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19516  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Turning disappointment into joy: SURFice dog Ricochet on: 01-Sep-10, 07:17:20 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGODurRfVv4&feature=player_embedded An inspiring video

What a great  crying video
19517  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 01-Sep-10, 06:53:32 AM
Quote

MAKfalcon (MAK): B has now joined A on base of Mercury



Link:
http://twitter.com/MAKfalcon/statuses/22696845414

The nest box then on to Mercury every time. LOL
19518  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 01-Sep-10, 06:52:42 AM
Ok, here we go again.
Almost a repeat of yesterday


Beauty watches Archer leave
Beauty leaving also
19519  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / A man and his falcon (falconry) on: 01-Sep-10, 06:46:18 AM
http://www.youtube.com/user/LabofOrnithology#p/u/34/mSflVY7Yauk video
19520  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Osprey Enlightenment on: 01-Sep-10, 06:30:42 AM
http://www.welovebirds.org/profiles/blogs/osprey-enlightenment
19521  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Pennsylvania Game Commission leaves bird's rescuer in a fowl mood on: 01-Sep-10, 06:27:30 AM
The Miracle Bird of Elizabethtown led the Outdoors page of a Lancaster newspaper one morning this spring, a feel-good tale if there ever was one.

The column told how Pati Mattrick, a 57-year-old grandmother and preschool teacher, had rescued the hatchling from a howling rainstorm four years earlier. And now the bird was returning the favor.

Mattrick's German shepherd had discovered the tiny creature - pink, fuzzy, and soaked - buried in the backyard ivy at the foot of a towering spruce. She carried it inside and placed it in an incubator fashioned from an old aquarium, a Tupperware bowl, a linen napkin, and a heating pad. She named the tiny bird Stormy Girl.

Unsure what her charge ate, Mattrick rounded up some worms and bugs, razoring them into bite-size specks. She e-mailed wildlife rehabilitation shelters to learn more. The bird, they said, was unlikely to survive.

But Stormy Girl did fine, growing feathers, filling out on a diet of fruit and nuts, and finding its singing voice. Mattrick learned her new friend was a house finch. The bird would serenade her as it followed her around the house. "She thought I was her mother," Mattrick says.

Which was just what Mattrick needed, since the last of her four daughters had moved out and she didn't feel well enough to teach anymore. The bird, she says, helped lift her depression.

The column, by outdoors writer Ad Crable of the Intelligencer Journal/New Era, ran May 11. Two mornings later, about 9 a.m., a knock at the door startled Mattrick. More alarming were her callers: a Pennsylvania Game Commission officer and three armed policemen.

They'd come for the bird.

Who knew you couldn't keep house finches in the house?

Certainly not Mattrick. But the Game Commission knew. Those garden-variety fowl - the Cornell Lab of Ornithology estimates there are as many as 1.4 billion of them on the continent - are protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty of 1918.

Mattrick was breaking the law.

Over the last few months, the case has created quite a squawk. Readers sounded off, some accusing the commission of storm-trooper tactics, others defending its vigilance. A Facebook group called Help StormyGirl attracted 411 members at last count.

And Mattrick has found an ally in Lancaster County's top prosecutor.

"At best, this case was a grossly misguided abuse of law enforcement discretion," says Craig Stedman, the county's district attorney. "At worst, it was just plain cruel."

Earlier this month, Stedman made sure that no more Game Commission raids would take place in Lancaster County without his knowledge. Wardens now must get his office's approval for all search warrants, rather than going to the local magistrate.

Stedman says the case has been a disaster for all. "I didn't see any threat to society or the community from this," he said. "Let's put some common sense in this whole job of law enforcement. I really don't want the representatives of the police participating in search warrants for house finches."

Pati Mattrick says her health went into a dive after Stormy Girl was taken from her. Her depression has deepened. The stress has made her asthma worse, and she now needs to use oxygen every night.

