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12331  Anything Else / Totally OT / Dog and Motorcycle on: 22-Oct-11, 06:49:26 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=xdj67XknFrM#t=5 Cute
12332  Anything Else / Totally OT / Baby Kitty looks at the world :) on: 22-Oct-11, 06:00:53 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx9grj7C__8#
12333  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 22-Oct-11, 05:25:13 PM
Looks like Beauty next to main cam. She left as fast as she got there.
12334  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Babies first steps on: 22-Oct-11, 12:34:37 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=InCUx_Z3AYo#
12335  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Rhea Mae and Tiago's Webcam - Toronto - Canadian Peregrine Foundation on: 22-Oct-11, 06:44:39 AM
A possible RM!  From yesterday!
12336  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / New Zealand Penguins in Need of Sweaters on: 22-Oct-11, 06:37:03 AM
A yarn store in New Zealand is making an unusual request that is pulling at the heart-strings of the world—they are asking people to sew knit sweaters for penguins affected by the country’s oil spill.

The “penguin jumpers” are intended to keep the birds warm until they are well enough to be scrubbed down and to prevent them from consuming oil on their feathers while preening.

The yarn store is called Skeinz and is located in Napier, New Zealand. They posted the request along with instructions and patterns on their website and have already received a “deluge” of jumpers.

“It’s really precious and overwhelming,” the store posted on its blog along with photos of piles of penguin sweaters.

On Oct. 5, a cargo ship ran aground in New Zealand, pouring 350 tons of oil into the ocean. The accident has been regarded as the country’s worst environmental disaster in decades.

More than 1,000 sea birds have already died as a result of the spill, including birds from the country’s native blue penguin population.

Oil can be extremely harmful to penguins, whose feathers are very different from other birds. They have very dense and tiny feathers of different lengths that stick onto them like Velcro, creating a waterproof pseudo-wetsuit.

“Basically, when you get even a drop of oil on these birds, it opens up a channel so water can penetrate,” Kevin McGowan of the Cornell University Lab of Ornithology told ABCNews.com. “It’s like a hole in their wetsuit.”

McGowan said the sweaters could be the equivalent of the plastic cones sometimes put on dogs to prevent them from scratching stitches after surgery or poking at head injuries.

“When they’re wet, the cold can penetrate, especially in water,” McGowan said. “You don’t want anything to penetrate through that wetsuit armor and oil is a pretty bad thing.”

Specifications and instructions for the penguin PJ’s can be found on the Skeinz website as well as the address where penguin-loving knitters can send them. http://www.skeinz.com/Newsletters/spring2011.html

12337  Member Activities / Birthdays / ~Happy Birthday Annette~ on: 22-Oct-11, 06:14:22 AM
GlĂĽckliche Geburtstag 50 Annette, Sie sind jetzt ĂĽber den Berg!    

ENJOY YOUR DAY!!
12338  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Another cute I can haz cheezburger on: 21-Oct-11, 09:53:20 PM
 

(Not a haz)
12339  Member Activities / Events / Re: MAK'S surgery on: 21-Oct-11, 02:26:47 PM
She's in her wheelchair and ready to roll to rehab at 531.
12340  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Pair of Peregrine Falcons poisoned in Motherwell UK on: 21-Oct-11, 01:26:05 PM
The poisoning of a bird of prey using a banned pesticide is being investigated in Devon.

The young female peregrine falcon was found at Whitecleaves Quarry near Buckfastleigh in July, but toxicology results have just been released.

It is the third such incident within a matter of weeks involving the banned pesticide carbofuran, the RSPB said.

Two peregrines were found in Cornwall just weeks after four goshawks and a buzzard died near Exeter.

Toxicology tests showed the Buckfastleigh peregrine also had aldicarb in its system - another banned pesticide.

The RSPB believes the poisoning was deliberate.
'Live bait'

All three cases are being investigated by Devon and Cornwall Police and the RSPB.

Peregrines at the Whitecleaves Quarry site have been targeted previously, with dead birds found in 1992, 2004 and 2005. On each occasion, the birds had been poisoned.

Wildlife conservationists have expressed concern over the presence of banned chemicals in the countryside.

Ivan Lakin, Natural England's wildlife adviser in Devon, said: "Peregrine falcons have suffered from illegal poisoning in Devon for 20 years - often tricked into consuming poisoned 'live bait'.

"The poison which we have seen used in many of these cases was banned more than a decade ago and it can be potentially as dangerous to the public, children and pets as it is to birds of prey."

Tony Whitehead, from the RSPB, said it had been a "truly awful year" for birds of prey in Devon and Cornwall.

"Whatever the motives of the people that carry out these deliberate acts, we must not forget that they are nothing more than common criminals," he said.
Poisoned peregrine falcon. Pic: RSPB The falcon is the eighth poisoned bird found within weeks in the South West

"They show no regard for these magnificent and much-loved birds of prey and also show little regard for the safety of people and their pets walking in the countryside.

"This needs to be stopped!" Devon and Cornwall Police said the persecution of birds of prey was a major problem and had been identified as a key priority for wildlife crime enforcement.

Anyone found guilty of an offence against birds of prey can be fined up to ÂŁ5,000 or jailed.

All birds of prey are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act and the RSPB has offered a reward of ÂŁ1,000 for information leading to a conviction.

Thanks Kris G for this article!

12341  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Hawk with nail in head is eating well on: 21-Oct-11, 07:17:01 AM
A red-tailed hawk in Golden Gate Park suffering from a nail in the head has been seen eating small animals the past two days, a hopeful sign to rescuers trying to catch the bird before it's too late.

A crew with the group WildRescue spent most of Wednesday chasing the bird, which was apparently shot by someone using a nail gun.

A crew member spotted the bird in the early afternoon near Lincoln Way and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, the same area where it was seen one night earlier, said Rebecca Dmytryk, director of the Monterey group.

The hawk was eating a squirrel Tuesday night and was working on a gopher Wednesday afternoon - a good sign, Dmytryk said.

"He's catching prey and eating," she said. "While he's definitely injured and suffering, it hasn't compromised him too badly."

The hawk has survived with a nail in its head for at least a week, and Dmytryk said she's worried about a possible infection.

The stress of injury on animals in the wild also makes them more susceptible to respiratory and fungal diseases, she said.

Rescuers have set two traps in hopes of capturing the bird. They cannot use nets because of concerns the nail would get caught and further injure the hawk, Dmytryk said.

She has high hopes of saving the bird if it can be trapped.

"I think he has a good chance," Dmytryk said. "He's a survivor."

Any sightings of the bird should promptly be reported to WildRescue's paging service at (831) 429-2323 or rescue@wildrescue.org, Dmytryk said.

The group is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of the person who harmed the bird.



http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2011/10/20/BAFG1LJJO1.DTL&object=%2Fc%2Fpictures%2F2011%2F10%2F18%2Fba-Hawk19_0504381444.jpg
12342  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Lights out in Toronto on: 21-Oct-11, 07:13:02 AM
Urban light creates a fatal attraction and disorients migrating birds, which often fly around until exhausted and drop to the ground. Or they may strike a building or window. To prevent these needless deaths, the city of Toronto has created a “Lights Out Toronto” program. Lights go out in city-owned buildings after work and on weekends. And their Bird-Friendly Development Guidelines offer common-sense lighting practices for managing a tall building or a ground-level home.



BirdNote
12343  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Adorable meerkat babies on: 21-Oct-11, 06:48:47 AM
Comeerkat! Very cute, always liked them. clap
12344  Member Activities / Birthdays / **Happy Birthday MAK** on: 21-Oct-11, 06:46:46 AM
Healing wishes to you MAK! Let's get this over with so you can get back to what you LOVE most!

FALCON WATCHING   sparrow
 

 

12345  Member Activities / Events / Re: MAK'S surgery on: 20-Oct-11, 09:24:49 PM
YAY, finally MAK got word that tomorrow afternoon, she goes to the Transitional Care Center at Unity Hospital!! Not a good way to spend her Birthday but she's pleased.   clap

A GREAT way to spend her Birthday!  Her knee is getting tuned up.  As I always say (and MAK will appreciate this) God knows what He is doing!  Happy 53rd MAK!   XOXOXOXO

I wish I'd had a 53 thousand mile tune up on my knees (and everything else) when I turned 53. Happy Birthday to our 53 year old "young'un".  Hope you are enjoying the baby knee, and  get to enjoy many more years using that new knee!   Happy Birthday to MAK (Margaret)  and her new knee!


Yes, yay she's getting a tuned-knee but her spirits need lifting.
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