Birds heading north in the spring would encounter a Bears stadium site, and presumably a big glass facade and either run into it or go around. There are longer term populations of ducks, swans, and rails all around the wetlands.
I made this graphic to show how the Bears' stadium in Indiana would affect nearby birds and the ones heading north in spring migration. If they don't hit the big glass facade of the stadium, they'll need to go around it to get to Lake Michigan and points north. (Forgive my graphic design skills.)
07.03.2026 15:24
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Ok, so I am not surprised that a Common Raven finally showed up at Montrose Point (354th species alltime) what with sightings in SE Chicago and Indiana Dunes in recent years - itβs only a surprise that it took this long!
06.03.2026 22:14
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A historic postcard shows a swan in her nest on an island in an urban park.
Did you know? Chicagoβs Garfield Park once was home to Mute Swans. Animal menageries were common in European parks and became popular in the US as well. Exotic animals including European Mute Swans were housed in several Chicago parks c. 1900.
24.02.2026 22:55
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Down in Griffith, Indiana
Plus, the latest unpleasantness with a new Bears' stadium.
A rainy Christmas Bird Count recap and a look at Wolf Lake and the Bears, all Indiana today. open.substack.com/pub/twib/p/d...
23.02.2026 13:35
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Ah, tomorrow weβre going to get into one of my favorite topics via the newsletter - the Bearsβ stadium situation!
23.02.2026 00:00
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Notes on winter
Let's embrace the season.
Robins everywhere, cardinals singing, and siskins wandering, all in todayβs newsletter www.twibchicago.com/p/notes-on-w...
16.02.2026 14:59
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The Army settles in at Montrose Point
The Vietnam War was under way, but Nike missiles were fast becoming obsolete.
Today's newsletter takes a look at the years the Army occupied Montrose Point, home to a command center for the missiles stored at Belmont Harbor. Due to outcry, shrubs were planted in front of the barracks, which became the Magic Hedge (portions visible today). www.twibchicago.com/p/the-army-s...
09.02.2026 14:35
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Possum kingdom here in the neighborhood. From early January.
07.02.2026 21:49
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An image of a raptor called the Osprey, sometimes called a seahawk, in flight with green foliage in the background.
In this house, these are the Seahawks we celebrate. πͺΆ
06.02.2026 15:24
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Newberry Library Receives $4 Million Grant
Funding will expand access to Indigenous collections, enable community-led research, and strengthen tribal partnerships.
Weβre excited to share today that the Newberry has received a $4 million grant from the Mellon Foundation to expand access to our Indigenous Studies collections and strengthen collaboration with tribal nations. www.newberry.org/news/newberr...
03.02.2026 17:42
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Shards of ice forming and cracking this morning on Lake Michigan. The north wind was pushing a sheet of ice into a big boulder along the jetty. Sound on π for some ASMR. #chicago
30.01.2026 19:47
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There are a handful of ducks at the edge of Belmont Harbor where some water is still open. Goldeneye, scaup, and mergansers. In the snow this morning.
30.01.2026 17:17
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Thanks for that!
26.01.2026 14:55
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When Montrose Point was for bathing
Expanded bathing beaches drove the public works project known as the Montrose-to-Foster extension.
For the newsletter, I took a look at the construction of the Montrose-to-Foster extension in the early '30s and the drive to expand parks on Chicago's north lakefront. At the time, it was said Montrose Beach was the largest artificial bathing beach in the world.
www.twibchicago.com/p/how-montro...
26.01.2026 14:47
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A wild bergamot seed head with about an inch of snow on top of it.
Testing out my Sony macro lens in the snow today. The flowers from last summer are nicely catching the snowfall. I appreciate the subtle brown tones the lens picks up. πΊ π± πͺ΄
25.01.2026 19:22
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Hazel Johnson with then-Vice President Al Gore in the White House in 1994.
Today would have been the birthday of the late Hazel Johnson, the Altgeld Gardens resident known as the mother of the environmental justice movement. Ms. Johnson was the namesake of one of Monty & Rose's 2020 chicks (along with Esperanza and Nish). www.peopleforcommunityrecovery.org/our-story/le...
25.01.2026 17:13
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An American Robin perches on what might be a hawthorn tree, looking down at a clump of berries.
There have been big flocks of robins--often more than 50 birds at a time--feasting on berries near Washington Square Park and the Newberry Library recently. I'm not sure I've seen so many in a very urban area of Chicago in winter. πͺΆ
22.01.2026 02:13
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Iβll be teaching a class on bird behaviorβusing historic texts. It starts in April and runs four weeks, plus a field trip! Newberry.org
22.01.2026 00:01
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Wow, it's been a while since I updated this (around 2020)! Since then Montrose added Broad-winged Hawk, Mountain Bluebird, Short-tailed Shearwater, Pileated Woodpecker, Ferruginous Hawk, Eastern Screech-Owl, Gull-billed Tern, White-faced Ibis, and Cassin's Sparrow. πͺΆ
09.01.2026 15:27
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What is a βprofessionalβ birdwatcher?
Plus, attend a class that gets Up Close and Personal with Birds
Some of us may long for the day when birding becomes the professional equivalent of bass fishing.
www.twibchicago.com/p/what-is-a-...
05.01.2026 15:24
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One of my favorites was meeting Ken Burns in a back hallway of the US Capitol.
29.12.2025 23:05
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This year hasn't been about the rarest birds or the getting the best photos. Here's a brief look back!
www.twibchicago.com/p/six-birds-...
29.12.2025 15:41
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How it started, how itβs going. First photo from a Christmas bird count two weeks ago (-1 F), second from this morningβs count (55 F and a downpour).
28.12.2025 21:46
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One of my avian highlights of the year, filming young Great Blue Herons in a nest in walking distance of home. Forgive the qualityβfilmed with an iPhone through a scopeβbirds were about 300β away but a neat experience. πͺΆ
23.12.2025 20:26
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A Cooperβs Hawk took out a Rock Pigeon on my street a few days ago. Murder bird! πͺΆ
13.12.2025 00:09
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In addition to being a novelist, yes, he is a birder (as anyone who's read Freedom can attest)!
12.12.2025 16:46
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The Birdman of Chicago
A tribute to Tony Fitzpatrick.
Today's post is an appreciation of artist and Chicago icon Tony Fitzpatrick. Tony and I werenβt great friends, and Iβll be the first to say I didnβt really know him that well. I only benefited from his generosity and absorbing some of his world view.
www.twibchicago.com/p/the-birdma... πͺΆ
01.12.2025 17:26
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Amazing how many of these still exist in some form or another!
26.11.2025 15:46
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