skip to Main Content

Great Blue Heron returned to Devil’s Lake State Park’s south shore rookery over the weekend. We usually expect them right around Saint Patrick’s day and they were right on schedule this year.

By Monday morning there are quite a few early arrivals up in the pines. (We took this video Monday, March 18th.) Over the next week or so even more heron will arrive to claim their spot. Right now the birds you see should mostly be males. They arrive first to claim their nesting sites, fix ’em up for the new year and then protect them until the females arrive.

To understand why the return of the heron is exciting to so many people, you’ll want to know a bit more about the Great Blue Heron. The heron is a BIG, LOUD, BUSY bird. A Great Blue Heron can stand up to 4′ 5″ feet tall and sports a wingspan that can reach 6 ½ feet!  In the air, heron can fly nearly 25 mph! They are stealthy predators with scissor-like beaks that they use to stab frogs and snakes in shallow ponds and along the banks of bigger waters. The park’s rookery is made up of 50 to 100 nesting birds who fill the trees with bursts of noise and havoc. Some children might find the experience even a bit scary!

What’s unique here at Devil’s Lake, is that the heron built their rookery in a stand of pine trees surrounded by the group camp area with parking lot and restrooms. Because the birds selected this location, it is much easier for visitors to get up close and personal. Normally heron rookeries are better protected. It also means campers at the park’s group camp have noisy until about mid-July!

It is against the law to disturb a rookery, however, visitors can get amazingly close right in the CCC parking lot [Printable Map] or by standing near the restrooms. A good rule-of-thumb is to simply stay out of the pines. You really don’t want to go in there anyway. Not only does it get filled with bird poop, but the favorite defense of the heron is to throw up on you. Imagine smelly, fish, snake & frog barf dropping down from the sky onto your head!!! And if that’s not enough, heron have also been known to use their beaks to pierce the skulls of invaders!!  Obviously, keep your pets on leash at all times!

For more info & pictures click here.

So there you go, another amazing reason to visit the Baraboo Hills & Devil’s Lake State Park!

Back To Top
Search