THE FORUM

20-Apr-23, 08:28:38 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 ... 1201 1202 1203 1204 [1205] 1206 1207 1208 1209 ... 1692
18061  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / A Humboldt first, brown shrike may have migrated down 'the wrong coast' on: 03-Dec-10, 06:49:24 PM
Siberian bird brings birders flocking:

The local birding community is atwitter with the discovery of a brown shrike, a small bird of Siberian origins that is exceptionally rare to the Western Hemisphere.

It is the first time a brown shrike has been seen in Humboldt County, according to the records. It's also only the third time one has been seen in California.

Birder Gary Lester saw the bird for the first time about a week ago, and on Monday he was back trying to get a better look. The brown shrike has been hanging around a freshwater marsh in the dunes north of the mouth of the Mad River.

”I'm out looking for the bird right now,” Lester said by cell phone Tuesday morning, “but it's not being very cooperative.”

Since Lester and his wife Lauren saw the bird on Nov. 21, others have spotted glimpses of the shrike. While shrikes are often spotted at the very tips of trees and vegetation looking for insect prey, Lester said, the recent attention may be causing it to start skulking in the brush.

The brown shrike breeds in Central Asia, then migrates south into southeast Asia to overwinter. Its diet is largely insects, which it attacks from high perches.

Only two have ever been seen in California: one in Marin County in 1987 and the other on the Farrallon Islands. Lester saw the Marin County brown shrike and recognized the one visiting Humboldt currently. The local northern shrike is significantly different in color, if not behavior. The northern shrike is white and gray with a long, dark tail, while a brown shrike has similar markings -- but in brown.

Lester said that it's possible that the bird got off track when preparing to migrate south, crossed from the eastern tip of Russia to Alaska, then continued moving south down “the wrong coast.” Since the bird has been spotted, he said, people have been calling from distant locations to inquire about the possibility of seeing the brown shrike.

Lester said that the best way to see the bird is to be patient and calm, to stay far away from the bird and view it through a telescope, scanning the tops of alders and cattails to locate it.

Sean McAllister with Mad River Biologists said the sighting of the brown shrike is comparable to the August 2001 sighting of a common greenshank -- not far away on the Mad River estuary. The greenshank is a migratory shorebird from northern Asia and Europe.

The sighting of the brown shrike is just about as uncommon.

”Just how rare it is may be measured by the scores of birders -- both locals and out-of-towners -- searching for it on a daily basis, come rain, sleet or snow,” McAllister said.

John Driscoll covers natural resources/industry.

18062  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Atlanta Zoo cub update on: 03-Dec-10, 01:00:04 PM
Mom cuddling jr. So cute to watch her with him.
18063  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Donna's new job... on: 03-Dec-10, 12:55:05 PM
You go Donna!   clap

When 9-11 happened, I put little flags on neighbors lawns. Most took them down. I don't get people. I live in a crazy neighborhood anyway.
18064  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Wildlife center of Va Falcon update on: 03-Dec-10, 12:47:22 PM
December 3 update from Dr. Miranda

The Peregrine Falcon was taken to Virginia Tech yesterday to see Dr. Phil Pickett and the news was encouraging.  Her left eye is stable (the one that just had a couple of scars present, which are old and stable).  The right eye is healing well and the area of reattachment is shrinking (just like a scar on your hand would as it heals).  Her foveas (the areas of focus) are present in both eyes and are intact and free of injury. Dr. Pickett is optimistic about this and sees nothing about her eyes that would impair her release. Dec 2 optho visit

Of course, we’re not completely out of the woods yet.  We still need to exercise the peregrine to test her flight and ensure that she can make a complete recovery from her shoulder injury.  Within the next couple of weeks we will creance her–which is taking her into a field on a fishing line and flying her–to give her the best exercise possible.  This will also allow us to make a thorough assessment of her flight to determine if she is releasable.     

Sounds like good news for this girl!

   thumbsup
18065  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Wildlife center of Va RIP Ferdinand 2008-2010 on: 03-Dec-10, 12:42:43 PM
Ferdinand: 2008-2010

Ferdinand (Virginia Opossum)
September 2008–November 21, 2010

FerdinandThe Wildlife Center is sad to announce that Ferdinand, a Virginia Opossum and a key member of the Center’s team of environmental education  ambassadors,  passed away last week.

Ferdinand came to the Wildlife Center in September of 2008 after he was rescued from the side of the road in Blacksburg, Virginia.  At the time, he was only a few months old, and he then lived with his rescuers for about a month before coming to the Wildlife Center.  He had originally suffered a broken right leg, which left the leg shortened; he was also too tame to be released back into the wild. 

 Ferdinand appeared at his first education program at the end of October 2008.  Since then he participated in 171 environmental education programs and met more than 19,000 people.  His final appearance, a “Home, Sweet Habitat” program, was on the November 3, 2010 at Central Elementary in Palmyra, Virginia.

