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19546  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 30-Aug-10, 06:12:02 PM
MAK and Sue on Broad St Bridge: Not a falcon to be found in the city.
19547  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Scarlet Tanager: As many questions as answers Letchworth State Park on: 30-Aug-10, 05:19:50 PM
I saw one once, they are beautiful.

*Lucky* I wish
19548  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Scarlet Tanager: As many questions as answers Letchworth State Park on: 30-Aug-10, 05:19:26 PM
I saw one once, they are beautiful.

*Lucky*
19549  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Scarlet Tanager: As many questions as answers Letchworth State Park on: 30-Aug-10, 05:19:08 PM
wave   Donna I have seen one of these rare beautys and I can tell ya Scarlet is the word. Very stunning!   clap

*Lucky*
19550  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Our Quest for Quest! A Success! - Saturday, August 28, 2010 on: 30-Aug-10, 05:16:38 PM
Pickering Power Plant

Pickering Nuclear Generating Station is a Canadian nuclear power station located on the north shore of Lake Ontario in Pickering, Ontario. The facility derives its name from the City (originally Township) of Pickering in which it is located.

Also co-located at the Pickering station is a single 1.8 MWe wind turbine named the OPG 7 commemorative turbine. In 1994 Pickering Unit 7 set a world record for continuous operation (894 days) without a shutdown

The facility was constructed in stages between 1966-1986 by the provincial Crown corporation, Ontario Hydro. In April 1999 Ontario Hydro was split into 5 component Crown corporations with Ontario Power Generation (OPG) taking over all electrical generating stations and which continues to operate the Pickering station.

The Pickering station is one of the largest nuclear facilities in the world and comprises 8 CANDU nuclear reactors located on the northern shore of Lake Ontario, having a total output of 4124 MW (capacity net) and 4336 MW (gross net) when all units are online. Pickering is only surpassed in Canada by the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station, which while also having 8 reactors, has a greater output. The facility is connected to the North American power grid via numerous 230,000 and 500,000 volt transmission lines.

The facility is operated as two distinct stations, Pickering A (Units 1 to 4) and Pickering B (Units 5 to Cool. While primarily administrative in nature, the division is not wholly artificial, as there are some distinct differences in design between the two groups of stations. (Example: The Pickering A units employ moderator dump as a shutdown mechanism, a feature not found in Pickering B.) There are, however, a number of systems and structures in common between the two stations; the most notable of these is possibly the shared vacuum building, a negative pressure containment system

Partial shutdown

On December 31, 1997 the four Pickering A reactors were shut down by the federal regulator, the Atomic Energy Control Board, because of Ontario Hydro's failure to upgrade the emergency shutdown system at the station. [3] Ontario Hydro committed to restarting the units, but the restart project underwent long delays and large cost over-runs.

Premier Mike Harris asked former federal energy Minister Jake Epp to study and make recommendations on the problems with the Pickering restart. Mr. Epp acknowledged the large cost over-runs and delays attributing blame to bad management. The Epp Review estimated the cost of restarting the remaining reactors at $3 - 4 billion and supported the continuation of the project.

Upon election in 2003 the government of Dalton McGuinty was not immediately prepared to proceed with the restart of Pickering A. On December 16, 2003 the McGuinty government struck the Ontario Power Generation Review Committee to review the structure of Ontario Power Generation and the restart of the Pickering A reactors. The Committee included former federal finance Minister John Manley as chair as well as Peter Godsoe, a former CEO of Scotiabank, and Jake Epp.

On March 18 2004 the OPG Review Committee released its report, attributing the blame for cost over-runs to bad management. The report recommended proceeding with the restart Pickering “A” reactors 1, 2, and 3, sequentially. The report argued that the restart of units 2 and 3 would be contingent on whether “OPG will be able to succeed at the Unit 1 project.”[4]

The Sierra Club of Canada criticized the report for not attributing any blame to the problems of nuclear technology, noting that there were no energy or environmental experts appointed to the panel.[5]

Numerous changes in executive-level staff and project management strategy were undertaken for the follow-on project to refurbish Unit 1. The experience of refurbishing Pickering A Unit 1 was significantly different from Unit 4, with a much tighter adherence to schedule and budget. Unit 1 was returned to service in November 2005 providing 542 MW of generating capacity for Ontario's electricity system.

In August 2005, the OPG Board of Directors announced that Units 2 and 3 would not be refurbished due to specific technical and cost risks surrounding the material condition of these two units.

