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17776  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Tis the season to be counting... on: 20-Dec-10, 06:22:28 AM
and he arrived by Helicopter!!
17777  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: 2 Fined For Deer Rescue (Baltimore, MD) on: 20-Dec-10, 06:14:34 AM
Are you serious? I'd do the same if needed. Fine me, put me in jail. At least I know I saved a life.
17778  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 19-Dec-10, 10:17:43 PM
Now that's what I call a box of assorted greeting cards! Thanks all, love them.
17779  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 19-Dec-10, 10:08:12 PM
OK, these are all great. Carol, you getting tired yet?? LOL
17780  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Lil bear cub can't stop sneezing. on: 19-Dec-10, 09:13:49 PM
http://video.aol.com/video/adorable-bear-cant-stop-sneezing/4027354314?a_dgi=aolshare_facebook Ahhh
17781  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Where are they now? Injured falcon to become education bird on: 19-Dec-10, 08:19:13 PM
ST Augustine Record

In the news: In late January a young peregrine falcon -- not often seen here -- was recovering after nearly dying from major injuries. No one can say exactly how it got hurt, though wildlife experts said it might have crashed into a car or other object in a high-speed dive.

Peregrine falcons, endangered for years by the pesticide DDT, once had few nests east of the Mississippi but now migrate through the state on their way to South America.

Dr. Mark Gendzier, a veterinarian from St. Johns Veterinary Clinic, placed pins in the radius of the bird's left wing and repaired the tibiotarsus in its right leg.

The bird was released to wildlife rehabilitator Melanie Stage of H.A.W.K.E., a nonprofit that cares for injured local wildlife.

Stage did not expect the bird to recover enough to be released into the wild.

What the bird's doing now: Stage said it took six months for the bird, whose name is now Kenya, to totally heal from its injuries.

Stage can't tell yet whether the young bird is male or female.

The pins were removed from its wing and physical therapy helped get its leg working again.

"The leg had to be fused in a comfortable position because it was too bad to be fixed," she said.

Stage said the bird can't fly any more but is in training to be an education bird.

"It wouldn't survive in the wild but it's doing great in captivity," she said.

She said the bird, which gets regular meals of quail, can now sit on a glove or a perch and will soon be making the rounds.

Kenya
17782  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: From MAK: Pics from Morning Watches on: 19-Dec-10, 10:39:09 AM
Pics from 12-19. Only 5 more days of shopping





The Beauty-ful one flying right above me. I was so excited I couldn't get the camera lined up with my binocs, so I zoomed the camera and managed to get this pic of her. WOOHOO she is so gorgeous!
17783  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / An Irruption Year? Rochester NY on: 19-Dec-10, 06:57:15 AM


 

(This 1027th Buffalo Sunday News column was first published on November 28, 2010.)

A number of early reports from regional feeders suggests that this winter may bring a flood of northern birds to this area. These periodic occurrences are called irruptions and birders look forward to such years, because they make winter birding exciting.
Many people are now reporting pine siskins visiting their feeders. Often associating with goldfinches, the siskins appear more sparrow-like. They are generally brown birds with noticeable streaking on their breasts. Unlike sparrows, however, they have very thin bills and male siskins show varying amounts of yellow in their wings and tails.
Siskins are another species I count among my favorites for, one autumn when I was a beginning birder, I found dozens of them in my suburban Rochester neighborhood. I couldn't believe that I was seeing so many of these birds that were entirely new to me. With some trepidation I approached one of my mentors, Howard Miller, to ask if I was really seeing these rare birds. "Oh, yes," Miller informed me, "we're having an incursion of siskins." Needless to say, I was delighted to have my tentative identification confirmed.
And now we have reports of two rare grosbeaks at feeders. A single pine grosbeak and four evening grosbeaks were recorded at separate feeders. Both species I consider spectacular finds.
In a lifetime of birding I have only seen pine grosbeaks four times and one of those times was in Canada 100 miles north of Toronto. But the best views I ever had of this species was south of Johnson City where I lived for a few years. For over a month a dozen of them fed in a grove of staghorn sumac where area birders could watch them from within a few feet. Like others among these northern invaders, they are unaccustomed to humans and pay little attention to us. To them we are no different from unthreatening deer feeding nearby.
I returned to that grove the next winter to look for these birds. No luck and friends tell me that they never have returned to that area.
Evening grosbeaks are another story. Through the 1970s they were common winter visitors to this region and during summers you could find them everywhere in the Adirondacks and Algonquin Park. In fact, many of those who maintained feeders complained about their voracious appetites for sunflower seeds. A group of them would clean out a feeding tray in an hour.
Since then, however, their population has crashed and they are rare even in northern forests. Thus their appearance at a feeder in Wilson is exciting news.
Evening grosbeaks always look to me like big muscular goldfinches. The males show quite a bit of yellow in their plumage but the females are more gray and white. They are twice the size of goldfinches and you cannot miss the huge pale bill they use to open those seeds. Gross is the German word for large and these birds are well named as grosbeaks.
The bill of the pine grosbeak does not appear nearly as large, perhaps because it is dark gray in color. The males appear to me as almost robin-sized pink and grey birds with white wingbars. The females don't show any pink.
It is easy, however, to confuse two of these northern visitors: the pine grosbeak and the white-winged crossbill. Crossbills are quite a bit smaller but the males are also reddish birds with white wingbars. Their strange crossed bills are not at all easy to detect. (They use them to pry apart pine cones to get at seeds.)
A few years ago we had a major incursion of these white-winged crossbills, but as yet this year I have seen no reports of them. Nor have I seen reports of the still rarer red crossbill, which is very similar to its white-winged cousin but lacks wingbars.
Two other northern species sometimes move south in numbers: redpolls and purple finches. But more common birds like red-breasted nuthatches and chickadees join the movements. Occasionally such irruptions also bring western species like Bohemian waxwings and varied thrushes to our region.
What causes these irruptions? You'll have to ask the birds. Two hypotheses: (1) poor northern seed crops and (2) an overabundance of individuals produced by an excellent breeding season.-- Gerry Rising

http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~insrisg/nature/
17784  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 19-Dec-10, 06:28:42 AM
And he's in full Bloom-ers! So cute.
17785  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 18-Dec-10, 08:17:26 PM
How beautiful Dot! Same to you!
17786  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Eagles lose their Sarasota stadium perch Fla on: 18-Dec-10, 07:10:22 PM
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20101215/ARTICLE/12151075/2050/SPORTS?Title=Eagles-lose-their-Sarasota-stadium-perch story and pics

SARASOTA - To build a new home for the Baltimore Orioles, the county kicked some bald eagles out of theirs.
17787  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / White duck a standout at Riverfront Park on: 18-Dec-10, 07:08:30 PM
http://www.spokesman.com/blogs/outdoors/2010/dec/17/white-duck-standout-riverfront-park/ Story and pics

17788  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: From MAK: Pics from Morning Watches on: 18-Dec-10, 05:59:23 PM
Beauty on FCT
Mercury
B and Mercury's $$ bag
Preening
A headless Beauty.
17789  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: From MAK: Pics from Morning Watches on: 18-Dec-10, 05:53:22 PM
12-18 afternoon pics

Nice pic MAK
B on base of Mercury
Ain't she purty? Beauty on base of Mercury.
Cool pic.
17790  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 18-Dec-10, 04:03:56 PM
It's a takeover.
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