Ferdinand was always very active and curious, and usually wasn’t content to just sit in his handler’s arms during programs.  This active and engaging behavior easiFerdinand rubbingly charmed his audiences, riveting their attention.  His high energy was evident in his enclosure as well, and groups visiting the Center often enjoyed watching him climb on his specially built feeding platform.  Ferdinand would often “click” at his handlers and caretakers; this clicking sound is used in the wild to communicate with other opossums, whether to attract a mate or keep track of young.  He would also mark his territory by licking and rubbing his cheek on objects he considered his — a climbing log, a food dish, or his handler’s gloves.

 Ferdinand and his ability to charm children and adults alike will be sadly missed.

Ferdinand
18066  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Atlanta Zoo cub update on: 03-Dec-10, 12:30:41 PM
Posted on Facebook today by Zoo Atlanta-baby's exam picture-look at those claws!   panda

   heart wub2

He is just the cutest! Thanks
18067  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Bird feeders and starlings on: 03-Dec-10, 12:25:57 PM
Here ya go Miss Bobbie!
18068  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: From MAK: Pics from Morning Watches on: 03-Dec-10, 12:15:55 PM
Dec. 3 Morning pics:

Manhattan Square Park.
Beauty on Mercury
Beauty on Midtown
Beauty plucking her breakfast.
Rip Roaring High Falls.
18069  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Donna's new job... on: 03-Dec-10, 08:29:02 AM

They do make solar powered lights and battery!

Yep, but at this point, the expense for enough to sho would be prohibitive, to say nothing of how I'd get  them strung up there...
Still hoping to see it happen though  Grin
Carol
WV

Cherrypicker! Another BIG expense!  Shocked
18070  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Donna's new job... on: 03-Dec-10, 08:03:34 AM
Roadside Secret Santa at it again along NJ highway

By WAYNE PARRY

(AP) LITTLE EGG HARBOR TOWNSHIP, N.J. - An annual Christmas mystery is playing itself out again along a busy New Jersey highway.

A Secret Santa is once again surreptitiously hanging ornaments from a large pine tree by the side of the Garden State Parkway in the dead of night.



There is a mid-sized fir tree in the median on Route 7 west of Leesburg, VA, that gets mysteriously decorated each year as well.  If I had more time and money, I'd love to chain a small generator to it and hang lights.  Maybe in a few years, someone will do solar powered ones :-)
Carol
WV


They do make solar powered lights and battery!
18071  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Bird tip of the day on: 03-Dec-10, 07:25:23 AM
(NTK) GARDEN BIRD TIP OF THE DAY - Fatballs are a great food source for small insectivores such as Goldcrest & Wren. If buying fatballs from a shop, remember to take the plastic mesh off them as birds can get their toes tangled, causing infection. Why not try making your own & popping them, along with some apple slices into a fatball feeder?

I make my own fat cakes and the birds seem to love them. I save the containers in which a store-bought suet feed comes in - these are rectangular in shape and fit into those hanging suet baskets. I melt lard along with lots of wildbird seed, raisins, apple chunks, leftover mashed potatoes - anything pretty much that is not salty! Melt the gunge. (It's hot, so mind if you are doing this with kids!) Let it cool a tad. Then pour into the containers to harden. It pops right out then.

If you want to do a few at a time, line them up on a cookie sheet so you don't get glop all over the countertop.

Hope you understand what I have been trying to describe!!!

Totally!  drool kidding...yes, good idea!
18072  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Pepsi Challenge for our Troops on: 03-Dec-10, 07:07:37 AM
Bobbie, did you sign up? You have to at first. Then go to #70, click on it, then click vote, it will ask you to sign in name-password/type the words in the white box and your in, then your vote counts.

http://www.refresheverything.com/thehugsprojectofelkhart
18073  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Donna's new job... on: 03-Dec-10, 06:57:24 AM
Roadside Secret Santa at it again along NJ highway

By WAYNE PARRY

(AP) LITTLE EGG HARBOR TOWNSHIP, N.J. - An annual Christmas mystery is playing itself out again along a busy New Jersey highway.

A Secret Santa is once again surreptitiously hanging ornaments from a large pine tree by the side of the Garden State Parkway in the dead of night.

A gold star was hanging from the boughs of the tree Tuesday morning.

It’s the fourth year in a row that the ornaments have shown up on the same tree in the southbound lanes in a sparsely populated area of Little Egg Harbor Township.

No one has come forward and acknowledged decorating the tree. The New Jersey Turnpike Authority, which maintains the road, has said it isn’t responsible.

The ornaments appear gradually, starting with one or two, and eventually growing to about a dozen by Christmas.

(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)




 secret2  Funny Bobbie!  clap
18074  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Wow, look at this pic on: 03-Dec-10, 06:51:38 AM
A bird that hit this window and left an imprint. Look carefully at just the window, see the outline of the bird? This was taken in Ireland.
18075  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Bird tip of the day on: 03-Dec-10, 06:47:05 AM
(NTK) GARDEN BIRD TIP OF THE DAY - Fatballs are a great food source for small insectivores such as Goldcrest & Wren. If buying fatballs from a shop, remember to take the plastic mesh off them as birds can get their toes tangled, causing infection. Why not try making your own & popping them, along with some apple slices into a fatball feeder?
Pages: 1 ... 1201 1202 1203 1204 [1205] 1206 1207 1208 1209 ... 1692
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon