THE FORUM

20-Apr-23, 08:26:40 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 ... 1296 1297 1298 1299 [1300] 1301 1302 1303 1304 ... 1692
19486  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Birdhouse Man builds homes for feathered friends on: 03-Sep-10, 06:24:57 AM
The birds have a friend in Dominick Esposito. The retired sheet metal worker is doing his darnest to make sure every bird in the Cape Region has a decent place to live.

Esposito made a birdhouse on a lark three years ago, and hasn’t stop making them since – he’s literally gone to the birds.

He’s so efficient at making the wooden houses, he can construct one in less than an hour.

It’s not unusual for Esposito to get up with the birds and be out working in his shop by 5 a.m. The friendly Esposito is known as The Birdhouse Man to his customers and friends.

Birdhouse Man is in the process of completely covering the pole barn that serves as his shop with birdhouse; he has more than 200 in place now. He said he would fill the west side of the barn by this spring – all 1,600 square feet of it. Passersby watch in anticipation as he adds to the collection at his Route 9 home near the Moose Family Lodge between Lewes and Harbeson.

And with the numerous birdhouses come his feathered friends. Hundreds upon hundreds of birds of all description call the Esposito residence home. They find refuge in the houses on his barn as well as perch on his house, deck, and fences – anything that doesn’t move, in a scene reminiscent of the Hitchcock classic “The Birds.”

The irony is that Esposito’s wife, Donna, has nightmares about the movie.

Esposito moved to the Lewes area about five years ago after retiring because of a disability from Boeing where he worked for 16 years as a sheet metal worker. He and his wife were able to sell their home in Ridley Park, Pa., in just one week, and within five months of making a decision to move, they were living in Sussex East near his parents. They moved to the home on Route 9 just down the road two years later.

“I’ve always loved animals,” Esposito said. “But I never anticipated doing this. It’s all a fluke how it happened. It started as a joke.”

He said he had some scrap wood, was killing time one day and decided it would be nice to build a birdhouse. He then built five more, and people started to stop by.

Esposito has always been good with his hands and can fix or build just about anything. “If you tell me I can’t do that, I’ll spend the rest of my life figuring it out,” he said.

At first, his wife was not thrilled that he was making birdhouses. The more birdhouses her husband put up on the barn, the more people started to stop by. Some came to buy, but others came to take photographs. “I had to apologize to him,” she said.

“I really enjoy it when people tell me how nice everything looks,” Esposito said. “I don’t charge a lot because I don’t have much overhead so it’s a win-win.”

His houses, which come in all shapes and sizes, sell for $5 to $125. He sells simple one-hole houses and makes custom villages with several levels of houses and perches. His wife is one of his most ardent fans and a super saleswoman. The couple, who have been married 23 years, has two sons, Mike, 23, and Craig, 19, who live in the Lewes area.

Esposito also makes bird baths, butterfly houses, mailboxes, shoe holders, garden hose holders, flower boxes and just about anything else made of wood. Besides selling his birdhouses from his home off Route 9, he also has houses for sale at Betty’s Backyard shop at Lavender Fields Farm along Cool Spring Road.

He takes orders based on the houses he has displayed on his barn, and usually has the new house finished the next day. He also offers advice, based on his own experience, how to care for the house and the birds that will take up residence. “You really don’t have to do much cleaning out of a house because the birds take care of it,” he said.

Esposito likes a challenge, so he is trying to figure out a way to build a house with an octagonal roof. Although he hasn’t been able to master it yet, he says he eventually will. It’s those challenges that keep the Birdhouse Man going.

Dominick Esposito shows off just a few of the more than 200 birdhouses attached to a barn behind his house. The Birdhouse Man makes birdhouses of all shapes and sizes.
19487  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Birders flock to watershed's shores, ridges to see raptors' fall migration (MD) on: 03-Sep-10, 06:19:01 AM
As the days grow shorter and cooler, the skies fill with birds migrating to warmer, more temperate climates for the winter.

