THE FORUM

20-Apr-23, 08:29:52 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 ... 1120 1121 1122 1123 [1124] 1125 1126 1127 1128 ... 1692
16846  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Dayton Osprey on: 20-Feb-11, 06:22:51 PM

Wraack!   I just got yelled at by my son for daring
to walk in front of the TV showing the last laps of
the race, oops, it was the last lap, I was just informed. 
I guess I'll live, but I don't know if he will -- . . ....
     indy car
       Cheers
        Lola


Oh boy, kids! He's a big kid huh? My hubs is always yelling at me for walking in front of the  , especially during  . I have no choice, it's in my way!
16847  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Bird ID help, please on: 20-Feb-11, 09:57:22 AM
My sister had Carolina Wren babies in her boat under the tarp. Here's a pic of them

16848  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Another cute I can haz cheezburger on: 20-Feb-11, 09:38:00 AM
The classic for me is CCR's Bad Moon Rising. I know  a lot of us said "Bathroom's on the right"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2w5kffJnq8#
16849  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Bird’s eye view from a peregrine falcon nest site in Atlantic City on: 20-Feb-11, 09:25:36 AM


Since 1985, one boardwalk casino has been home to a pair of peregrine falcons. On the 23rd floor of the Hilton (originally named as the Golden Nugget, then Bally’s Grand, The Grand) in Atlantic City a pair of peregrines have nested since 1988. Since then only two females have ever occupied the territory there. The first female nested there until 2002. In October of that year she was found injured after it was believed that she had struck an object. She was transported to The Raptor Trust for treatment, but unfortunately died later that night. She was the oldest nesting peregrine in New Jersey at the time (she was born in 1985 at a nest site in Sedge Island WMA) and was a NJ native falcon. She raised a total of 25 young during the 15 years that she nested there. She was known for her tenacious attitude and brave assaults on biologists and photographers by dive-bombing them “fighter jet style” to protect her young.

Here is an excerpt from the article “Storied A.C. Peregrine Dies: State’s oldest nesting falcon was N.J. native” in our old Conserve Wildlife newsletter from 2002:

    “She’d been around nearly as long as I’ve been a biologist,” says Clark. “I felt a kinship from our many years at her nest, banding her young.”

    Last June, as Clark was returning the bird’s two chicks to the ledge after she had banded them inside the penthouse suite, the biologist noticed the fierce female accidentally glance one of the building’s structural columns. But Clark will remember more all the times the bird was at her fighterpilot best, strafing Clark, her assistants and the news photographers who bravely clambered out onto the narrow ledge to record what had become a much publicized, annual banding ritual. In fact, in 1997 within a span of several minutes the bird was able to strike the heads of both an assistant biologist and a photographer. That’s why Clark, since then, had been banding the chicks inside.

    Ironically, it took her death to solve the final mystery of her existence. In 1994, thanks to a remote-controlled camera, Clark was able to read all but the last digit on her leg band. The numbers confirmed her 1985 hatch date, but without that missing digit she could have been fledged anywhere from Maine to Virginia.

    When Clark recovered the fatally injured bird, she recorded the entire banding number, and quickly learned the female had been hatched atop a nest tower erected in Barnegat Bay’s Sedge Islands Wildlife Management Area, just 25 miles north of Atlantic City. One of the first offspring of restored, wild-nesting peregrines in New Jersey, she had been a lifelong resident of the Garden State.” written by Bruce Beans.

Today, the only other female peregrine to nest on the ledge of the penthouse floor will be 14 years old this summer. She originated from a nest site in coastal Virginia in 1998. In early 2009 we placed a deterrent (wood and pigeon spikes) along a portion of the ledge to deter the pair from nesting. The preferred nest site is a nest tray where the pair can be more closely monitored by casino staff and butlers (Mel and Pete) on the penthouse floor and it also has more protection from harsh weather conditions. The deterrent worked quite well last year, but it wasn’t quite large enough. The female proceeded to nest directly next to our deterrents (see photo below). She was allowed to nest there, but after her young were banded, they were placed in the nest tray on the west side of the building.

Yesterday Kathy Clark, zoologist with the Endangered and Nongame Species Program,  and myself visited the site to measure the ledge where additional deterrent will be placed next week. The nesting pair was present and aggressive as usual. The female dove at us both as we were out on the ledge. The spirit of the old “storied” peregrine has certainly been passed on to this bird. The new deterrents will be installed next week. Peregrines begin nesting in March.

Measuring the length of the ledge where deterrent will be installed.
nest tray
The adult female peregrine *P/*G [b/g] and the location where she laid a full clutch of (5) eggs in 2010
CUTE

http://videos.nj.com/star-ledger/2010/06/peregrine_falcons_nesting_on_t.html Banding video from 2010
16850  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Rescued and rehabbed, Rhett the redtail is released (Gettysburg) on: 20-Feb-11, 09:10:00 AM
As hawks go, the redtail is one of the most common.

