Unveiled

August 13, 2006

August 3, 2006. The Warren County Record announced plans of the Marthasville Lewis and Clark Committee to establish a 5-foot red granite monument in Marthasville’s Wessel Park with a La Charrette plaque. The plaque is a much larger and more detailed rendition of the one shown on the back cover of La Charrette: A History of the Village Gateway To The American Frontier Visited by Lewis and Clark * Daniel Boone * Zebulon Pike reissued earlier this year.

The plaque’s placement in Wessel Park will highlight the La Charrette Village vertical log cabin erected there since May 2003 for the bicentennial arrival of Lewis and Clark at the long lost village. September 20, 2006 marks the bicentennial return of The Corps of Discovery to civilization at La Charrette Village.

Retired fireman Bob Daus of nearby Dutzow (once the home of early German settler Gottfried Duden) was commissioned to create the work of art. The 25-pound bronze sculptor of his Liberty Artworks, Inc. www.libertyartworks.com will aid in my objective to return ‘life’ the village. Committee Chairman, Connie Tesson said, “It will be here hundreds of years after we are gone. Its a beautiful thing.” Local historian and friend, Mr. Ralph Gregory provided the inscription for the monument. Local business woman Ann Jenkins designed the plaque’s artwork.

Congratulations to everyone who helped make this a reality! Join the celebrations in Marthasville September 20 by “Shouting for joy” as the the explorers return to the frontier of the Louisiana Purchase.   

The Magnificant Stumbling of Catain Pike

August 4, 2006

Likely enough, there must be millions of reasons for our fascination with western lore. Some may identify with the great western migration, others with trail drives, ranching, horses, or even pickup trucks. Even our youthful fascinations with Cowboy and Indian movies, novels and comic books embellish the image. Even so, newly disclosed secrets unbeknown but to a few privileged historians offer new details about how all this really began. Disguised as secrets for a very long time, these old sequestered events are intimately associated with a National Bicentennial Celebration of a U.S. military expedition out of Missouri led by a man known as The Lost Pathfinder by one biographer.  Indeed these are very old secrets, even predating the Louisiana Purchase. What were these secrets, and why so long in revealing the roots of western migration, cowboys and our interest in such?

  ……………

The preceeding paragraph appears in  the August 2006 issue of ROUNDUP MAGAZINE, Volume XIII, Number 6: 14-17 as my introduction to an article extracted from La Charrette: A History of the Village Gateway to the American Frontier Visited by Lewis and Clark * Daniel Boone * Zebulon Pike that was reissued earlier this year. Obtain a copy of ROUNDUP MAGAZINE for ‘Rest of the Story’. Their homepage is http://www.westernwriters.org and subscribe for only $30 per year. Back issues cost $5.00 each, if available. ROUNDUP MAGAZINE is a forum for Western literature sponsored by Western Writers of America, Inc. 

Happy reading as you explore the American West!  

Readers seek family ties, local history at authors visit

June 7, 2006

May 5, 2006. Following the May 4, 2006 book signing and donation event in the Schowengerdt House hosted by the Warren County Historical Society, an informative article appeared in the Surban Journals carrying the above title. Excerpts follow:

“I had to get this signed, because I used to swim in Charrette Creek,” Gerry Murphy said as she reminised about her childhood, growing up in the area west of Marthasville.

Visitor Vickie Logston said she and the author share ancestors from a century ago. Logston, who now lives in Jefferson County, traded distant family names and memories with Schake, as he wrote a short message in her copy of “La Charrette.”

And so the eventful evening progressed.  

Sarah Olinger of the Surburn Journals, Warrenton Journal was one of the journalists covering the event. Her two page coverage was an excellent report. Later, she apologized to me for referring to this work of history as a novel, but not to worry, a subsequent disclaimer soon followed!   

St. Louis Post Dispatch La Charrette article

April 27, 2006. St. Louis, MO. The almost forgotten village of La Charrette - the first settlement in present-day Warren County and the westernmost settlement of the Louisiana Purchase - returns to life in the works of retired professor Lowell M. Schake, was the lead paragraph of this St. Louis Post Dispatch article.

This missing link in American history will be featured by the Warren County Historical Society from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at the Schowengerdt House, 308 East Booneslick Road, Warrenton, the article noted. It continues to chronical highlights of village history concluding with my donating La Charrette reference materials acquired while compiling its history to the Society.

 

Missouri Life & Ozarks magazine reviews

Two of Missouri’s most prestigious magazines carried reviews of La Charrette in their June 2006 issues. Ozarks magazine presented an impressive half-page plus spread picturing the front cover on page 46. Missouri Life included La Charrette along with other new selections on page 69. Both offered comments enticing to their readerships. (Ozarks had a little faux pas over the supposed absence of an index, but a retraction will be forthcoming). 

In both cases, I wish to thank the Editors, Susan Kirkpatrick of Ozarks and Danita Allen Wood of Missouri Life, for their support in helping tell the La Charrette Village story.

Stop by your local news stand to acquire a copy, or visit their web pages on-line for more details. Better yet, subscribe to these enjoyable and informative midwestern magazines, then buy your copyHERE.

La Charrette Available as E-book

Were you aware that La Charrette: A History of the Village Gateway to the American Frontier Visited by Lewis and Clark * Daniel Boone * Zebulon Pike was also available as an e-book selection? Proceed to the iUniverse, Inc. bookstore at http://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/book_detail.asp?isbn=0-595-80603-1 for details. Others sources also carry both the paperback and the e-book versions.

Thirst for History Started Here

June 4, 2006

The Warren County Record of Thursday, April 27, 2006 (Vol 108, Number 48) presented a three column story on La Charrette with the lead headline shown as the title above. Its subtitle proclaims, “Author Lowell Schake Will Autograph Book on Rich History of Village of La Charrette.” Record Editor Charlie Deen interviewed me for this article by phone while I was in Denton, Texas attending the North Texas Book Festival earlier in the month.

“As a child growing up near the now almost forgotten village of La Charrette, Lowell Schake spent countless hours combing his parent’s farm for Indian arrowheads and other historical artifacts,” was the lead paragraph. Later Denn concludes with “These days Schake travels around the country in speaking engagements and book signings.”

Tenth Annual Whooping Cranes Celebration Features New Speakers

April 18, 2006

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For further information please contact:
Sarah Wischhof, (402) 323-7800 x. 279
sarah.wischhof@iuniverse.com

Tenth Annual Whooping Cranes Celebration Features New Speakers

Port Aransas, Tex. (February 15, 2006)—The Tenth Annual Celebration of Whooping Cranes and Other Birds is certain to be more spectacular this year than ever before in the presence of a record number of Whoopers appearing at nearby Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. The event will also feature birding tours by both land and sea, the International Crane Children’s Art Exhibit, a Nature-Theme Trade Show and lectures by birding experts.

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