The Chesapeake Bay watershed lies within a major migration path known as the Atlantic Flyway, where coastal shorelines and mountain chains to the west channel millions of migrating birds through the Bay region.

Among these travelers are hawks and falcons, commonly known as raptors.

Raptors begin their annual southward migration just before the fall foliage color change. The earlier migrants are generally not noticed. Juvenile birds lead the way, beginning to move in September. Adults generally wait until late November to join the southbound flight

As they approach the Chesapeake Bay, the land formation changes, causing some migrants to funnel along the coast while the others are steered along the mountains.

Mountain ridges are great spots to see raptors. The best viewing days are those that occur when a cold front pushes a north, northwest or westerly wind eastward against the face of the mountain ridge. The combination of cooler air and strong wind allows the bird an effortless "ride" southward.

The most common group of hawks noticed on the ridge are the accipiters. Characterized by their long tails and short rounded wings, accipiters, such as the sharp-shinned hawk, northern goshawk and Cooper's hawk, can be seen gliding along the mountain treetops. These hawks dominate the sky during most of the month of October.

The buteos, or soaring hawks, include species such as the broad-winged hawk, red-shouldered hawk and red-tailed hawk. Broad-winged hawks congregate in groups of 100 birds or more called "kettles," migrating in September.

The rest of the buteos peak during the month of November at the coldest part of the season. Red-tailed hawks are the most common migrant during this period. These large robust hawks are seen hesitating along the ridge, making sudden stops into the trees in an attempt to capture squirrels.

On occasion, a golden eagle will make a showing, usually during late October after a strong cold front. Wind conditions that peak at 25 miles per hour will increase one's chances of witnessing such an event.

To observe the hawk flights along a mountain passage, travel toward the Appalachian or Blue Ridge mountain ranges. The west-facing ridges in Pennsylvania, western Maryland and Virginia provide excellent opportunities to see the southbound migration.

The coastal migration route is even more singular than the ridge. As the land mass narrows toward the end of the New Jersey peninsula, raptors begin to congregate at the southern end of Cape May. The uncertainty of crossing a large body of water turns the raptors northward until they feel secure that conditions are just right.

Falcons are one group of raptors that migrate along the coastline. These birds are characterized by long, pointed wings and long, narrow tails. The American kestrel, merlin and peregrine falcon favor the wide open spaces of the coast. The northern harrier, also known as the marsh hawk, can also be seen along the coastline.

The coast is extremely important for migration because of the tremendous quantity of bird life found along salt marshes, fields and forest edges, many of which serve as a critical food source to these migrant hawks and falcons.

The migration is nearing the end when adults begin to join in the southbound flight, usually near the end of November. To observe a coastal fall flight, visit the southern end of peninsulas such as Cape May, NJ; Cape Henlopen, DE; the barrier islands of Assateague, MD and Chincoteague, VA; and all points south along the beaches to Cape Charles, VA.


The sharp-shinned hawk, one of the most common accipiters, is often seen flying in large numbers along ridges during migration.
19488  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: No hatch in Eemsmond? on: 03-Sep-10, 06:14:47 AM
3 falcons in their nests this morning
19489  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Sad news for the 25 yr old Osprey mom in Scotland, still has chics in nest on: 03-Sep-10, 05:36:59 AM
Archive for the ‘Diary 2010’ Category
Wildlife Diary 3rd September
Friday, September 3rd, 2010

  The pine martin is back! At about ten to six this morning the same wee juvenile pine martin appeared on the feeders outside the VC. It stayed for  about 10 minutes and stuffed itself with peanuts- we  are going to have top start putting out a more mixed and suitable diet for it in the evenings-dried fruit, and some meat too. It appears to have a wee white spot on its left shoulder – individual markings on pine martins are very useful identifiers. Lets just hope this become a habitual visit!

This will be my last blog post, as it is unbelievably my last day at Lowes. Soon I will be joining you lovely folks on the ‘reader’ side of the blog community, which will be a great way of keeping in touch with my friends up here and the joys of the coming seasons on the loch.

I just wanted to say one last thank you to you all for all your kind comments and good wishes- they have been very much appreciated. All the staff here have found the blog an enormous morale boost and it has certainly helped us through some difficult times this season knowing there are so many of you out there who care! Thank you all and see on the blog- look our for “ex ranger Emma!”

Emma Rawling
19490  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Search for Falcon ID at Kodak Leads To Good News on: 02-Sep-10, 11:29:05 PM
Sweet baby!  Had she hurt her talon?

I noticed that too jeanne, unless she is just holding it up. ???
19491  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 02-Sep-10, 11:26:57 PM
Jeanne, MAK, Brian and I witnessed a successful hunt by Archer as he stooped off of the NE corner of Xerox, behind some lower buildings to the NE.  We spotted him flying up behind HSBC, gaining altitude, before landing on the SW corner of HSBC.  We put the scope on him and saw that he had successfully caught himself some dinner.  What appeared to be a starling.  It didn't take long before feathers were flying.


But no sign of Beauty, no nest box activity either.
19492  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Search for Falcon ID at Kodak Leads To Good News on: 02-Sep-10, 11:23:35 PM
Carol, is this the pic you were talking about? Alkyonis rescue. Look at her face.  Sad
19493  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Search for Falcon ID at Kodak Leads To Good News on: 02-Sep-10, 10:40:21 PM
WOW!  Just...wow!  That was my first year watching...I'm speechless...wow!   Happy crying again...I can live with that!



Another juvie pic of Alkyonis (via Jim P.)


Mine too Ei, so that year was exciting for me...Been hooked ever since. I'm with Jim, Hafoc was my favorite from that year. I  heart him too. Actually, I was smitten with all but he was just so adorable.  Sad
I'm so happy Alkyonis was found and doing well. Banding does pay off.
19494  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Hawk Mountain Eagle count on: 02-Sep-10, 08:49:28 PM
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvania reports that they counted 36 migrating bald eagles last Thursday, which was the second-highest one-day count in Hawk Mountain history! Check out the cool photo.



19495  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Search for Falcon ID at Kodak Leads To Good News on: 02-Sep-10, 08:29:38 PM
Quote

Truth, the saying goes, is often stranger than fiction.  Followers of the Rochester Falconcam's various forums and our Falcon Watch blog will know that there have been occasional reports of a falcon at Kodak's facility to the north of Kodak Office.  We've had some thought that this mystery falcon may have been Mariah,...



Link:
http://rfalconcam.com/imprinting/?p=1327

OK, now this is exciting! She's a beauty. Thanks for this news.
19496  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Rhea Mae and Tiago's Webcam - Toronto - Canadian Peregrine Foundation on: 02-Sep-10, 12:48:06 PM
One in nestbox at 12:44 this afternoon.  I didn't know how to capture the picture heart heart heart

Here ya go jeanne. Possibly RM
19497  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Check out these last 2 videos of the BW Ospreys on: 02-Sep-10, 11:39:38 AM
http://friendsofblackwater.org/wordpress/osprey10/ The 2nd one is amazing and so cute. Wow, what the wind can do and how they handled it.  clap
19498  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Saving Migratory Birds: The Quest for Knowledge vs. the Ticking Clock on: 02-Sep-10, 11:19:02 AM
Splendid piece, Donna. Well done on finding it. Highly recommended reading for everyone, with interesting insights, especially since our area is along an important migration highway.

Thanks Bobbie and the pics are great too. I find migration fascinating!!
19499  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Sep-10, 11:11:51 AM
Quote
Haha, Donna - a "web" site!

Oh Bobbie, that was funny!  hysterical 2funny
19500  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Sep-10, 10:54:30 AM
(movie) Speaking of Arachnids.....look at this web. What a busy busy spider.   spider
Pages: 1 ... 1296 1297 1298 1299 [1300] 1301 1302 1303 1304 ... 1692
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon