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18781  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Scottish wildcats on: 14-Oct-10, 06:45:37 AM
A big "Awwww" Warning comes with these little guys. Probably don't want them around the house, tho...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9085000/9085644.stm

They'd be welcome on my porch, so cute. I'll make a house for them!  wave
18782  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest and Her Mate Still at Pickering Power Plant on: 14-Oct-10, 06:40:31 AM
Well Joyce, I can't wait to see some of your 300 + pics!  surprise It's really a beautiful area for a Nuclear Plant. She seems to like the place so maybe a nest box is on order!  Cheesy
18783  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Kinnelon, NJ: Coyote snatches Smoke Rise pet pug; coyote sightings on the rise on: 13-Oct-10, 10:46:11 PM
we have them here. They run along the railroad land. A corridor of wilderness to anywhere. Saw a pack in Canton (that is the largest city in my county) one morning. So check the wilder areas of your neighbor hoods would be my guess.

What is worse is a lot of blame goes to coyotes when actually the problem is wild dogs. People dumping off unwanted pets who join up and form packs. Problem is they get mean and they are not afraid of people like a coyote is.

Could probably blame a few humans too for cutting down their habitat! Poor guys have no where to go....like deer and bears. Who could dump off ANY dog is beyond me.  Sad
18784  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Peregrines have much better year in 2010 Smoky Mt. News (NC) on: 13-Oct-10, 10:42:10 PM

According to a recent report from Chris Kelley, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission Mountain Wildlife Diversity Biologist, seven of 12 nesting pairs of peregrine falcons across the mountains of North Carolina successfully fledged chicks. Last year only three of 12 nesting pairs were successful.

NCWRC annually monitors 13 known peregrine territories and searches for falcons in other suitable habitat. This year, according to Kelly, 10 of the 13 known territories were occupied, plus eyries were discovered at Pickens Nose, in Macon County, and Victory Wall, in Haywood County.

These two new nesting sites do have some peregrine history. Victory Wall, here in Haywood County, had nesting peregrines in the 1990s but the birds shifted to Devils Courthouse. Pickens Nose was a NCWRC hack site during the peregrine falcon reintroduction program.

Hacking is the process of taking chicks that were born in captivity to good nesting sites when they’re about a month old. They are kept in a protective enclosure and food is provided. There is minimal human interaction, so the chicks don’t imprint on people. When the chicks can fly, the enclosure is opened. Food is provided until the chicks begin to hunt for themselves.

One male hacked at Pickens Nose nested successfully at Devils Courthouse a few years later. According to Kelly, peregrines were seen at Pickens Nose last year but nesting was not documented. This year two fledglings were documented.

Whiteside Mountain in Jackson County between Cashiers and Highlands is the most successful nesting site in the state. Forty-five chicks have fledged at Whiteside since 1984. Two fledglings were recorded this year. Last year was the first nesting failure at Whiteside in 11 years. There is no way to document, for certain, the cause of the failure but officials know that the closure was violated last year.

When falcons are known to be at a site, authorities close the area to rock climbing and other invasive activities for the duration of the nesting season. Peregrines are very sensitive to disturbance. Adults may leave the eyrie unattended if they are disturbed and frightened chicks have been known to tumble to their death.

Another long-time nesting site was also successful this year. A pair at Looking Glass in Transylvania County successfully fledged three chicks. Looking Glass was home, in 1957, to the last wild pair of peregrines before they disappeared from the state. Thirty-one chicks have fledged from Looking Glass since reintroduction began.

Second-year females were found at three sites this year — Big Lost Cove and Grandfather Mountain in Avery County and North Carolina Wall in Burke County. Nesting attempts at Big Lost Cove and North Carolina Wall were unsuccessful (not uncommon for sub-adult birds.) Kelly reported the results at Grandfather as “unknown.” She stated that a pair was observed at the “usual nest ledge” but it wasn’t clear if they nested. Grandfather boasts lots of remote rock faces that can make it hard for observers to locate birds. Nine documented chicks have fledged at Grandfather.

Grandfather also offered another surprise this year. The second-year female was banded but, according to Kelly, her state of origin could not be determined.

This year’s success is welcomed news. It’s heartening to see these kings and queens of the sky reclaiming their Carolina blue.


Well said!  clap
18785  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Wild Side : Hawks — grace and ferocity combined on: 13-Oct-10, 10:32:27 PM
http://www.mvtimes.com/marthas-vineyard/article.php?id=2951  Pics by E. Vernon Laux

Martha's Vineyard Times
18786  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Humpback whale travels FAR on: 13-Oct-10, 10:02:08 PM
So sorry if this has already been posted - pretty amazing

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101013/ap_on_sc/whale_of_a_trip

Amazing...indeed. Thanks dale!
18787  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Reintroduction of the whooping cranes on: 13-Oct-10, 08:19:53 PM
I like the 2nd pic...looks like they are taking a stroll and chit chatting. So cool!
18788  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Matriarch Richmond Peregrine Falcon Admitted to Wildlife Center on: 13-Oct-10, 05:07:24 PM
A female Peregrine Falcon — the keystone of the successful effort to reintroduce these rare birds to Richmond — has been admitted to the Wildlife Center of Virginia.

The Peregrine Falcon was found on the ground, injured and unable to fly, on East Cary Street in Richmond on Monday, October 11.  She was picked up by A. K. Taylor of Richmond Animal Control and taken to the Cary Street Animal Hospital.   

The falcon was examined by Dr. Kimberly Kuhn.  Dr. Kuhn took x-rays of the bird and, in consultation with Wildlife Center veterinarian Dr. Miranda Sadar, concluded that the falcon should be brought to the Center in Waynesboro.  Volunteer transporter Michael Knight drove the falcon to the Center, arriving at about 9 p.m.

At admission, the falcon was assigned Patient #10-2118 and examined by Dr. Sadar, assisted by Dr. Marc Isidoro Ayza [from Spain] and Pedro Paulo Giese Krindges [a veterinary student from Brazil].  In addition to a coracoid fracture identified in the earlier x-rays, the Center vet team found injuries to the falcon’s right shoulder and a detached retina in the bird’s right eye.  Given that all of the injuries are on the same side of the bird, Center vets surmise that the falcon may have hit the side of a building or some other object.

Center vets administered pain medications, fluids, and anti-inflammatories and secured the falcon in a body wrap.

The falcon — a large female [weight of 1 kg] — has been identified by Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries biologists as the female from the pair of peregrines that have been nesting in downtown Richmond since 2003 — first at the BBT Building, and more recently on the west building of the Riverfront Plaza.  This pair has produced numerous offspring, included chicks that have been used to introduce peregrines into other areas of Virginia.  This female also has been the “star” of the VDGIF Falcon Cam – a web-based camera focused on the falcon’s nest.

[Earlier this year, the Center admitted and transferred for release a juvenile Peregrine Falcon -- likely one of the hatchlings from this Riverfront Plaza nest.]

The Peregrine Falcon is a native species to Virginia, once nesting in the Allegheny and Blue Ridge Mountains.  By the early 1960s, the falcon was believed to be extinct as a breeding species in Virginia and all areas east of the Mississippi River — a decline linked to the widespread use of DDT and other chemicals.  A program of peregrine reintroduction began in Virginia in 1978.  There are now about 20 known breeding paris of peregrines in Virginia.

So sad.
18789  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 13-Oct-10, 02:03:21 PM
Quote

WanderingFalcon (Carol P.): Noon hr Watch-A beautiful day in Rochester, but no A or B. An RTH preening in tree below pedestrian bridge. Buddy on lightpole.



Link:
http://twitter.com/WanderingFalcon/statuses/27259892633

That boy Buddy..he gets around!

That's why he's our buddy.   laugh

He's as bad as Quest!
18790  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 13-Oct-10, 01:39:04 PM
Quote

WanderingFalcon (Carol P.): Noon hr Watch-A beautiful day in Rochester, but no A or B. An RTH preening in tree below pedestrian bridge. Buddy on lightpole.



Link:
http://twitter.com/WanderingFalcon/statuses/27259892633

That boy Buddy..he gets around!
18791  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 13-Oct-10, 01:38:20 PM
Oh, yeah and people walking around on the OCSR roof below the disk.  Might be keeping falcons off the building.  Too much activity.

Well, they should go to the nest..what better view for them to sit and watch the washers!  devil
18792  Anything Else / Totally OT / Lucky, Lucky Day! on: 13-Oct-10, 01:32:42 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKcFPnS9r8Y&feature=player_embedded#!  scared blue
18793  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Peregrines in the UK - film cliips on: 13-Oct-10, 10:54:44 AM
Reminds me of Grandpa Munster.

*noted*
18794  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Thought for Today on: 13-Oct-10, 10:53:56 AM
???  Circadean rhythms?   stupid

A circadian rhythm is a roughly 24-hour cycle in the biochemical, physiological, or behavioural processes of living entities!!  Shocked
18795  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest and Her Mate Still at Pickering Power Plant (pics by MAK) on: 13-Oct-10, 10:32:14 AM
http://share.shutterfly.com/share/received/welcome.sfly?fid=bb57d825c9d100356276141d224b0f78&sid=1AaOGLdu5asnLA Hope this works. MAK & Joyce's trip to Canada. Man, this was hard to figure out!

 notworthy  Thank you so much for posting my pics Donna. Someday I'll figure it out for myself.  stupid    wave

Naaaah, MAK, why bother? We all know she "never leaves home"! yes

Oh she leaves home Bobbie. She just usually takes her laptop along. Donna just can't help herself!  crazy    She's  an addict!!! harhar   hahaha

Tell her to watch out for "Laptop Knee Burn"... no kidding! I was just reading about that. Kinda like the McDonald's "Hot Coffee" lady, huh?  paperbag

Your cruisin' Bobbie!  hurt  Cheesy
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