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19351  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 10-Sep-10, 08:31:03 PM
(movie) Maybe a falcon flying!! See it?

It's a something.
19352  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: New peregrine cam on: 10-Sep-10, 11:38:22 AM
Where is this nest-box, Annette? That is one tall building! Eeeeek  scared blue NOT for me!! I get a bit woozy if I stand on a kitchen chair...

Racing pigeon ring? Sounds about right... but shouldn't there be a leg in it???  paperbag

Look closely Miss Bobbie, there is a leg in it!  drool

Maybe in Germany? Not sure.
19353  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: New peregrine cam on: 10-Sep-10, 11:33:56 AM
Where is this nest-box, Annette? That is one tall building! Eeeeek  scared blue NOT for me!! I get a bit woozy if I stand on a kitchen chair...

Racing pigeon ring? Sounds about right... but shouldn't there be a leg in it???  paperbag

Look closely Miss Bobbie, there is a leg in it!  drool
19354  Member Activities / Events / Re: Team Peregrine on: 10-Sep-10, 11:27:06 AM
Tonight at 7 pm the 2010 Montezuma Muckrace will start!  We, Lisa M, MAK, Don and myself, are the members of GVAS sponsored Team Peregrine 2010. 

Last year our team identified 96 species in the 24 hour period, well, actually we only birded on part of Saturday.  Top bird on our list this year is a Peregrine, of course!  Several juvies have been spotted there recently, and we are certainly hoping Jemison may be in the group.  We will be ready with our binos, spotting scopes, cameras, and sharp eyes!

We hope all with be cheering for us!  This year we hope to hit 100 species!! 
Suzanne   

I'll be for ya's! Good luck, have fun and yes, please do find Jemison and or Callidora.
19355  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: New peregrine cam on: 10-Sep-10, 11:23:37 AM
Is there a band on the outside platform of that nestbox?  i see something red

Sure looks it jeanne, maybe a racing pigeon?  Looks like a black one too next to it. Oh boy!
19356  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: New peregrine cam on: 10-Sep-10, 08:39:02 AM
Very nice Annette, thanks!
19357  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Amazing Dragon Illusion on: 10-Sep-10, 07:32:14 AM
Pretty cool! Contact me if you know how to make a falcon version of this.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2K39Q9zvQoE

That's incredible!
19358  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Most expensive book? It's about birds! on: 10-Sep-10, 07:24:22 AM
Wonder what the starting bid will be?   Shocked

One of the reasons why there aren't many complete copies of this book is because people took them apart to sell the pages with pictures of the birds on them separately for framing.  The pictures in these old bird books are stunning.

I had also read that, Carol. In addition to actually holding such a treasure, I would love to give it a good sniff... a must for a fine book. Sure wish I could find a link for us that would show more plates than the site I noted... must have a look. Probably on the Sotheby's website, now that I think of it.

http://www.google.com/images?q=John%20James%20Audubon%27s%20Birds%20of%20America&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=og&sa=N&hl=en&tab=wi&biw=1280&bih=576 Try this Bobbie
19359  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Most expensive book? It's about birds! on: 10-Sep-10, 07:22:14 AM


I'm bidding on that one!

I got dibs on borrowing it first when you're finished!
[/quote]

K Bobbie, your #1 on my list!
19360  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Above the City at Night, the Call of the Wild Is Heard on: 10-Sep-10, 07:05:07 AM
No matter how urbanized New Yorkers like to think we are, the reminders of our natural world are constant. Canada geese, raccoons even skunks have brushed up against humans recently in a somewhat rude manner. Or at least it was rude to us.

But as the temperatures drop ever so slowly, there above us in the autumn skies are thousands of migrating birds, and except for the geese and swooping flocks in the sky, they pass without giving us much notice of their transit. They usually fly at night, over the heads of sleeping urbanites. Often, the flocks leave behind casualties of the lit skyscrapers, although New York City Audubon is working to change that.

Like truckers on their CB radios, these birds call to each other, and each species has its own migratory call. Andrew Farnsworth, who studies bird migration at Cornell University, has been recording these calls as the birds wend their way across the city.

“You have to be a pretty astute observer to even know that it happens,” Dr. Farnsworth said.

Dr. Farnsworth puts microphones on the roofs of buildings around the city, although the only one that consistently will be posted this fall is the recorder on his building on First Avenue. The majority of the calls have been recorded at night, and most of the calls are less than one-third of a second long. Even asleep, the city roars like a rushing river. But if you listen carefully …

“You have to have a pretty good ear, too,” Dr. Farnsworth said.

