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14401  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Canada Falcons: All but Rhea Mae & Tiago, (they have their own thread) on: 14-Jun-11, 01:39:50 PM
!! Day 39 & First Fledge!!!
June 14, 2011 - Etobicoke - Sun Life Centre
Kathy Reports:

More details to follow later…   baby
14402  Member Activities / Events / Re: Toronto Trip - June 10, 2011 on: 14-Jun-11, 01:06:28 PM
Yikes!  I don't know about cell phone cost from Canada-- not sure if it is higher- when there is a signal.  When I went a few years back, I couldn't get a signal on my phone - verizon

Maybe that was a blessing jeanne!
14403  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Buffalo Falcon News 2011 on: 14-Jun-11, 01:05:34 PM
And after UB>Statler, then CT, then North Bridge, then Niagara Gorge

btw, eggs in nestbox at South GI Bridge were broken open and apparently looked like Beauty's~
Sad  What's up with that?  The very cold weather this late-winter/early-spring?

OK, you need more than 10 people!!  Shocked  So sad about the eggs!
14404  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Quest and Kendal - Toronto/Don Mills on: 14-Jun-11, 01:03:48 PM
Those pins must have grown over night!! Wow!! Ya think a he or a she? Hard to tell without another sib. The way they hug and snuggle, I think male....but....could be female. stupid

Feet are pretty big... ...I'm thinking female...

Probably a female, was just thinking all the tenderness......male. We'll know in a week!!  clap
14405  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 14-Jun-11, 01:00:45 PM
11:36am, Archer and Beauty at nest bowing.
"Now what, it didn't work yesterday!" "Got ball and chain?"
"That's right Buster, look at my face, this time I mean business!!"
"yeah and remember what I just said!"
14406  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Buffalo Falcon News 2011 on: 14-Jun-11, 12:52:57 PM
If you're in the area UB KIDS ARE LIKELY TO FLEDGE!!!  One accidentally went to a roof yesterday but got back.
Bring cameras, scopes,boxes, gloves, coffee and bagels!  The rest of this week should be exciting!

Statler kids will be right on the heels of the UB fledges!

Pix on http://www.facebook.com/pages/Peregrine-Place/182371738440433

High temps today - mid-60s!

Ahhh geeze, their all going at once. How do you cope? You guys need about 10 volunteers. I wish I lived closer. Good luck Sage, I feel for you all.
14407  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Pigeon Hell on: 14-Jun-11, 12:47:52 PM
I now believe most if not all are flying, being 22 stories up and out of camera view makes it hard, the only sightlines to the terrace is from street blocks away, so even if I brought my telephoto lens in it would be mere dots. Over the last few days I have noticed a occasional sighting on the lower terraces and yesterday as I was leaving i heard lots of screeching, which the young ones tend to do during their first flights, Not  sure if its from joy or panic, or both, but they are particularly noisy at first. Then today as I drove in I could see 3-4 soaring around, and looking out my 15th floor window we have had numerous sighting including one with pigeon, most likely Mom unless one of them is a natural.  One of them seemed to be stationed on a antenna across from the tower hours at a time, I assume its Mom, luring the kids to practice from their tower perches.  So sorry no pics, but rest easy, unless you love pigeons

Thanks so much for the update. I wish them well!
14408  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Quest and Kendal - Toronto/Don Mills on: 14-Jun-11, 12:46:30 PM


For a change of pace, Harlie was up while Quest got some sun...

BUT I noticed something...Harlie is starting to get wing feathers!  surprise

It's all too fast...

Those pins must have grown over night!! Wow!! Ya think a he or a she? Hard to tell without another sib. The way they hug and snuggle, I think male....but....could be female. stupid
14409  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Canada Falcons: All but Rhea Mae & Tiago, (they have their own thread) on: 14-Jun-11, 12:41:10 PM
Day 39 and we had our first fledge this morning  clap  Hera - who will likely be renamed as he and Skye look like tiercels now - flew around the building to the next tower and he's actually right on top of the building which is higher than the nest ledge!  Mom is keeping an eye on him and Frank and Tracy are on the ground..so far so good.  Skye looks ready to go next but we'll see!  Jupiter might be a girl and a not a boy..but we're not sure yet.    paperbag

Oh my, he's a she, she's a he....and the 4 girls are now all males!! Good grief, how do you all do it!!!. Good luck Canada keeping up with all your fledgings. I have never heard of so many in one place. This year there are more than last!  clap
14410  Member Activities / Events / Re: Toronto Trip - June 10, 2011 on: 14-Jun-11, 12:34:07 PM
OMG!!!  Shocked Outrageous!!!
14411  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Stranded osprey gets helping hand NJ on: 14-Jun-11, 06:45:56 AM
I’ve been off work for the past week to spend some time with the newest member of my family, Reed Alexander Wurst. I was planning on heading into the office today to play catch up with a lot of projects that I’ve involved with (having a baby during field season is definitely keeping me busy!). So I started the day by opening up my laptop to download the 90+ emails I’ve gotten in the past week. As I sat down for some breakfast I saw an email from a woman where the subject said “Osprey on our Sailboat and we need help!” Immediately after I saw that I thought, there goes heading into the office… The woman who contacted me was Melissa, who was living on her sailboat that was moored in the harbor at Barnegat Light (BL). She sent me an image and this is what she wrote:

    “We read your story in the SandPaper so are contacting you about this situation.

    We heard a loud noise around 1am and when we looked with the flashlight we saw this osprey. It tried to fly up and out w/o success and now that it’s light we can see blood and it’s appears that his/her wing is injured.

    We are anchored at Barnegat Light across from the town boat ramp. Our boat is Piscator and is the 32′ white and green double-ender.

    We have no way to deal with handling this osprey, so really need help!! “

I called Melissa and I headed up to BL. I met John at the boat ramp and we rode out to the s/v Piscator in his dingy. After the short ride I saw that that osprey had a fracture to it’s left wing in the carpal (wrist) joint. I carefully collected the osprey and saw that she was banded. I looked up the band (788-49090) and she was banded in Sandy Hook on June 30, 2009. This would be her first year back from her wintering areas to breed in New Jersey. Ospreys spend two years after fledging in their wintering areas. One positive aspect is that most two year old birds do not raise young their first year after returning to nest in areas where they originated. So, no young ospreys are dieing b/c of her injury.

I then called Don Bonica with Toms River Avian Care and transported the osprey to Barnegat Animal Clinic where it would temporarily stay. I don’t know if it will heal from its wounds. Ospreys don’t do well in captivity or in rehabilitation settings. I can only hope that its fracture is minor and that it heals quickly!

Melissa knew who to contact after reading a story about my work with ospreys in New Jersey, especially the B. Bay Watershed in The Sandpaper. The story is viewable online until Wednesday, June 15th.



Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New Jersey

Conserve Wildlife Blog
14412  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Alaska Hummingbirds on: 14-Jun-11, 06:40:58 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUEZkwJulBY#ws

These videos are so amazing
14413  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Killing One Owl Species To Save Another on: 14-Jun-11, 06:36:33 AM


A female northern spotted owl in California. Spotted owls are losing habitat to invasive barred owls, a species originally from the eastern U.S.

June 12, 2011 from KQED

Spotted owls are on the decline despite two decades of work to bring them back. So, later this month, wildlife officials are releasing a new plan to protect the owls, and it includes a controversial new approach: eliminating their cousins.

In a dense forest near Muir Woods, just north of San Francisco, National Park Service ecologist Bill Merkle plays a recording of a spotted owl in hopes of hearing from a real one.

"I think they're just probably 50 or 60 feet up there," he says.

Northern spotted owls became famous in the 1990s, when the federal government set aside millions of acres of forest to protect them. That stoked an epic battle between loggers and wildlife groups over their habitat. Since then, spotted owls haven't come back. Biologists believe that's due to an invasion of barred owls.

Barred owls take over spotted owl territory and in some cases even attack them. They have an advantage because they eat a wider variety of prey. In places like western Washington, the spotted owl population has been cut in half since the barred owl showed up.

"It's a troubling picture for the spotted owls," Merkle says.

Originally from the eastern U.S., barred owls invaded spotted owl territory in Washington state decades ago and, Merkle says, they've moved down the coast ever since.

"The barred owl is a little larger," he says. "It's a little more aggressive."

The Fish and Wildlife Service hopes to deal with this by "permanent removal," says Robin Bown, a biologist with the agency. "We're going to look at all potential opportunities, but the most humane way to do it is to shoot them."

Bown says the agency plans to eliminate barred owls from a few study areas to see if the spotted owls there do better. And yes, she says, shooting the barred owls will raise a few eyebrows.

"It's a difficult concept, to say I'm going to kill one species to try to save another species," she says. "But it's also something that, in some cases, we need to do."

Eric Forsman, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Forest Service, says shooting owls isn't a long-term solution.

"To try to control barred owls across a large region would be incredibly expensive, and you'd have to keep doing it forever because if you ever stopped, they would begin to come back into those areas," he says.

That's why, Forsman says, it's looking pretty dismal for the spotted owl.

"I think all we can really do is try our best to provide [a] habitat for spotted owls and in the long run, we're just going to have to let the two species work it out," he says.

NPR
14414  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Quest and Kendal - Toronto/Don Mills on: 14-Jun-11, 06:24:49 AM
Harlequin gets a morning hug from mom.  heart
14415  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Rhea Mae and Tiago's Webcam - Toronto - Canadian Peregrine Foundation on: 14-Jun-11, 06:19:48 AM
Sunshine still out, hope she does well today.
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