From what I read on another site, no food is allowed inside as it may become contaminated with radioactive dust particles. I hope Quest and her man move on!
19551  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: YARD SALES CAN BE DANGEROUS TO YOUR HEALTH on: 30-Aug-10, 05:01:43 PM
rofl   Yeah we're quaint depending on your definition of the word!  harhar
   I told Donna just yesterday that sometimes I have difficulty understanding your english. But then I have the same problem with New Jerseys lingo too!  laugh  Right Donna!  Wink

Boy are you up the Crick! No, it's you all that have the accent.
19552  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Found this on facebook: Ireland Birdwatch Portmarnock on: 30-Aug-10, 08:24:14 AM
Glossy Ibis

I am so not knowing birds: never heard of this one either.

Mystery Bird...any guesses?

Falcon in Ballybunnion


19553  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Jeff's in Antarctica PT 2 on: 30-Aug-10, 08:06:55 AM
Jeff ready to go outside

Volcano: MT Erbus

Tracks

I like this one

Jeff on duty

I'm waiting for the Penguins and Seals: Soon  Temperature:      -25 °F  right now. Crisp!
19554  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: YARD SALES CAN BE DANGEROUS TO YOUR HEALTH on: 30-Aug-10, 07:56:13 AM


Quote
And I refuse to buy cards that do not say "Merry Christmas". (That oughta put the Cat in the Dustbin in with the Poisoned Pigeons...)

 clap thumbsup 2thumbsup
19555  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 30-Aug-10, 07:44:33 AM
MAK reports Archer on base of Mercury. 7:30am
19556  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Dead pelicans wash ashore with possible human-caused injuries (NC) on: 30-Aug-10, 06:34:09 AM
Someone operating a white speedboat Thursday afternoon might be responsible for killing several brown pelicans that washed ashore, according to police in Carolina Beach. Nine dead pelicans with obvious injuries were found on the beach near the town’s pier between 2 and 4 p.m. Thursday, said Carolina Beach Police Chief William Younginer.

The pelican deaths appeared to have been intentionally caused by a boater, he said.

“We had a report that somebody on the pier saw a speedboat, kind of a white boat with a center console, go between two shrimp boats and hit six of them,” Younginer said. “It appeared they did it on purpose.”

Younginer said he notified the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries and the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and the wildlife agency is investigating the incident.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services monitors the population of brown pelicans, which used to be listed as an endangered species but was delisted because of a recovery in the species’ numbers, according to the agency’s website.

But pelicans are protected under the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which makes it illegal for anyone to kill or harm them or to attempt to do so.

In January, 10 injured pelicans washed up on several Brunswick County beaches. Their wings had been broken in the same places, and a shorebird rehabilitator said at the time that it appeared humans were involved in the injuries.

Anyone with information about the Carolina Beach case is asked to contact the Carolina Beach Police Department at 458-2540.
19557  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 30-Aug-10, 06:27:38 AM
6:23am MAK/Dan on Broad St Bridge: A & B still in bed. Beauty under SE wing TS.
19558  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Scarlet Tanager: As many questions as answers Letchworth State Park on: 30-Aug-10, 06:13:11 AM
 In the past, I’ve spent a lot of hours in Badgerow Park in Greece, counting fall warblers, for example, and mapping the territories of nesting birds.
It was a lot of fun, and I wouldn’t take back those hours for anything, but it did kind of warp my perspective on the abundance of certain species.
For example, Scarlet Tanagers do not nest in Badgerow because the woodlots are too small and fragmented.
I see them there only as spring and fall migrants, sometimes only one bird each season.
So my impression was that these brilliant songsters, which bring “a touch of the tropics” to our northern forests, were relatively scarce breeders in our region.
Until this summer.
When Cathy McCollumn and I spent a week visiting some of the best birding spots in our area, we heard the hoarse, burry, robin-like song and distinctive chip-burr call of Scarlet Tanagers in lots of places with large tracts of woodland.
They were abundant at Letchworth State Park and at Sterling Nature Center. We heard them along Norway Road, and at Beaver Lake Nature Center near Syracuse, and had a nice closeup look at one near Hemlock Lake Park.
This was all very encouraging, but there are still reasons to be concerned about the future of this colorful songster.
“As a species of the forest interior, it is sensitive to forest fragmentation, suffering high rates of predation and brood parasitism in small forest plots and often absent completely from plots less than a minimum size,” writes Thomas Mowbray in his profile of this species for The Birds of North America series.
For example, like the Wood Thrush and various other woodland species, Scarlet Tanagers are victims of Brown-headed Cowbirds, which lay their eggs in other birds’ nests and let the host parents incubate the eggs and raise the nestlings.
When this happens, the Scarlet Tanagers have much less success raising their own broods.
Cowbird parasitism is heaviest in areas where woodlots are relatively small and fragmented, giving the cowbirds, normally birds of open areas, easier access to the woodland species.
In fact, in the fragmented woodlots of largely rural central Illinois, rates of cowbird parasitism of tanager nests exceeds 80 percent, and these wooded areas are considered, in effect, “population sinks” that do not produce enough young Scarlet Tanagers to replace the adult population.
Project Tanager, conducted by Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, found that in areas where the overall landscape was heavily forested, the minimum size of woodland patches needed by Scarlet Tanagers was less.
However, even when Scarlet Tanagers are found in small woodlots, that does not necessarily mean they will breed successfully. For example, in western New York, pairs could be found in patches of just about any woodland of more than 25 acres, “but fledgling success increased significantly with forest size,” note James Lowe and Ralph Hames in The Second Atlas of Breeding Birds in New York State.
As with many bird species, there are at least as many questions as answers when it comes to determining the best ways to protect Scarlet Tanagers.
“We need a better understanding of what constitutes quality habitat in various forest fragments,” Mowbray writes. Moreover, “almost no quantitative information is available regarding this species during migration or on its tropical wintering grounds.”
How sensitive is this species to fragmentation during migration and on those wintering grounds?

DID YOU KNOW

These are largely insect eaters, feeding on butterfly caterpillars and a variety of adult insects by hovering and gleaning them from leaves and bark, or sallying forth to catch flying insects in midair. When capturing bees and wasps, tanagers have been observed repeatedly beating prey against a branch or other hard surface until it is dead.
However, when insects are not plentiful, these birds will eat earthworms as well as wild and cultivated fruits, and even tender buds.
Both males and females sing. The female song is generally shorter, slightly softer and a little less harsh, Mowbray writes. “Female often sings together with male, immediately answering his song, while gathering nesting material and hunting; sometimes sings with nesting material or food in her beak.”
Scarlet Tanagers prefer to place their thin, loosely-woven, saucer-shaped nests in deciduous trees, among a cluster of leaves on a horizontal branch well out from the trunk, with a clear view of the ground and with clear, open flyways from adjacent trees, according to Mowbray.
The female builds the nest, incubates the clutch of four eggs, and broods the nestlings; however, the male helps with feeding the young and removing their fecal sacs.

What a stunning bird and NOPE, never saw one.

http://php.democratandchronicle.com/blog/birds/?p=3290
19559  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: 30-Aug-10, 06:05:55 AM
Wildlife diary 30th August
August 30th, 2010 by fiona, osprey HQ

Good morning to you all!

It’s another glorious day here this morning, but there is a definite chill in the air. Autumn is just round the corner it seems.
This month has flown by and it’s now that time when seasonal visitor start to make their next journey, including our staff and volunteers! It’a always a sad time for us who stay and have to say goodbye, but happy in the knowledge that they are moving on to start their next chapter with happy memories. We wish Emma and her team of volunteers well on their future ventures and thank them for all their hard word and dedication over the season.
We were reminded that autumn has not yet taken over as an osprey was sighted hunting on the loch this morning. No doubt a migrating individual popping in for a quick fish supper before heading on it’s way. We will continue to see sporadic sightings of visiting osprey right up until mid to late September, by which time ‘our’ birds should finding their ‘feet’ in their wintering grounds.
We have noticed an increased number of geese on the loch of late, but have since been informed that it is a gaggle of feral geese who have been hanging about the area all summer. The group are mainly canada geese, but there are also 4 bar-headed geese, some greylags, a few hybrids and one that looks like a snow goose. Quite the rogue bunch of misfits!
The squirrels continue to entertain us, and I’m quite sure there is at least 1 new kit has appeared in the last week! Squirrels, being mammals are quite capable of having 2 or 3 litters a year and can reproduce throughout the seasons, although it is less likely young will survive during the winter.

Still plenty to see folks, so stay tuned!
Fiona
19560  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Jeff's in Antarctica PT 2 on: 30-Aug-10, 05:49:56 AM
I always thought it to be one big piece of flat ice. I can't wait for more pics. They have bars and bowling alleys and movies....(who knew)?

We all do know that Antartica is a Continent (the 5th largest) - a land mass with mountains and a LOT of snow and ice?

Ahhh, I know but in my minds (eye), it always seemed flat and never-ending. It's BEAUTIFUL!   I'd LOVE to go there.
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