THE FORUM

23-Nov-24, 02:30:15 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Note: The views expressed on this page are not necessarily those of GVAS or Rfalconcam.
 
  Home Help Search Calendar Login Register  
  Show Posts
Pages: [1] 2
1  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 11-Jun-11, 01:41:32 PM
We all had a good laugh, Donna - Mama was ready for them this time!
2  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 11-Jun-11, 09:41:09 AM
Our three eyases were banded yesterday.  Two females (Betty & Rose) and one male (Sparky) - all healthy upon inspection.  The funny part of the process was when one of the banders was warding Big Red off with a towel and she grabbed the towel with her talons and took off with it!  Here's a link with a short video:

http://www.mlive.com/news/jackson/index.ssf/2011/06/angry_parents_object_as_peregr.html
3  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 12-May-11, 08:49:32 AM
Our third and last egg hatched May 6th.  Two unhatched, but three beautiful and healthy chicks!  Banding will occur in about a month or so. 
4  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 05-May-11, 09:01:11 AM
2nd hatch today....Photo of Dad Chayton with two fuzzballs.
5  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 04-May-11, 03:24:50 PM
Thanks Donna!  I reported the first hatching in the other thread. 
6  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 04-May-11, 03:21:42 PM
First hatch today!!!  It will be interesting to see if the other four eggs all hatch.  This poor couple had such cold, awful weather during incubation.
7  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 01-Apr-11, 12:20:29 PM
Now if only our Beauty would start laying.....
8  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 01-Apr-11, 08:52:39 AM
We have 5 eggs in Jackson, Michigan!  It's so exciting to see our young couple, Big Red & Chayton, with such a large clutch, after their first nesting of three last year.  Poor Chayton's going to have trouble keeping all those eggs under him!
9  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: It's official: The peregrine falcons of downtown Jackson are expecting again on: 25-Mar-11, 09:03:53 AM
Big Red laid her 2nd egg this morning.  Hoping for three again this year!

Lynn
10  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Banding in Jackson, Michigan on: 04-Jun-10, 03:25:56 PM
Banding took place today and I had the pleasure of watching the live video feed from the banding room at the Jackson County Tower Building.  The nest is just outside a window on the 14th floor so the banding table was only a few feet away from it.  It was a simple process to bring them in through the window and back out again the same way.  The whole process only took 25 minutes!

Chayton and Big Red have one daughter & two sons:

Ella, Jackson & Ernie 

Ernie is named after Ernie Harwell, the famous Detroit Tigers broadcaster, who recently passed away.

All appear to be in good health.  We look forward to fledging in a couple of weeks.

Lynn
11  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 26-May-10, 09:34:55 AM
Hey Donna - our babies are now 20 days old and discovering their wings!  It's so cute.  They will be banded within the next 5-6 days. 
12  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 06-May-10, 03:02:45 PM
Here's the link:

http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/wildlife/dow/falcons/year.aspx?year_id=26
13  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 06-May-10, 02:17:47 PM
Sorry, that's Chayton, not Clayton.

14  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 06-May-10, 02:08:26 PM
Big Red's mate has been identified - Clayton, from the first hatching 2007 at the University of Toledo, Ohio, in 2007.  He is a handsome fellow.  Here is a pic of Clayton and feeding from this morning.





15  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrine falcon birth alert in Jackson! on: 06-May-10, 09:36:34 AM
We are so happy here in Jackson, MI - who would have known we'd have eyases in our little town!  (Just wish we had a better web cam!)  Big Red laid 4 eggs - one disappeared, but the other three hatched.

Here is your original post Donna on April 2nd:

Predatory love has conquered the skies above Michigan Avenue.

A pair of rare peregrine falcons has courted, mated and laid three eggs high atop the Jackson County Tower Building.

It is the first time peregrine falcons have bred in Jackson. Biologically speaking, it is a very big deal.

"We have fewer than 40 nesting sites for this species in Michigan," said Karen Cleveland, all-bird biologist for the state Department of Natural Resources and Environment.

"It is always exciting. It is never routine."

Assuming all goes well — which is no sure thing — the eggs will hatch in early May.

The mother, a Chicago-born bird named Big Red, and the still-unidentified father might soon rank as Jackson's most famous couple.

Call it a rooftop reality show.

Access to the nest site will be restricted, but progress of the falcon family is already shown live on the Internet (http://96.61.192.55:8888/update.html) thanks to a Web camera installed by county workers.

Peregrine falcons are fierce predators that dive from the sky at up to 200 mph to catch prey in the air. They live on cliffs in the wild and on tall buildings and bridges in developed areas.

Falcons were seen on the Tower Building for years, but a DNRE investigation last summer determined the birds did not breed there.

"The building was unusually clean. There was not a lot of debris and gravel they could use for a nest," said Barb Baldinger, a peregrine falcon volunteer for the DNRE.

Wildlife experts suggested that humans provide pea gravel as a potential nesting material.

County maintenance workers followed the advice by putting down stones in four places in mid-March. Obviously, it worked quickly.

"It was like the last piece of the puzzle for the birds," Cleveland said. "They were ready."

And now a word about the bonds that unite the happy couple.

Falcons mate for life in the same way humans do: With varying success.

"If they have a pairing that works, usually they stick with it," Cleveland said. "But sometimes the male will have a girl on the side. Sometimes the female will go off with another male."

Jackson's falcon couple evidently hooked up last year, when the female stole the male from an older lady bird.

The band on her leg, read for the first time this week, identifies the female as Big Red. She hatched in 2008 at 125 S. Wacker Drive in Chicago.

Big Red is named after the nickname for a Chicago building. Her father is Joe, who came from Milwaukee, and her mother is Rahn, a native of Sheboygan, Wis.

Mother and father share child-rearing duties and take turns incubating the eggs.

"He relieves her so she can stretch her wings and have a meal," Baldinger said.

Not all eggs hatch, and not all baby birds survive. Peregrine falcon mothers typically have more success as they grow a little older.

"They tend not to do so hot at first," Cleveland said. "At 2 years old, she is like a teenage mother. It is a very positive sign that she had three eggs."

Roughly six weeks after they hatch, about the middle of June, baby birds will begin to jump on ledges and flap their wings.

Flying is instinctive, but baby birds must be taught to hunt. As training, parents often fly with the young and pass them food in mid-air.

That should make an unforgettable sight over downtown Jackson.

Young falcons will fly away in late summer or early fall.

"They will take off and we will probably never see them again," Cleveland said.

Big Red and her male likely will return to Jackson to produce new generations for years to come.

"You generally get the same birds coming back to the same places," said Cleveland.

Love, and gravel, conquers all.
Pages: [1] 2
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon