THE FORUM

20-Apr-23, 08:33:21 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 ... 909 910 911 912 [913] 914 915 916 917 ... 1692
13681  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Linn & Reuben - Scarborough/Yellow Pages on: 21-Jul-11, 03:21:48 PM
I think I remember,it was Martha Eberle 2002 , or if I´am wrong it was Lawrence O´Heron 2004.

Greetings Carla

I know Carol P used that "swearword" a lot, down by the Ped Bridge.
13682  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A Day Made of Glass on: 21-Jul-11, 11:41:00 AM
Kinda cool and kinda scary! Someday people won't speak to each other at all they'll just let their fingers do their talking for them.  2cents

Are you kidding....it's happening now!
13683  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 21-Jul-11, 11:38:51 AM

 
13684  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A Day Made of Glass on: 21-Jul-11, 11:18:51 AM
I thought it was kinda cool!

Me too! Maybe some day...lol
13685  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A Day Made of Glass on: 21-Jul-11, 10:54:16 AM
 Shocked
13686  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Iroquois NWR Eagles 2011 on: 21-Jul-11, 07:44:58 AM
Pair of injured eagles prove to be lovebirds

Updated: July 16, 2011, 3:49 PM

 They are the fiercest-looking lovebirds you'll ever see, and they demonstrate their bond by eating dead rats side by side, wings touching.

The two seriously injured bald eagles, found two months apart and more than a mile away from each other near the Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge, were rescued and reunited in a wildlife rehabilitation facility in Medina last week.

Wildlife rehabilitator Wendi Pencille already was treating the female bald eagle, who snapped a tendon in her wing, at her Bless the Beasts Foundation, when she picked up the injured male bald eagle.

"What if he's her mate?" Pencille thought at the time.

The chances were slim, almost impossible. But these eagles beat the odds.

By their behavior, it is clear the two eagles were a bonded pair before their injuries, according to Pencille and other experts.

The bald eagles, a threatened species in New York, each wear state and federal bands, and it's possible that a photo of the pair on a nest together earlier this year could prove their bond.

But Pencille and other wildlife experts don't need photos -- the bald eagles' behavior tells the story.

The female was comfortably housed in a large flight cage, complete with tree stumps the bird could use as steps to climb to a perch.

The cage, which includes a pool stocked with fish, was perfect for another bald eagle with a damaged wing -- but only if the two didn't want to kill each other.

"Do we put him in another cage, or do we try to introduce him to her?" Pencille recalled thinking.

Two strange raptors will always clash, resulting in anything from a squawking squabble over a perch to a full-scale attack. Pencille donned her heavy leather gloves and entered the flight cage, prepared to separate the pair if the conflict got too serious.

Instead, when Pencille placed the bedraggled male on the floor, the female swiveled her head and stared at him with her light-colored, piercing eyes.

"He's afraid, because he's in the cage for the first time, then all of a sudden he calls to her, and she goes out of her mind," Pencille said. "She starts pacing the perch, calling and calling, she went crazy, as if when he made the noise she knew who it was."

The male, crying in return, began walking toward the female as she continued to call.

Halfway there, he stopped to eat a dead rat on the floor.

"She actually looked at him upside-down when he did that, as if to say, 'What?'" said Pencille, laughing.

Then, as Pencille watched in amazement, the female swooped down from her perch to get a closer look at the male. After spending a short time on the ground with him, the female hopped back to her perch using the stumps.

"She showed him how to get up on the perch," Pencille said. "He was afraid, but he finally followed her."

Making the final jump from the highest stump to the perch, the male scrambled, grabbed with both feet, then fell to the ground.

The female swooped to the floor, spent some time with him, then hopped up to the perch again, spreading her wings wide with each hop.

He hesitated, so she did it again.

"She repeatedly tried to herd him up on that perch," Pencille said. "She did it five or six times."

Finally, the male followed her, jumping from stump to stump. His final leap succeeded and he was on the perch next to the female.

Together, apparently again.

"They both settled down, they closed their beaks, they weren't panting, it was as if they had never been apart," Pencille said. "This behavior is unheard of when introducing raptors to each other. I am sure that they were a bonded pair.

"Then the next day, I go out and they are eating rats right next to each other, their wings touching."

Bless the Beasts received its first bald eagle three years ago and Pencille has worked with seven since then.

If the pair were not already bonded, "we would likely see much different behavior than Wendi witnessed," said Joel Thomas, wildlife administrator at the SPCA Serving Erie County.

"There would be much more territorial behavior. There would be some squabbling," he said.

Pencille caught the female on May 4 after a caller reported spotting a bald eagle down on a road in the Town of Shelby.

"I believe she hit power lines, which ended up snapping the tendon between her right elbow and wrist," said Pencille.

She chased the eagle down and grabbed her with her thick raptor gloves.

"She was very weak and emaciated and didn't fight us too much," she said.

The eagle was treated for an infection at the SPCA. With a wing span of more than 7 feet, the bird weighed just 8 pounds when she was caught. She has since gained 3 pounds.

"She is one of the biggest eagles we've ever seen," Pencille said.

"We believed that before her injury, the female had been part of a bonded pair, because there were four nests in the Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge, and one of the nests had failed" to produce chicks, Pencille said. "Our goal was to get her back out with the male, but obviously, due to her injury, that wasn't going to happen."

Two months later, Pencille got a call from Fish and Wildlife Service that an injured bald eagle had been caught on the Tonawanda State Management Area in Alabama.

The male, which is much smaller than the female, had lost the end of one wing and suffered talon injuries from a fight with another raptor, said Floyd "Sonny" Knowlton, a wildlife technician with the state DEC who caught the bird after several callers reported seeing him. The male was also treated by the SPCA in Tonawanda.

"There is nothing sadder than an eagle by itself in one of these rehab facilities," said Knowlton. "Eagles are very social and they like having company."

But, Knowlton says, "I'm not saying they are not a pair; they very well could be."

Photos could prove that the male and female had a nest together. "We don't really need that -- not in my opinion," Pencille said. "Not from the behavior we have seen."

And the eagles' nesting days may not be over. Because of the severity of their injuries, neither eagle will be able to be released to the wild.

"Eagles in captivity could have a nest -- we'd have to give them the facilities to do it, but there are places that do breeding of handicapped raptors," Pencille said.

When Bless the Beasts had only the female bald eagle, Pencille received a letter from the Endangered Species Unit, recommending that she stay there, for education and to foster any bald eagle chicks that might be found.

"As soon as we learned that the male was not releasable, I called the DEC right away and told them that we believe it is her mate. So if they can't stay with us together, send them to another facility but keep them together," Pencille said.

"It just feels like the right thing to do, to keep them together."

  heart

BuffaloNews.com
13687  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: Norfolk Eagles in their new nest on: 21-Jul-11, 07:32:25 AM
Watch Norfolk eaglets return to the wild online or in person

NORFOLK -- Three young eagles will be returned to the wild later this month and you can join wildlife officials to say goodbye and good luck.

The three were removed from their nest at Norfolk Botanical Garden in late April after their mother was killed by a plane landing at Norfolk International Airport.

They've been cared for at The Wildlife Center of Virginia in Waynesboro and people around the world have watched their progress on the WVEC.com Eaglecam.

"Today the three are healthy, can fly, and are ready to go back into the wild – free and on their own," said President Ed Clark.

The release will occur Wednesday, July 27 at 11:00 a.m. at historic Berkeley Plantation on the James River between Williamsburg and Richmond.

Officials say the plantation provides eagle-friendly habitat and is just across the river from the James River National Wildlife Refuge – 4,200 acres of protected land that hosts one of the largest Bald Eagle roosts on the East Coast.

The event is free and open to the public, but officials ask that your RSVP so they know how many people to expect.

"Based on the RSVPs we’ve received to date, we’re expecting folks from 24 states and Canada to be attending the eagle release," Center spokesman Randy Huwa told WVEC.com.

Officials stress you should be prepared for hot weather by dressing in light clothes, wear a hat, sunscreen and bring something to drink, like water.

One of the eaglets will be released just after 12 noon. That will be shown live on 13News @ Noon with reporter/anchor Joe Flanagan reporting live.

WVEC.com is planning to stream the release of all three eaglets beginning at 11:00 a.m.

Wildlife Center officials said one of the three young eagles will be fitted with a transmitter. "It will allow Va. Dept. of Game and Inland Fisheries eagle biologists, Wildlife Center staff, and visitors to the Wildlife Center’s website to track the eagle’s travels for up to two years," explained Huwa.

There's been no final decision on which eagle will be fitted, but Center staff expects it to be attached to one of the two females.

13688  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Havin a heatwave! on: 20-Jul-11, 10:16:40 PM
Going for a record high temp tomorrow in Rochester!   scared blue

Not fit for man nor beast!!
13689  Anything Else / Totally OT / Havin a heatwave! on: 20-Jul-11, 08:51:14 PM
This is all I have to say!

Well, OK, can't wait for this
13690  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 20-Jul-11, 04:20:14 PM
She's back
So is he.
He left and so did she right after this pic
13691  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Friendship on: 20-Jul-11, 02:49:09 PM
I've seen this before but it's sooo worth looking at more than once. Thanks Nicole! clap

What a great video and what a great friendship. Why can't all cats be friends with Birds?? Sad
13692  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: What we need is a cam for this bad boy on: 20-Jul-11, 01:53:45 PM

Now that's just nasty but cool!!
13693  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 20-Jul-11, 01:51:42 PM
Archer arrives
Beauty follows
Archer leaves
Beauty  watches
13694  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Happy Birthday, Tester! on: 20-Jul-11, 01:42:08 PM
Happy 2nd birthday Tester!!

Love it!  Maybe this will make Tester laugh today and stop being so "testy"!

Who says??

Actually, Tester is 42, Donna!

42 ??
13695  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Amazing camouflage! on: 20-Jul-11, 01:40:18 PM
Wow, took me a while to find it!! Way good Camo!!
Pages: 1 ... 909 910 911 912 [913] 914 915 916 917 ... 1692
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon