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11356  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Twitter 2012 on: 11-Jan-12, 05:36:21 PM
Quote

WanderingFalcon (Carol P.): Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you? So, what creature was asking me this question from the woods at the end of my street last night?



Link:
http://twitter.com/WanderingFalcon/statuses/157074912597643264

Ding ding ding ding ding!  You are correct.  A Barred Owl vocalization it was!  Wish I had been able to see him/her.   clap

http://magblog.audubon.org/quiz-name-tune-12-tricks-remembering-bird-calls Just found this, OMG, all these birds talk!!  clap
11357  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Quest and Kendal - Toronto/Don Mills on: 11-Jan-12, 04:03:28 PM
Well, just tuning in again and am not entirely surprised to hear that probably wasn't Kendal I was watching, but a juvie. Kendal has a very white breast and this one...well...it's hard to tell from where I sit! I suppose it makes sense the way it was playing about (and Quest was flying with it, too). Would it be too much to hope it's Harlequin we were looking at?! In any regard, I did see a pair flying about earlier this afternoon, but too far to tell who was who. And Quest did do a fly-by my window again, so I know she's still hanging about! Would be great if someone could ID the young one, though.

So now, of course, I wonder where Kendal's at!

Quest seemed like she was pretty much saying, "this is my nest" and that's why she stayed for so long the other day. She did not seem upset that the juvie was flying back and forth, so I don't think she was concerned for territory. Wouldn't be the first falcon/juvie to upon a nest in the Winter and yes...Where Is Kendal?
11358  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Looking for some answers/suggestions on: 11-Jan-12, 12:01:09 PM
Hi..its likely tethers/a leash used in falconry and the bird has escaped from a falconer. They are leather. They can be chewed off eventually. There would be some danger of it getting snagged on something if thats what it is. Some birds adapt and ball it up and carry it. Hopefully if it is an escaped bird,someone is able to catch it and take appropriate actions.

Smart fella! Never thought of that!!  clap
11359  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Looking for some answers/suggestions on: 11-Jan-12, 10:55:07 AM
Here's one Bobbie

thanks for that, Donna! Will pass along... whom do I credit, tho??

The 1st pic, Harlie Cam the second, Vernon Laux in Maine, I believe
11360  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Looking for some answers/suggestions on: 11-Jan-12, 10:50:47 AM
Here's one Bobbie

and another
11361  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Looking for some answers/suggestions on: 11-Jan-12, 10:41:48 AM
Looks like it's not in the right spot for a transmitter Bobbie...I blew it up a bit and I don't think so. Hopes it's nothing bad that will hurt the Kestrel. Thanks for posting.

Oh Carly said too....I'm with her, no expert!
11362  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: 2012 Pictures from the Rfalconcam Cameras on: 11-Jan-12, 10:32:00 AM
City of Rochester NY

January....it's the new April!   from fb  Gorgeous day!!
11363  Rochester Falcons / Rfalconcam Website News / Re: New Features for 2012 on: 11-Jan-12, 10:25:41 AM
I think we're running out of features to add to the website. This is what we have so far.

  • Falcon history section

  • Improve Main Camera reliability


Suggestions?

See what we accomplished in 2011.

http://rfalconcam.com/forum/index.php?topic=3915.msg62549#msg62549

Wow, you got a lot done in 2011! So RFC received 3,000 of the 5,000 in ROC the DAY?
11364  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Twitter 2012 on: 11-Jan-12, 08:10:21 AM
A Barred owl.  gum

Why is he "barred"? What did he do?

 paperbag

 hysterical harhar
11365  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Twitter 2012 on: 11-Jan-12, 07:51:31 AM
Quote

WanderingFalcon (Carol P.): Who cooks for you? Who cooks for you? So, what creature was asking me this question from the woods at the end of my street last night?



Link:
http://twitter.com/WanderingFalcon/statuses/157074912597643264

 I don't know, some sort of Owl??? Sounds more like a Morning Dove.
11366  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Another cute I can haz cheezburger on: 11-Jan-12, 07:36:46 AM
Bat House

Not an I can haz but....funny
11367  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Strange African birds on: 11-Jan-12, 07:26:07 AM
Thanks, D-G! You know me and tech stuff! (ps - How's Ed?)

 wave

Home, sick, cranky......need I go on?  devil
11368  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / They Froze for Science — and Got the Eggs on: 11-Jan-12, 07:10:27 AM
A must read!!!  Shocked

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/01/they-froze-for-science-and-got-the-eggs/ What these men went through in 1911 in Antarctica
11369  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Whooper Migration 2011 has started on: 11-Jan-12, 06:59:47 AM
FAA waives rules, says paid-pilots can guide whooping cranes to Florida using bird-like plane.   clap

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/faa-waives-rules-says-paid-pilots-can-guide-whooping-cranes-to-florida-using-bird-like-plane/2012/01/09/gIQA7IYHmP_story.html On the road again, OK, in the air!! YAY
11370  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / The scary stuff that sharks eat; the solutions are for the birds on: 11-Jan-12, 06:54:19 AM
A new study by the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama finds that tiger sharks in the Gulf of Mexico are eating a lot more than fish and other marine life. Their diet also includes land-based birds, such as woodpeckers, tanagers, meadowlarks, catbirds, kingbirds and swallows.

The question is how these birds end up in a shark's stomach and the American Bird Conservancy thinks it might have the answer. The conservancy has been tracking studies that show that lights on oil rigs appear to confuse birds during their flights over the gulf, leading them at times to their deaths, and sometimes in large numbers.

According to the conservancy:

    These avian fatal attractions occur more often on cloudy nights, and can involve hundreds or even thousands of birds that apparently confuse the platform lights with stars by which they navigate. The birds become trapped in a cone of light -- either reluctant or unable to leave it and fly into a wall of darkness.

    “Some birds circle in confusion before crashing into the platform or falling from the sky, exhausted. Others land on the platform where there is no food or drinking water. Some of these birds continue on quickly, but many stay for hours or even days. When finally able to leave, they can be in a weakened state and unable to make landfall, and ultimately, are more vulnerable to predation,” said Dr. Christine Sheppard, Bird Collisions Campaign Manager for ABC.

The conservancy has what appears to be a rational path to stop this: bird-friendly lighting, which is already in place in the Netherlands. In some cases, changing the color of the lights from the usual white or red, to green (what else?) solves the problem. Other studies indicate that flashing lights rather than steady ones don't cause the visual disorientation.

LA Times
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