THE FORUM

20-Apr-23, 08:25:58 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 ... 1328 1329 1330 1331 [1332] 1333 1334 1335 1336 ... 1692
19966  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Aug-10, 09:13:42 AM
Close up, Beauty
19967  Support / Camera Problems / Re: Cams 2 & 3 Stuck *REPORTED* on: 02-Aug-10, 09:12:27 AM
Fixed

Thank you so much Shaky.
19968  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Aug-10, 09:11:56 AM
Archer
See Bobbie, they always come back to the nest.
19969  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Aug-10, 09:08:27 AM
Beauty stays for a few minutes after, pondering.
19970  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Aug-10, 09:02:51 AM
Bowing
Archer leaves
19971  Rochester Falcons / Rfalconcam Now / Correction A & B there 8:55 on: 02-Aug-10, 08:55:55 AM
We know where 2 are
19972  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 02-Aug-10, 08:54:49 AM
Beauty visits again 8:51
A & B there now
19973  Rochester Falcons / Rfalconcam Now / Beauty @ nest box 8:51 on: 02-Aug-10, 08:51:50 AM
 clap
19974  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Callidora question on: 02-Aug-10, 06:54:52 AM
Logged on this morning to get the news of Callidora - when was she last seen? Keeping my fingers crossed! And (sorry if I missed this...) how is Jemison doing?

Thanks, Gang!

Bobbie

Hi Bobbie, Callidora has not been seen since Sat at 2:30, she was on Mercury whining. Jemison is in a flight cage by now practicing flying. I think it was for 2 weeks, 1 week left if I'm correct. Hoping to hear soon how she is doing with that. Miss them both.
19975  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Early migration benefits North Jersey bird lovers on: 02-Aug-10, 06:39:35 AM
You going?

Hmmm, good question.
19976  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 02-Aug-10, 06:27:25 AM
6:25: Archer left, Beauty now under SW wing TS.
19977  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: 02-Aug-10, 06:23:55 AM
Osprey Diary 2nd August
August 2nd, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT

  What a relief this morning to find, after my four days off, that all our ospreys are still here at Lowes. As many of you will be aware, our female is usually the first to leave for her southward migration, leaving Dad to supervise the ‘teenagers’ last few weeks training. Who can blame her after all that enforced stillness on the nest during incubation and the chick stage.

In the past our female has left as early as the last days of July and as late as mid August. What her timing this year will be is the big question- will she linger in order to build more strength, or will the instinct to fly south be too strong? It is highly unlikely she will stay into autumn however, as an osprey would be unable to survive the winter here in Scotland.

All you eager eyed bloggers and webcam viewers- We need your help! We’d like to keep an accurate track of her appearances on the nest over the next wee while, so we will be able to judge when she is getting ready to leave, so tell us when you see her on the nest. Below is a refresher of ‘who’s who’ to help you identify her.

Adult ospreys: dark solid chocolate upper plumage.

Juveniles: each upper feather fringed with pale edges.

Male; a green leg ring with 7y on one leg, a metal one on the other leg. Smaller.

Female ; no leg rings, and a distinctive ‘v’ shape dark pattern on her forehead.  Larger

Emma Rawling,Perthshire Ranger

P.S. full marks to our wee osprey chick ’slim’ who managed to keep TWO pike to himself last night, despite ‘greedy’ sibling being on the nest too- well done mate!
19978  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Early migration benefits North Jersey bird lovers on: 02-Aug-10, 06:21:21 AM
While humans are settling in to the heart of the summer season, "summer" is basically over for shorebirds, which have already begun the hard work of fall migration. (cont.)

http://www.northjersey.com/news/99606744_Early_migration_benefits_North_Jersey_bird_lovers.html?page=all