"What good did this all do?" she asks. "It didn't do the bird any good. It certainly didn't do me any good. I don't get it."

She isn't sure what to believe.

"I was lied to so many times," she says. During the search, she says, the Game Commission officer told her that if she resisted the search, the FBI would come next.

"All I could hear was furniture moving around and her screaming and screaming," she says. "It's something I just can't get out of my head."

The animal-control officer told her that the bird would be going to a wildlife rehabilitation shelter, she says, and that she could visit it.

But the Game Commission still won't tell her where the bird is. They wouldn't tell me either.

"It's alive," is all spokesman Jerry Feaser would say.

Dude.

Pati Mattrick and Stormy Girl . She rescued and nurtured the bird, only to have it taken away by a state agency.
19522  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Landing room only: Owl ambushed by his playful brother in the Colorado desert on: 01-Sep-10, 06:18:51 AM


A peck on the cheek .... A photographer has captured the tender moment an Owlet flies in and gives its sibling a 'kiss' on the cheek. Spotting the perfect moment to surprise his unwitting sibling, the six-week-old crafty creature swooped in and gave him a friendly peck on the cheek

BROTHERLY love is not only a human concept, as these two owlets proved to a surprised photographer.

These are the same Owls as below.
19523  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Knowledge could be key to saving mysterious Slavonian grebe (Scotland) on: 01-Sep-10, 06:13:45 AM
New research is hoping to shed light on the lives of one of Scotland’s most mysterious birds.

The Slavonian grebe only began breeding in the UK in 1908; its population today remains restricted to northern Scotland where latest counts have shown only 22 breeding pairs remain, the lowest level since monitoring records began.

As a relative newcomer to the country, many aspects of the bird’s behaviour remain unclear but conservationists are hoping further study will identify what may be driving a decline in numbers.
Stuart Benn, RSPB Scotland’s Conservation Officer for the South Highlands, said “ This striking species only began breeding in Scotland just over a century ago so we still have a lot to learn about its behaviour and its movements in the winter months. What is clear is that while populations are thriving in Iceland and Norway, things aren’t going so well here. It would be good to find out why that is and what things we, as conservationists, could be doing to turn around the fortunes of Scotland’s Slavonian grebe population. To do this we’ll need to focus our research on key areas such as the role of weather and climate, when and why chicks die and compare our results with other countries whose populations are faring well.”

Despite a worrying decrease in the UK population, 2010 has provided one of the best breeding seasons in recent years. A total of 17 chicks fledged this summer, six of these at RSPB Scotland’s Loch Ruthven nature reserve which remains the best place in the country to see breeding Slavonian grebes.

It is unclear exactly why after two years of no young Loch Ruthven’s breeding pairs were successful in 2010, but it is thought a drier and less windy or stormy spring may have helped. Nests are destroyed by waves, so excess wind or stormy conditions can be damaging.

Also this year, staff at the reserve have started introducing a range of conservation measures that they hope will make a difference to productivity among the local population.

Steph Elliott, Site Manager of RSPB Loch Ruthven nature reserve added: “Our work for Slavonian grebes is very much trial and error at the moment. Over the winter months, we will be carrying out some major restoration of sedge beds on the reserve. This is crucial nesting habitat for Slavonian grebes and by removing sediment and areas of succession we can make sure the water depth is at the right level for the grebes to build their nests. We’re also hoping to install nesting rafts next spring which will hopefully protect vulnerable nests from damage and allow more chicks to fledge.”


19524  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: 01-Sep-10, 06:10:32 AM
Wildlife Diary 1st September
September 1st, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT

Well folks, a new month brings new excitement here at Lowes. Congratulations and thanks to the eagle eyed webcam watchers who spotted early this morning, our first Pine Martin visitor for a long time, at our window feeders.

We used to have a resident family here at Lowes, but over the last year they have been consicuously absent, theories have ranged from feral cat competetion , to local clearfelling being the cause.