The study of night migration calls is a significant but small part of migration studies, Dr. Farnsworth said, although recording night calls themselves is not new. It is challenging, though, in part because the calls are so short. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology has a deep repository of samplings of bird calls, and Mr. Farnsworth and his colleagues have developed a “Rosetta stone” for identifying 48 different species.

Alan Clark, a biologist at Fordham University who also works with migration calls, said this year his program in the Bronx added radar, which gives researchers a better sense of how many birds are in the air. But the sounds themselves can also help ornithologists determine how many birds migrate and when, and how conditions in the city affect the birds’ flight, he said.

The bird calls are the highest notes of the city’s fall song, and we’ve included some to satisfy your curiosity. These aren’t the typical warbles you hear on a sunny fall afternoon; they’re short, very quiet and muffled by the roar of the city below.

  A wood thrush, whose brethren have been migrating across New York City at night.

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/09/above-the-city-at-night-the-call-of-the-wild-is-heard/ Night bird calls here on right
19361  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / 'Windfall’ Documentary Explores Perils of Wind Power on: 10-Sep-10, 06:54:59 AM
Windfall,” a new documentary that premieres Friday at the Toronto International Film Festival, could take the sails out of wind power. The film observes the deeply divided residents of Meredith, New York — an Upstate farm community in decline — as they debate the pros and cons of allowing wind turbines on their land. Local proponents champion the promise of green energy and monetary compensation, while detractors question the efficiency of wind-generated energy and the drawbacks of living among 400-foot tall towers with gigantic rotating blades.

First-time director Laura Israel, who has a log cabin in Meredith, first became aware of the town’s wind energy debate when she read stories in the local newspaper about the potential dangers of turbines to the bird population (bats are also at risk). “I went through the same process myself as they did in the film,” says Israel. “First, I thought, maybe I’d like to get a wind turbine, but then I started going on the Internet and realized there was more to the story.”

Israel videotaped in Meredith for about a year, documenting contentious board meetings and interviewing residents, and also visiting other areas in New York, such as Lewis County, where wind turbines have already taken hold. The film offers few experts on either side of the debate; rather, it allows local townspeople to discuss their own research, experiences and fears, such as the wind turbine’s “flicker effect,” as the machines pass across the sun and cast immense shadows, as well as the dangers of their low frequency hum.

Robert Bryce, author of “Power Hungry: The Myths of ‘Green’ Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future,” and a frequent critic of the wind industry (in the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal), says the “infrasound” issue is the most problematic for the wind industry. “They want to dismiss it out of hand, but the low frequency noise is very disturbing,” he explains. “I interviewed people all over, and they all complained with identical words and descriptions about the problems they were feeling from the noise.”

Because of wind energy’s massive expansion — the five-year average growth rate is up 39%, according to the American Wind Energy Association — Bryce suggests that the kinds of conflicts depicted in the film “are going to be much more common if it’s allowed to grow as fast as it could,” he says. “There’s a lot of pissed off people out there.”

Israel doesn’t want her film to be used as an advocacy prop for anti-wind advocates, however. She just wants people to be informed. “What I would want people to do is research it and look at it critically.” Invoking the words of Gordon Yancey, an outspoken wind critic from Tug Hill, NY who appears in the film, Israel advises, “Do your homework.”

Or as Bryce adds, “There’s no such thing as a free lunch and it’s the same with wind energy.”
19362  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Most expensive book? It's about birds! on: 10-Sep-10, 06:49:16 AM
Wouldn't we all love to have a copy of this?!


World's most expensive book goes back on sale

A book that sold for a record-breaking price of $8.8m (£5.7m) a decade ago is going back on sale at Sotheby's, the auction house has announced.

John James Audubon's Birds of America will go under the hammer along with other items from the collection of the late Lord Hesketh.

The book contains 1,000 life-sized illustrations of almost 500 species.

Only 119 complete copies of the 19th-century book are known to exist, and 108 are owned by museums and libraries.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11242275


I'm bidding on that one!
19363  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 09-Sep-10, 11:28:16 PM
(movie) The same exact time from Main cam! She's good, she's real  good.
19364  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 09-Sep-10, 11:25:44 PM
(movie) Man she's quick. I think she went in the nest and said the word "Bow" and left. Archer was just getting into it and , she's gone. Oh that Beauty!
19365  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 09-Sep-10, 11:20:52 PM


How on Earth did I miss this?? I'm slacking. Thanks Shaky!
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