Birds feeding along the Maryland shoreline.
19979  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 02-Aug-10, 06:01:31 AM
MAK/Dan: Broad St bridge. A under NE wing TS.
19980  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Starving female chick found, recovering after nest goes down near Cuyahoga on: 01-Aug-10, 09:01:46 PM
A pair of bald eagles may have built a nest this year along the Cuyahoga River near a Cleveland steel mill.
No one found the nest and it may have come down in early June during heavy storms, said Damon Greer of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources' Division of Wildlife.
The best evidence: a young bald eagle chick that was found alone on the ground at the ArcelorMittal Cleveland complex in the industrial Flats area, he said.
The weeks-old eagle, starving and under attack by parasitic bugs, was taken to the Lake Erie Nature and Science Center in Bay Village and then transferred to the Medina Raptor Center in Chatham Township.
There the young female eagle was fed and regained strength, said director Laura Jordan. ''It was in bad shape when it got here,'' she said.
It appears that the uninjured bird was almost old enough to start flying but its pectoral muscles were not yet fully developed, she said.
The dark-headed young eagle is now at the Tennessee-based American Eagle Foundation facility where she is learning to hunt before being returned to the wild, she said.
Greer said that state wildlife officers in early May were on the Interstate 90 bridge in Cleveland checking on nesting peregrine falcons and saw adult bald eagles flying south with fish in early May.
That was a pretty good sign that a pair of birds had built a nest and were attempting to raise young, he said.
It appears likely that the nest was along the Cuyahoga River between Valley View and Cleveland, perhaps close
to the steel complex, he said. A number of large trees came down in thunderstorms in early June and ended up in the Cuyahoga River and it is possible that the eagle nest was in a tree that came down.
That would explain the young bird being found alone, no evidence of a nest and the adult birds abandoning the area, he said.
''Anything's possible today,'' Greer said. Years ago, eagles would try to avoid contact with humans, but that seems to be disappearing as competition grows for the best nesting spots and eagles are increasingly willing to share space with humans.
It is highly likely that the adult birds involved in raising the Cleveland youngster were a pair seen last spring north of Akron in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, he said.
The federal park already has one nesting pair of bald eagles. There is a nest in the Pinery Narrows area north of state Route 82 and west of the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland Metroparks' Brecksville Reservation.
The pair had two chicks this year, said Lisa Romaniuk of North Ridgeville, who monitors that nest and four others in Cuyahoga, Lorain and Erie counties.
The nest in the national park had failed in 2009.
Summit County also hatched its first bald eagles and may have a second nest.
The Nimisila nest — unsuccessful the last three years — had two chicks, said volunteer Tom Henry, who monitored the nest.
There is a report of a new nest off Cuyahoga Street on the border between Akron and Cuyahoga Falls, but wildlife officials do not know if any young came from it this year, said Andrea Tibbels of the Ohio Division of Wildlife.
The Wingfoot Lake nest in Portage County's Suffield Township was also successful for the first time, Henry said. That nest had also failed the last three years.
This year, the nest produced at least one chick. Once leaves came out, it was impossible to tell whether there were additional chicks, said Henry, who is retired from the Division of Wildlife.
Nests at Walborn Reservoir in Stark County's Marlboro Township and near Lake Milton in southeast Portage County were also successful, said volunteer James Kavelaris, 67, of Atwater Township.
The Walborn nest produced two chicks as did the Portage County nest, he said.
The Walborn nest is one of the most visible eagle nests in Northeast Ohio. It is 90 feet up in a white pine tree and the Stark County Park District has built a small viewing platform at 13606 Marlboro Avenue NE. Hours are 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Visitors cannot get closer than the deck. You will still need binoculars or spotting scopes to watch the birds that will be about 400 yards away.
A Medina County nest, in its second year, produced at least one eaglet. It is near Chippewa Lake and produced two young in 2009.
A nest in Cleveland Metroparks' Rocky River Reservation near Cleveland Hopkins Airport raised one eaglet, Romaniuk reported.
A nest at Killbuck Marsh in southern Wayne County produced one eaglet, Tibbels said.
The Breakneck Creek nest in southern Portage County produced three eaglets; a new nest at the old Ravenna Arsenal east of Ravenna produced one; and no information was available on a nest at Lake Rockwell north of Kent.
In 2010, the state can confirm 180 nests with 207 eaglets, but those totals are much higher and the state cannot say for certain what the numbers are, she said. Thirty-three new nests were reported.
In 2009, Ohio had a record 215 nests, of which 113 were known to produce young. What happened at 55 nests was unknown. A minimum of 197 eaglets were hatched and fledged or left the nest on their own. There were 32 new nests.
Ohio had a record 222 eaglets in 2008.
In 1979, Ohio had just four nests on Lake Erie because of loss of habitat and pesticides. Four years ago, the eagle was removed from the federal endangered species list after its comeback.
Watching eagle nests is a time-consuming activity, said the 52-year-old Romaniuk, who has monitored nests for 10 years.
She spends one to three hours at each of her nests at least four times a week. ''You learn to know your birds and they're all different,'' she said.
Monitoring bald eagles is a labor of love for Kavelaris.
He spends up to 60 hours a year watching the eagles at his two nests, determining what's going on by watching their body language with a spotting scope.
''I've been doing it for 16 years and it's contagious,'' he said. ''Seeing an eagle in the wild is a pretty awesome thing to see. I got goose bumps after I saw my first one. It's a bird that's 36 to 40 inches from head to tail and with a wing span of 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 feet. It's majestic. When I see one, I hear that Johnny Denver song, Rocky Mountain High, and that's the way I feel. I almost get a lightheaded buzz. . . . It's fun but it's almost addicting.''
Pages: 1 ... 1328 1329 1330 1331 [1332] 1333 1334 1335 1336 ... 1692
Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Sponsored By

Times Square
powered by Shakymon