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20296  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: July 4th Weekend On Ocracoke Island, NC on: 11-Jul-10, 11:56:55 AM
http://rfalconcam.com/forum/index.php?topic=621.120

When my friend Jeff was in Antarctica, he sent me a pic o a Fata Morgana...see it here
20297  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / One Fledged!! YAY on: 11-Jul-10, 08:14:26 AM
First chick takes to the skies!
July 11th, 2010 by fiona, osprey HQ

Hi folks,

If you were watching you will have seen chick no.1 spread its wings, hover above the nest and then fly free at 9:09am this morning! I will update you all more in a bit when I get everything else here sorted. Anyone else feeling emotional?!
Fiona

Well what a morning! When I got here at 8:40am, I just knew the conditions were right for a first flight, and both chicks were enjoying the fresh breeze, feeling the ‘wind beneath their wings’! I had sat by the video recorder for about 15mins and decided to get some work done and just as I sat down to count the money, the chick vanished from the screen! You’ll notice it took a while to find where it fly off too as mum had flown back onto her perch, just to confuse me! This was probably to be a landing beacon to the chick. It made a few attempts to land on various trees but the wind proved to strong and blew it over the top off them. An initial attempt was made to land on the nest, which it overshot by a long way, and I admit to having a giggle at that. But after another flight round about the loch, it came in for another attempt and made an almost perfect landing! Lady looked like a proud mum watching their child take it’s first steps while chick no.2 cowered in the nest looking slightly petrified! We just have to hope it plucks up the courage to follow suit, and today would be the perfect day to do so.

There was a lot of confusion as to whether one chick had flown last night, but I have had a look back at the footage and they did spend a lot of time on the edge of the nest just out of camera range of cam1. This is our night vision camera which gets switched on when we leave at night. Unfortunately it appears to have been blown to the right which we won’t be able to correct until the winter when we get up the tree to do some maintenance, so apologies for the poor picture your getting at night.

Keep your eyes peeled for flight number 2!
Fiona
20298  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 11-Jul-10, 06:17:25 AM
6:00 MAK/Dan. Callidora was doing her morning exercises, flying all over. Landed on Widow's walk then moved on to FCT. High Falls are flowing fast from all the rain.  No A B yet.
20299  Anything Else / Totally OT / Oscar, the British cat who steals underwear, reported to police by his owners on: 10-Jul-10, 03:59:55 PM
Oscar the cat has been reported to police by its owners for stealing underwear.

Forget catnip. This frisky feline has a penchant for frilly undies.

Seems Oscar, a 13-year old British kitty, has been swiping his neighbors unmentionables - and just about anything else he can get his paws on.

"He was very proud that he had found these presents for us and would drop them at our feet," Owner Peter Weismantel, 72, of Southampton, told the Daily Mirror.

So far, the fuzzy cat burglar has swiped more than 70 items, from socks to rubber gloves. Last week, he brought home 10 pairs of children's underwear.

Worried that their neighbors would suspect something more perverse was afoot, Weismantel reported klepto kitty to the police.

"The officer I spoke to thought it was pretty amusing, but he could see why I was worried," Weismantel said.

He and his wife, Birgitt, have been fostering Oscar since last Christmas. Despite his naughty knicker thieving habit, the couple still plan to adopt him.

"He's got a lovely personality," Birgitt Weismantel, 56, said. "If anyone is missing any underwear, it would be good to put their minds at rest that it's only a cat pinching them and not someone more unpleasant."

The couple has held on to the pilfered items in hopes of one day reuniting them with their rightful owners.

Oscar, meanwhile, remains on the prowl.


Oscar the cat has been reported to police by its owners for stealing underwear.



20300  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Jemison Headed to Rehab on: 10-Jul-10, 12:52:03 PM
What great news! Gosh, he's so cute. Thanks!
20301  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: 600 miles just to eat? It's a daily feat for a barn swallow on: 10-Jul-10, 12:15:00 PM
Hey dale, your tiny URL took me to Lou's colorama album...the first link was yours. Smiley

Pic 3 and 5 are quite adorable...love their faces...look like popeye

20302  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: 10-Jul-10, 11:39:18 AM
Osprey diary 10th July
July 10th, 2010 by fiona, osprey HQ

Good morning all!

It’s another fairly dreich day here today and not a lot of wind.  Will that put our chicks off their maiden flights or will they decide to take the plunge?  Our fingers are poised, ready to record the big event, so we’re hoping it will be during the day when we are actually here, unlike last year when the eldest chick decided to wait 20 minutes after we left for the evening!  You’ll notice Lady spending much more of her time off the nest and this is to encourage the chicks to follow her.  Dad will also bring less food so they have some incentive to leave.

There have been many questions regarding what happens after fledging, so here are a few pointers.

    * once the chicks fledge, they will continue to return to the nest to receive food deliveries for dad, who will bring in whole, live fish and leave the chicks to work on their feeding skills.
    * They will practice fishing and if they’re lucky might even catch a fish or two!
    * Mum usually leaves first, at the beginning of August, but we are unsure what she will do this year.  She may wait a bit longer to build up her strength, or she may not migrate at all.
    * The young will spend less and less time on the nest and from mid-August onwards, they will start to migrate.
    * Dad will leave first with the chicks following, but once on migration they are on their own.
    * It will take anywhere up to 8 weeks for them to make the full migration to their winter roosting spot, with females making more stopovers than males (hence the earlier departure).
    * They will fly predominantly during the day, but may fly at night, particularly over bodies of water.
    * The young will spend the first 3 – 5 years in their wintering grounds until they are sexually mature, and then return to the UK to breed.
    * They will head in the direction of their nest site, finding their own sites and partners on the way, starting the cycle all over again!
20303  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 10-Jul-10, 10:50:17 AM
How totally sweet for Miss Callidora to come for a visit.
20304  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 10-Jul-10, 06:33:40 AM
6:30 MAK/Dan: Callidora back on FCT..must have swallowed breakfast whole. Didn't take long.
20305  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / 600 miles just to eat? It's a daily feat for a barn swallow on: 10-Jul-10, 06:30:00 AM
A bald eagle soared along the spine of the river. Ospreys in the tree overhead watched warily, but didn't move from their nest. On the dock, we looked on as well, delighted to be returning to the peaceful rhythms of this wide tidal river. Virtually lost against this majestic backdrop, a handful of much smaller birds coursed about, seemingly oblivious to both the predators and their human observers.

The little birds with long, pointed wings swooped and swirled, executing acrobatic turns with precision and deadly accuracy. They were hawking insects that swarmed above the water, eating buzzing bugs with extraordinary efficiency. These precision flyers were wasting no time watching the eagle glide downriver. A half dozen of them continued to flit about in their pursuit of the endless bounty of the insects.

The barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) is the most widely distributed and abundant swallow in the world.

Along this stretch of the river, we also saw tree and northern rough-winged swallows. Cliff and bank swallows are also found nearby. A farmhouse down the road has a purple martin house that is crammed with occupants.

The world may be full of flying insects, but members of the swallow family do their best to manage the population explosion. Ornithologists have estimated that a single barn swallow can cover 600 miles daily during its constant swirling flight in pursuit of insects. The birds swarming about the dock seemed to be well on their way to that impressive mileage figure.

The sight of swarming swallows is common across the country at this time of year. This stands in stark contrast with the dead of winter, when not a single swallow will be seen. Without the plentiful insects of summer, these birds have nothing to eat. When the weather turns cold, swallows turn south.

The barn swallow breeds throughout the United States except for the Gulf Coast. Its range extends well into Canada. The birds winter in South America. Some barn swallows fly all the way to the tip of Argentina in their endless pursuit of their insect prey.

Barn swallows are relatively easy to identify. They are the only swallows with deeply forked tails. The birds are a dark, iridescent blue on top that transitions to black in the tail and trailing edges of their wings. They have rusty throats with matching forehead patches. The males have a dusky orange underneath while the females show white. Both sexes were displaying their aerial skills near the dock where we stood transfixed.

Barn swallows once built their nests along the rocky edges of streams. As their name suggests, today they are more readily found in barns.

But they are not limited to these rustic structures. The birds circling about us probably roost in the abandoned boat house rusting away next to this aging dock. A short distance downriver, barn swallows have made their nests under a dock, carefully placing them just above the reach of high tides.

Barn swallows' nests are made of wet soil. The birds fill their beaks full of mud and construct a cup that they attach to a cross beam or a man-made shelf. They are monogamous, and both male and female construct the nest. Once it is built, the female lays four to five eggs, which she will incubate for about two weeks. The male may share some of the nesting duties when he is not busy bringing bugs back to the nest for his mate's consumption.

After hatching, the chicks need only three weeks before they are ready to fledge.

That relatively quick breeding period allows the adults in the Chesapeake region to have a second brood most years. In contrast, the barn swallows at the northern extreme of their breeding range in Canada will start their migration south as early as July, cutting short their ability to raise a second brood.

The barn swallows swarming about us had wrested my attention away from the commanding presence of the bald eagle and the wary osprey. Throughout the small drama, the barn swallows mindlessly went about their business of hawking insects.

The barn swallows are content to know their place in the world and take full advantage of it.

Why do we find it so hard to be comfortable fitting into our niche in the world? These barn swallows will soon be sated.

I wish I were as easily satisfied.

20306  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 10-Jul-10, 06:18:47 AM
6:05am MAK and Dan witnessed another successful food transfer between Beauty & Callidora by the Frontier Comm Tower. Took 3 tries but she got it. Go Callidora!
20307  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / My Witt's End Cute blog with Chad & Chris on: 10-Jul-10, 06:11:30 AM
http://mywittsend.blogspot.com/  Scroll down to "Just one of those days"

How cool!
20308  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 10-Jul-10, 05:55:22 AM
5:50 am MAK: NO Dan No falcons. (yet).
20309  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: The extraordinary high-definition images of exotic creatures in flight on: 09-Jul-10, 11:05:06 PM
I liked the eagle best and I think the Blue Fronted Amazon would be a great tatoo. Thanks Donna! wave

I'm still trying to find the right "KAVER" picture for my next tattoo...LOL
20310  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Jemison Has Broken Shoulder, Says Vet on: 09-Jul-10, 09:49:53 PM
How is Jemison? Has anyone heard? I'm sure he's fine and eating like a falcon but just checking.
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