Title: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 16-May-11, 09:31:13 PM The two males have both fledged, and the fledged "up" as they say in San Francisco. Hajari (Swahili for flight) did a long, boomerang flight and is on a different level of the PG&E building. Phoenix, the other male, made it across the street to 201 Mission. Here is a highly-zoomed video showing him far away, being fed.
Meanwhile, the female, Ayah (Hebrew for falcon) is practicing her flapping. The Canyoneers (fledge watchers) all hope she will be in no hurry. http://www2.ucsc.edu/scpbrg/nestcamSF.htm (http://www2.ucsc.edu/scpbrg/nestcamSF.htm) Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 17-May-11, 11:01:01 AM Phoenix took off at twilight and wound up sleeping on top of the PG&E building. As of this morning, Fledge Watch says:
Good morning - we have disposition for all three young, and are currently viewing the adults wheeling around, probably looking for breakfast. Ayah - in bay 6 PGE building, still pre-fledge. Phoenix - flew this morning from his night roost on 201 Mission. He can currently be located on the topmost window ledge in bay 7 of the PGE building Hajari - this just in, from Mary Malec - who has a visual on Hajari. He is still near his last known coordinates on the PGE building north side nesr Main St~Fledge Watch~ Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 18-May-11, 09:10:56 AM Here are some great pictures from yesterday by Glenn Nevill. zi particularly like the first one of one of the fledge watchers showing the falcons to a passerby Enjoy!
http://raptor-gallery.com/2011_05_17/index.htm (http://raptor-gallery.com/2011_05_17/index.htm) Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: MAK on 18-May-11, 12:36:03 PM Fantabulous pics! Thanks for sharing. ;D
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 23-May-11, 09:12:47 PM Glenn Stewart of the Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group wrote a note on his reactions to the recent loss of one of the San Francisco fledgelings:
We have suffered a loss and it is hard. No rationalizing will make us feel better. We watch these youngsters hatch and grow, and so quickly leave the nest. And some do not make it. In past years, I have wondered out loud if it is right to put these images of naked nature on line so that folks have the opportunity to fall in love with these animals before something bad happens. I invite criticism by remarking that this is not the Disney Channel or that we need to focus on the population and not on the individual birds (even though both are true). But just the same, we have suffered a loss and it is very emotional. I have wept over these birds even though cold reasoning informs me that many fledglings just don't make it. David kindly pointed out that many others do make it and pointed to his experience viewing other eyries this year. Indeed, I still have more baby peregrines to band this season and will do so on Tuesday and Friday of this week. I am lucky, very lucky, to see and touch many peregrines. Like David remarked earlier, each one I encounter is a new thrill for me even though there have been many, and each loss is deeply felt.... It is devastating, maddening, frustrating, and a feeling of helplessness to recover one of these creatures as Teague and Ann did last night, so I am mostly sorry for them--sorry for them and sorry for all who participated in fledge watch and who watched this saga unfold online. For most, Ayah and her family are the only peregrines that will be encountered this year and I want for that encounter to be a happy one. But am I sorry that I put the images on line? Not one bit. Sorry for the sadness, yes, but not sorry that people have connected with these birds as is evident by the outpouring today. I am not sorry that people have encountered wild nature and seen it in both tender and cruel moments. It takes luck and strength to survive, and what happened last night was just pure bad luck. We are protected from most of what nature dishes out by the walls that surround us. Last night as I drove into the City to retrieve Ayah's remains I had a clue as to what happened--gusting wind moved my speeding car on the freeway. I speculate that an otherwise routine flight ended in disaster when high wind turned into wind sheer at the corner of the PG&E building--pure bad luck for a young bird just learning to fly. It is tough to make it through year one as a raptor. One thing can go right and so many things can go very wrong. The strong and the lucky are the ones that end up on an eyrie ledge, face into the wind. And their annual production of young--their courtship, 33 days of meditative attention to their eggs, and 60 or more days of care and feeding of their young--is a hedge against the spring when they are no longer at that eyrie. So they each get this chance. They push their way out of an eggshell and struggle to hold their head up in a cold world. They grow and they fly. With strength, determination, and a measure of luck, they are out there each day, face into the wind. --glenn@scpbrg Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: margaret on 23-May-11, 09:26:22 PM Beautiful sentiments expressed by Glenn; words that speak for every peregrine falcon watcher across the world. Ties in so well with what Ei said yesterday. And thank you, Paul, for posting these moving thoughts.
Timely and well said. Thank you. Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Donna on 23-May-11, 10:05:20 PM Wow, that weighed heavy on my heart. Very well spoken and touching. Bless that little fledgling. Thank you Paul for posting.
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: MAK on 23-May-11, 11:06:56 PM :heart: They fly in and steal our hearts, sometimes they break our hearts and sometimes they rescue our hearts! :heart: Thank you for sharing!
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 27-May-11, 01:58:34 PM :heart: They fly in and steal our hearts, sometimes they break our hearts and sometimes they rescue our hearts! :heart: Thank you for sharing! Here is one from yesterday to rescue our hearts: Just before the start of the 5:30 gathering at Main and Mission, one juv flew off the top of PG&E and circled back, landing on top of the second column from the left on the south side. He didn't stay long and flew east. Shortly after that, we saw one on the window sill on the second column from the right, south side. It sat there for an hour while nothing much happened and people gathered. We had that one in the scope to show people but it didn't show us enough to get an ID, other than juv. Then the action started: two adults, food, two juvs. One adult landed on the east side, about 8 windows down from the top, several bays over from the left. White pigeon feathers floated over us. A juv flew in, a second juv flew in, an adult flew out, the pigeon fell, both juvs flew when there was nothing on the ledge to eat. Then all the action was over the middle of Mission between Steuart and the Embarcadero. An adult and both juvs, a food exchange, attempted landings, stuck landing, adults being bounced off ledges by enthusiastic juvs, and more flying and talon tag in the air. We were still on Main and Mission at that time and the action would move out of our view on both sides of the street. It was getting cold so we started down Mission to our clubhouse, stopping to watch a wailing baby get handfed on a window ledge---the juv that had just done an in-air food exchange was now being fed morsels and wailing like a baby! It's hard to grow up and it seems equally hard for these parents to let their babies grow up. Dan and Lil (housekeeping aside!) have been such excellent parents. More food coming in than the babies can eat. Feathers beds for sleeping eyases. Watchful Mom on the nest ledge. Watchful Dad on 199 Fremont for 36 hours. Gulls and redtails and crows banished from the airspace. Many of us had a difficult time losing George and Gracie. Some of us still mistakenly call Dan 'George'. We call the juvs by the names of juvs-past when we're tired and the action is frantic. But we've come to really love and respect the ways of Dan and Lil and can even sometimes see the advantages of plucking in the nest when all you can see on camera is the eye of the eyas peering out from a shifting mound of feather bed. Stay tuned for more. Fledge party to come -- tentatively, like last year, sometime in the summer. Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Dumpsterkitty on 08-Jan-12, 08:57:38 AM Glenn Nevill took these photos while Glenn Stewart was cleaning the PG&E ledge & changing out the gravel. I don't know which on is which, but both Dapper Dan and Diamond Lil were there defending the nest...
http://raptor-gallery.com/2011_12_13/ (http://raptor-gallery.com/2011_12_13/) Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Donna on 08-Jan-12, 09:13:39 AM Fantastic shots!! Thanks Ei. Beauty guards her nest from above but she needs to drop down from time to time! :wave:
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: MAK on 09-Jan-12, 12:40:52 PM Fantastic pics! Thanks! ;D
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 19-Feb-12, 08:25:32 PM http://www2.ucsc.edu/scpbrg/nestcamSF_large.htm (http://www2.ucsc.edu/scpbrg/nestcamSF_large.htm)
First egg of the 2012 season, from Diamond Lil and Dapper Dan. Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: carly on 19-Feb-12, 08:35:08 PM Woohooo ...thanks for the heads up! I think they were first last year too?
And so it begins.... :clap: :2thumbsup: Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 13-May-12, 09:39:58 PM Mary Malek from the San Francisco Fledge Watch group reports a great Mother's Day save by Diamond Lil. A few days ago, Perry was the first to fledge. He flew well but laned less so, earning him a return to the PG&E building via Animal Control. This was today's adventure. This story reminds me of an incident with Mariah and Isaura, many years ago:
About two hours after Perry flew to the pyramid at 123, he was flap-hopping across the west face of the pyramid. Each face of the pyramid has horizontal parallel ridges that he could grip while he flapped, or he could flap-fly if by letting go. The faces of the pyramids are connected by a smooth sheet metal ridge. At the bottom of the pyramid is a gutter (the gutter that Sutro used when he circumnavigated the roofline when he fledged to that same building) Perry caught some wind and was moving to the south on his west face of the pyramid. Then a gust of wind moved him to the north face. He caught another gust that dropped him on the smooth connecting ridge where he started to slide down, partially sideways and partially backwards in a slow but uncontrolled slide over the edge of the roof. Lil came flying in and body-checked him, bouncing him back up into the gutter. Probably he would have been able to fly but it would have been awkward to start a flight from a backwards-sideways position. It was amazing to see how aware Lil was of Perry's danger, to see her fly in fast enough to stop his slide with a body-check. She sat with him for a few seconds and flew off. Good mom Lil. Happy Mother's Day. Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: MAK on 13-May-12, 09:50:08 PM Thanks for sharing that Paul! :2thumbsup:
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Paul Hamilton on 20-May-12, 08:47:24 PM The three fledgelings had a brief reunion at their sest site.
5/18/12 7:35 am: All three fledglings back at the nest; SCPBRG Falcons: SF PG&E peregrines (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GApeRcwv04#) Paul Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Dumpsterkitty on 20-May-12, 08:56:05 PM The three fledgelings had a brief reunion at their sest site. 5/18/12 7:35 am: All three fledglings back at the nest; SCPBRG Falcons: SF PG&E peregrines (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GApeRcwv04#) Paul That is very nice to see. This nest has had it's share of first flight mishaps. Thanks! Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: MAK on 20-May-12, 09:32:49 PM :thumbsup: That was fun to watch! Thanks! ;D
Title: Re: San Francisco Peregrines Post by: Donna on 20-May-12, 10:05:43 PM Love when they come home for a spell. Thanks Paul
|