You know it by its rusty, brick colored tail plumage. Its white-breasted raptor form is often perched atop poles, haybales and fenceposts scouting for food. The male predator can be up to 22 inches tall and weigh close to three pounds. The female comes 25 percent larger.

Most unique is the redtail seen hopping across Herr’s Ridge Road, west of Gettysburg, while being tailed over the snow by a blonde woman in pajama bottoms.

Yes, the lady was thinking clearly at the time.

From her window a couple of Sundays ago, Carol Ecker found a redtailed hawk sitting on her porch railing, unusually close to her house. After half an hour of her taking pictures and trying to be inconspicuous, and him flexing his wings in non-flight, she went out to greet him.

The bird took off for the roof of her Cape Cod, but didn’t make it. Obviously unable to fly, the redtail took to the ground and into the neighborhood, with Carol in pursuit. In t-shirt and PJs, she followed him across the road to a low pine branch.

Getting behind him, Carol was able to able to cover his head “so he would not freak out and shred me,” and get him off the branch. She took him home and started looking for medical help.

Picture a woman sitting in her living room, bird of prey underwraps in her lap, with the Hallmark channel on the tube. All the while, her four cats having NO CLUE what is going on.

Anybody who’s had a sick animal on a Sunday knows that vet help is hard to find. After hours on the phone, much with a colleague at the National Park Service, Carol talked to the Opossum Pike Vet Clinic in Frederick, Md.

Carol has been a Park Watch volunteer on the Gettysburg battlefield for five years and recently earned her 500-hour pin.

Birds of prey rehabilitator Suzanne  Shoemaker told Carol to pack the bird into a box and put it in a dark closet to keep it calm. The hawk gave her a couple of talon punctures to her stomach as she tried to juggle the blanketed predator and empty a cardboard box. That done, she bid the redtail goodnight, sweet dreams and named him Rhett.

Carol took Rhett to the clinic the next day for an Xray and exam by Dr. Barb Stastny. Shoemaker took him from there.

She treats only birds of prey at her Owl Moon Raptor Center at Boyds, Md., Montgomery County.

Shoemaker has a Master’s in wildlife biology. and worked as a veterinary technician. She rehabbed about 30 birds last year and is working with a bald eagle right now at the Center, on her own property.

“Fracture of the radius in his wing. It had started to heal and was in good alignment,” the doc said analyzing Rhett’s injuries. Vets can talk freely about wildlife conditions, not encumbered by HIPAA restrictions.

After close inspection, Shoemaker found Rhett to be a juvenile, immature hawk, hatched last summer and exceptionally marked.

Exceptionally lucky too.

The bird’s injury was serious. Being  unable to fly and therefore hunt, he’d have been one dead red had Carol not rescued him.

Recuperation time was short. The break didn’t require surgery or a pin, so the prescription was cage rest. Suzanne rehabbed him in her flight cage and flew him on a creance line with anklets to keep him around.

Last Saturday, after about three weeks, the redtailed hawk was back at Carol’s house. Suzanne and Ken Smith, a licensed bander of raptors, gave her the honor of releasing Rhett back to the wild.

Smith’s most recent 15 minutes of fame came at the Library of Congress. It seems a Cooper’s Hawk had gotten trapped in the dome of the main reading room and perched for a week.

A news segment on the dilemma ran nationally on NBC.

After others tried to no avail, Smith built a trap and used as bait a couple of European starlings, “Frick” and “Frack” he captured a year ago. Smith had the Cooper’s within 25 minutes of setting the trap.

The hawk hadn’t eaten or drank for a week, other than some frozen quail that had been used as bait.

“No animals or humans were harmed during the rescue,” Smith says. Guess Frick and Frack survived.

The Cooper’s was rehabbed and released last Tuesday.

As for Rhett, he showed up, for his own protection, wearing a taped tail. After being unwrapped, he flew across Herr’s Ridge Road and landed in a pine tree, to get his bearings.

As for pajamas, the rescuer this time, was more suitably dressed.

RHETT IS READY - Carol Ecker prepares Rhett, a redtailed hawk, for his release back into the wild last Saturday. After Ecker rescued him, the bird was rehabbed for a broken wing.

Gettysburg Times
16851  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / 'Eyesore' Bromford tower blocks are demolished, after falcons left. (UK) on: 20-Feb-11, 08:58:12 AM
TWO tower blocks branded eyesores by locals are finally being demolished.

Work began yesterday to pull down Bayley and Stoneycroft Towers, in Bromford, after a five-year delay.

Attempts by Birmingham City Council to demolish the 20-storey blocks have been frustrated by first, the recession, and then a family of peregrine falcons.

The council had finally secured the funds to demolish the blocks last year when they found two falcons had made a nest at the top of Bayley Tower and hatched four chicks.

Demolition could not start until the birds flew off, which they did at the end of last year.

Both tower blocks have been empty for nearly four years after the city council paid tenants more than ÂŁ1 million between them in compensation for the upheaval of moving out.

The council then had to foot a ÂŁ100,000 bill each year for security because the blocks were being repeatedly targeted by arsonists.



