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19456  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 04-Sep-10, 09:45:09 PM
So that's the famous Juvie BCH everyone was talking about. Nice to see him in "birdson", thanks Jim, always love your pics.

And the MINK, I never saw one. Very cool!  clap
19457  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 07:49:16 PM
Okay, is it  B  or  A scratching their hinney (sp  ??)
      Lola
     rain


 hysterical hysterical hysterical
19458  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: Blackwater Eagles are back on: 04-Sep-10, 07:26:43 PM
Sunset @ Blackwater as posted on Facebook. Beautiful with all the birds.
19459  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Why the internet is fun... on: 04-Sep-10, 02:25:55 PM
That's nifty Ei, too bad they don't make them in Pods...I love my Keurig Coffee Maker.
19460  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 02:04:25 PM
Not even maybe a guess...  tired

C'mon Ei, think cams.  wave Cheesy
19461  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Animal Intelligence on: 04-Sep-10, 02:03:11 PM
19462  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Jersey City Chick Check May 10 2010 on: 04-Sep-10, 01:30:21 PM
Nice Juvie FF...Thanks for the pic. Good luck, let us know.
19463  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 01:29:02 PM
I know I know I found it but I wont tell. How did you see that?

 bguitar mbanana hysterical 2funny Funny BC! Good job.
19464  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 09:29:06 AM

Boo-hoo! When I try to enlarge, even a little, I get a big blob... maybe it IS a big blob? Ok... sea slug... (tell me it's not pigeon poo...)

Ok...hint....not an animal...and yes, I blew it up a bit for distortion. It's something we all see every day if you view the cams. It caught my "warped sense of humor" a while back and thought...oh my, this looks crazy weird.

Jig is probably up, I just gave it away!  harhar
19465  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 09:27:50 AM

Boo-hoo! When I try to enlarge, even a little, I get a big blob... maybe it IS a big blob? Ok... sea slug... (tell me it's not pigeon poo...)

Ok...hint....not an animal...and yes, I blew it up a bit for distortion. It's something we all see every day if you view the cams. It caught my "warped sense of humor" a while back and thought...oh my, this looks crazy weird.
19466  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Just for Funnnnnn!! on: 04-Sep-10, 09:00:59 AM
gator?

Sorry, try again.  wave
19467  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 04-Sep-10, 06:57:39 AM
So far so good
Oh yeah, it's Archer
Bowing as usual as Beauty watches

he's like...well!!
Wrong direction Beauty
Archer decides enough is enough and leaves.
Beauty's bewildered.
Let's see if Archer went to Mercury
She left just after this shot.

Archer did NOT go to Mercury this time.
19468  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 04-Sep-10, 06:46:36 AM
been a few days but YAY!
19469  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Minnesota Power takes action to prevent birds from hitting power lines on: 04-Sep-10, 06:09:33 AM
In an effort to project an endangered crane species, Minnesota Power has installed approximately 15,000 flight diverters on 44 miles to transmission line in North Dakota over the past two weeks.

The foot-long plastic corkscrews will help whooping cranes and other birds see and avoid the lines. Hitting lines, towers and antennas is a major cause of bird mortality. Research indicates that flight diverters are approximately 50 to 80 percent effective against avian mortality.

Minnesota Power and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are working together to reduce the chances of whooping cranes hitting power lines connected with the Bison I wind farm being built near New Salem, ND.

Whooping cranes are among the most threatened bird species in the U.S. There are only 263 whooping cranes who use the flyway through North Dakota, and 535 in total, according to Tom Stehn, U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s whooping crane coordinator.

Minnesota Power agreed to equip 22 miles of new line and 22 miles of existing line with the diverters. It was necessary to use a helicopter to install the diverters on the existing line.

“That’s a very impressive effort,” Stehn said in a news release. “The species is so rare we’ve got to help wherever we can.”
19470  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Repowered wind farm could save Altamont birds on: 04-Sep-10, 06:06:55 AM
If we told you that a poorly regulated energy facility killed thousands of birds this year, you could assume we were talking about BP's Deepwater Horizon platform in the Gulf of Mexico. But we also could be talking about the Altamont Pass wind farm east of San Francisco, which has been killing thousands of migratory birds and protected raptors since the 1980s.

Despite being one of the nation's earliest renewable-energy facilities and being built with good intentions, the thousands of wind turbines have long ceased being a source of pride for environmentalists and are an embarrassment to the wind energy industry.

Not only have the bird kills at Altamont split environmentalists, but they've also made it more difficult to get much-needed alternative energy projects approved. Every impact study now includes a cautionary tale about avian mortality at Altamont. Moreover, supporters of the oil and gas industries enjoy shedding crocodile tears about the dangers to birds that wind energy present.

But in the coming weeks, Alameda County officials will have the opportunity to finally address the problems at Altamont by approving a new plan to reduce bird deaths.

The same things that make the Altamont Pass good for wind turbines also make it good for birds. The breezes blowing over these 50,000 acres make it a perfect migratory pathway, and grasslands under the turbines are full of small mammals that attract birds of prey.

A recent study estimates that the Altamont Pass turbines kill between 7,500 and 9,300 birds each year. Many of the affected species are protected under state and federal laws, including the golden eagle, red-tailed hawk, American kestrel and burrowing owl. These birds are spectacular examples of a wild California - part of our identity as a state - that we must protect.

The killing of these birds should have triggered action long ago by the California Department of Fish and Game and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - as well as local regulatory bodies. But after years of inaction by these agencies, four Bay Area Audubon chapters - Golden Gate, Santa Clara Valley, Ohlone and Marin - and Californians for Renewable Energy sued Alameda County and the wind companies in 2006 demanding that an environmental impact report be completed before operations at Altamont continued.

The suit was difficult for the plaintiffs because they understood that renewable energy is necessary to minimize the impacts of climate change, which will have dire consequences for birds. Wanting to encourage efforts to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels, the plaintiffs arrived at a settlement that gave the wind companies three years to reduce bird deaths by at least 50 percent. If that goal was not reached by November 2009, then the county would implement an adaptive management plan for the entire Altamont Pass to minimize bird deaths, which would require the wind farms to shut down their turbines for 3 1/2 months during the winter.

Unfortunately, the wind companies - NextEra Energy Resources, enXco and AES Wind Generation - have dragged their feet at every turn, and the regulatory agencies haven't compelled them to do otherwise. A draft study of bird deaths at Altamont shows little, if any, progress toward the 50 percent reduction.

This is the county's moment to do the right thing.

If the county is strong, it can address the problem of bird deaths at Altamont without sacrificing any renewable energy. Most of the 4,500 wind turbines there are old, inefficient models that because of their height and poor location are particularly dangerous for birds. Newer wind turbines are taller and the blades turn more slowly, presenting less danger. Even better, they produce much more power than the older models, so a "repowered" Altamont will have fewer turbines placed in lower-risk spots and still generate the same amount of electricity.

But this won't happen unless Alameda County officials take a hard stance right now and reverse their tacit trading of birds for "green power."


  Wind turbines like these near Altamont Pass have been blamed for the deaths of thousands of birds.  crying
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