This pine matrtin which apeared this morning appears to be a juvenile, probably dispersing from its birth family at this time of year, looking for a teritory of its own- which is good news for us as it might decide to stay around!

There was great excitement in the office this morning as we rewound the overnight camera recording and watched the wee beastie filling itself up on peanuts- Fiona tells me its their tradtional favorite around here! lets hope we get return visit soon.
19525  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: YARD SALES CAN BE DANGEROUS TO YOUR HEALTH on: 31-Aug-10, 10:27:07 PM
Hayseed (slang): 3. Slang A bumpkin; a yokel.

Dead on board aff yisser nut, oi don't git it either but 'tis craic readin'.

Ireland for: Ok Bird crazy, I don't get it either but it's fun reading

So yer clap, 'tis not dat 'ard ter understan' bobbie's language.

Ireland trans for: So you see, it's not that hard to understand Bobbie's language

Oi'm from jersey an' oi don't understan' any av dis.
19526  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Latest member on: 31-Aug-10, 10:01:15 PM
Welcome Gary


Of course penguins can fly they just do it in the liquid sky.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrxmpihCjqw They fly   2thumbsup
19527  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 31-Aug-10, 08:40:25 PM
Quote

MAKfalcon (MAK): Only Lynda,Jeanne and MAK watching juvie BCNH



Link:
http://twitter.com/MAKfalcon/statuses/22660048768

I guess that would be a Black Crowned Night Heron??
19528  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: Barn Owl webcam - Molly & McGee on: 31-Aug-10, 07:09:34 PM
Molly and her 2 daughters....Ashley & Carrie. They are getting big FAST!
19529  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 31-Aug-10, 05:48:44 PM

Look who's Tweetin!!! Yay!
19530  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Macomb County peregrines on: 31-Aug-10, 05:45:11 PM


    June 8, 2010 --- Peregrine falcons Packard, Harwell and Martha were officially welcomed to the county and tagged for identification on June 8, 2010 by Macomb County Board of Commissioners Chairman Paul Gieleghem and representatives from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

    The names were chosen by Gieleghem to honor both Macomb County and Michigan’s culture and history. They give a nod to the Packard Motor Car Company, which based its Packard Proving Grounds in Shelby Township; the iconic “Voice of the Detroit Tigers” Ernie Harwell; and Martha Griffiths, the first woman chosen to serve as Michigan's lieutenant governor.

    The falcons were weighed, checked for health issues and tagged for identification by DNR wildlife biologists, who will be able to track their age, origin and travels by the numbered tags.

    The falcons were born May 12 to Hathor and Nick, who apparently find Macomb County a fine place to raise their young --- this is their third set of offspring since 2008.

    UPDATE: Harwell and Martha go to "Rehab"

    June 16, 2010 --- Harwell and Martha were found on the ground near the Macomb County Administration Building (across the street from their nest on the 11th floor of the County Building) this morning. They both appeared to be uninjured, and according to the DNR, they just didn't have the wing strength to be out there flying around on such a windy day! As a result, they were take by the DNR to a "rehab" facility in Detroit for about a week, where they will be checked and allowed to develop some strength in their wings under a controlled environment. They will then be returned to their nest and to parents, Hathor & Nick. Brother Packard is being monitored, and is still flying around the County building.

2010

UPDATE: The Return of Harwell & Martha


    June 29, 2010 --- Fresh from a stint in a "rehabilitation" program to get their wing strength up to par so they can contend with flying conditions, Harwell and Martha have been returned by the DNR to their nesting area in Macomb County. The pair was released atop the county's Administration Building on June 28 to be reunited with brother Packard and parents Hathor and Nick. For photos of the homecoming, click the 2010 Falcon Picture Gallery link at the left of this page, and scroll down.

How cute are they?

http://macombcountymi.gov/peregrine/2010_photos.htm  More pics here.

If I posted this before, I can't find it. Oh they are cute.

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