Birmingham Mail.net

16852  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Helping out backyard birds on: 20-Feb-11, 08:53:44 AM
Did I ever tell you the story about a baby hummingbird that wouldn't leave the nest? The tale was told to me by Ron The Plant Man about a time when he was working at South Coast Botanical garden.

For weeks he and crew members watched a baby hummingbird that was growing too big for his nest. Junior refused to leave, no matter how much the mother encouraged him to. Exasperated and ready for her next brood, the mother hummer finally built a new nest 10 feet away. What did Junior do? He finally flew, but only to jump over to the new nest and get it in it.

If there was ever a time of the year when we can be one with the birds, spring is a season when our gardens can make a difference.

How? Don't go crazy with the chainsaw and pruners. Migrating birds will arrive soon and local birds will begin to look for boyfriends. Your back yard will be bursting with important avian activity.

In the next few weeks your shrubs and trees will be abuzz with wrens looking for spiders, bluebirds searching for real estate and orioles on the prowl for wide leaves like banana to build their pouches in. �

"Hummingbirds are already nesting," said Dave Brandt from Wild Birds Unlimited in Mission Viejo. "And tiny hummers can nest as low as 2 feet off the ground."

There are a few ways you can help backyard birds. Best is to leave the birds alone to do what they know how to do. Lay low on the heavy pruning. You never know when you'll be cutting into a nest, even in low-lying shrubs.

Keep your yard free from string, fishing line and Easter grass. Birds are attracted to these kinds of nesting materials, but babies and mommies can get a leg caught and starve.

And don't leave dryer lint out. Birds stick to it when it gets wet. "Cotton batting is a safer nesting material," Brandt said.

All of us have found a baby bird or two on the ground. The question is what to do about it.

If the baby is weeks old and well feathered, it could be that it is just learning to fly. Landing on the ground is not unusual, and chances are mother is nearby encouraging the bird to try again.

If the baby bird is very young and not well feathered, it is perfectly safe to return it to the nest. Sometimes a rambunctious toddler falls out and mother has no way to get it back with the brood safely.

"It's an old wives tale that you can't touch them," Brandt said. �

A bluebird box can help these endangered species tremendously. According to Dick Purvis of the Southern California Bluebird Society, bluebirds have been effectively pushed out of their nesting cavities by European starlings.

What's more, perfect landscapes designed by people also mean that old trees with knotholes are harder to find than ever.

Providing a bluebird nesting box, a box that is specifically designed to allow bluebirds in but keep starlings out, has brought this pretty bird back from the brink. Follow box instructions, as bluebirds are picky about what they need to nurture babies.

And standby for lots more stories about backyard birding. Bird lovers will be pleased to know that the Orange County Register is welcoming a new guest contributor, Jennifer Meyer, who will write a monthly column about backyard birding beginning in March.

Orange County Register
16853  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Another cute I can haz cheezburger on: 20-Feb-11, 08:48:17 AM
For Dale... Thanks for those web links!

Mondegreens can be found in every area of the spoken word, from the record buyer who asks for a copy of the Queen single "Bohemian Rap City" to the schoolchild who is convinced that the Pledge of Allegiance begins "I led the pigeons to the flag."
-- Gavin Edwards, 'Scuse Me While I Kiss This Guy: And Other Misheard Lyrics


Oh I'm not even going there, I was reading all MY mistakes in many many songs. Funny how we make up our own words for lyrics we don't really hear clearly. I'm so ashamed! 
16854  Member Activities / Birthdays / Re: Happy Birthday, Anne! on: 20-Feb-11, 08:04:13 AM
Happy Birthday Anne. Enjoy the Windy City, although it's been the Windy City here all weekend.
16855  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Lily, the Black bear Cam on: 19-Feb-11, 11:21:26 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc5UioHbYts# Hope loves her siblings....maybe a bit too much! So cute.
16856  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Cathedral of learning, (where beauty was hatched) is now live on: 19-Feb-11, 10:14:33 PM
http://www.aviary.org/cons/falconcam_cl.php

http://www.aviary.org/cons/falconcam_gt.php Gulf Tower

16857  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest at Kingston- In The Flesh! on: 19-Feb-11, 07:48:22 PM
So Penelope we are both from QC. I dont know if you are perfect bilingual. If not, members of the forum will have fun to read us.  hysterical

Bienvenu dans le monde des faucons

Nicole


"Welcome to the world of Falcons"  I knew the first and last word!  Wink
16858  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest at Kingston- In The Flesh! on: 19-Feb-11, 07:46:51 PM
Comme toute bonne québecoise, je parle français d'abord... thumbsup

This is what google said: " Like any good québecoise, I speak French first."
16859  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Video of the Day on: 19-Feb-11, 06:48:32 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hh3dHykESo# This bird speaking Chinese or what?
16860  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Another cute I can haz cheezburger on: 19-Feb-11, 06:28:03 PM
Good one!
Pages: 1 ... 1120 1121 1122 1123 [1124] 1125 1126 1127 1128 ... 1692
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon