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23836  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Falcons could be evicted from their Brighton home (sussex) on: 24-Jan-10, 12:36:49 PM
http://www.petitionspot.com/petitions/PeregrineFalcons/

petition for saving the nest box.
23837  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Feathered friends roost in senior's custom house on: 24-Jan-10, 08:20:59 AM
It's an impressive looking home with a cupola on top, four rooms, eight windows and a tranquil white picket fence in the front. It's beautifully painted: white with green trim. It looks like something you'd see in an architect's magazine.

There's just one problem if you're thinking of checking it out on a real estate Web site. The sign on the front is the giveaway: "WHERE OUR FEATHERED FRIENDS MEET"

It's the new birdhouse in the memorial rose garden in front of the Mary Phillips Senior Center in Temecula that's earning the rave reviews. The sign is perfect, given the center's motto: "a place where friends meet."

Wayne Bershaw of Temecula spent more than 100 hours creating the 2-foot-by-2-foot birdhouse. It's easy to see why, given how elaborate it looks. It's even more impressive considering that he built it for free.

"It looks like a condo," recreation supervisor Candice Flohr said.

Bershaw isn't done yet with his good deeds at the center. A new community garden is in the works and he's planning to accessorize it with another of his birdhouse creations.

At 86, Bershaw has more experience working with wood than most of us have with life. He learned his talent in a wood-making class in high school in Idaho about 70 years ago.

Over those many years he has built lots of furniture, including a complete bedroom set. He has put together more than 100 birdhouses and lately he's also been churning out lots of butcher blocks and lazy Susans.

Bershaw proudly keeps an inventory of his wares on his digital camera. All he wants when he sells them is to cover his material costs.

The inspiration for his first birdhouse was the feathered friends who were making a mess on an overhang at his house. He built them their own place instead.

Bershaw estimated that he spends about 30 hours a week on his woodwork.

"My wife (Mary) will say it's 60," he said with an impish grin.

His work involves fine motor skills, especially crafting the tiny cedar shingles he sticks on the roofs of some birdhouses. He's constantly working with saws, though he has learned to be more careful since he partially severed a finger about 18 months ago and went to the hospital to have the dangling digit sewed back. Now he only works with saws when his wife is around.

Bershaw said his work keeps him sharp mentally. It's easy to see why, given that his bird places look like real houses and even a saloon, complete with small steps and a sign advertising its use.

Then there is the senior center condo project that has the kind of upgrades found only in a model home.

"That one got a little out of hand," he conceded.

One reason is that Bershaw cares so much about the center. He met his wife there and worked at the center for a couple years as a recreation assistant before retiring three years ago.

Retiring is a relative term for Bershaw, who spent much of his work life as western states operations manager for a home health care company.

"I've got to be doing something," he said. "You can sit around and wither away, but I'm not going to do that."

His many feathered friends can attest to that.   thumbsup

I can't upload the pic of the bird house, I get an error saying the upload folder is full. Gee, I wonder why?  Embarrassed
23838  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Penguins rally for comeback (Australia) on: 24-Jan-10, 08:09:56 AM

23 Jan, 2010 04:00 AM
AN encouraging number of fairy penguins was recorded at Warrnambool's Middle Island this week, despite a cruel attack on the small colony 10 days ago.

Last week environmental workers found three penguin chicks dead and dozens of nests crushed after vandals went on a violent rampage across the island.

Warrnambool City Council environmental officer David Williams said about 120 birds were counted waddling onto the island's shore - a record since the unique Maremma dog project started.

"When the Maremma program started four years ago, there were only four penguins," Mr Williams said. "Now the numbers are increasing with each breeding season."

In the world-first initiative, two sisters of the Italian canine breed have been working to keep predatory foxes away from the vulnerable birds.

The Maremma s are regularly let loose on the island to mark their scent over the special territory.

Mr Williams told The Standard the pair would eventually live on the island for extended periods of time to ensure the penguin's breeding season went uninterrupted.

"The dogs are nearing maturity and will spend the majority of their time on the island next breeding season," Mr Williams said.

However, the population of the penguin colony has been put at constant risk as vandals and trespassers ignore the island's restrictive laws.

A council bylaw prohibits any access to the island but it seems the message is not getting through.

Mr Williams said humans were turning out to be bigger problems than foxes and wild dogs, prompting security cameras to be installed to catch trespassers.

"There are CCTV cameras installed in various locations across the island and people face a hefty fine if caught trespassing," he said.

More than 300 law-abiding participants attended the Meet-the-Maremmas summer program earlier this month.

The daily tours gave participants an insight into the life of a Maremma and the importance of the little penguin colony.

Mr Williams hoped the tours had educated the public enough to help protect the precious rookery.

You have to be a sick sadistic non-human to do this.  crying
23839  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Update on nesting program on: 23-Jan-10, 08:13:28 PM

Posted By LAMBTON WILDLIFE INC.
Posted 13 hours ago
   

The Peregrine Falcon is one of the world's fastest animals. It has been clocked diving for prey at speeds of 160 kilometres per hour.

Unfortunately, this amazing bird is very uncommon.

In the 1950s, Peregrine numbers began to drop and by the mid-1960s the falcon had disappeared from Ontario. Eventually, it was discovered that the pesticide DDT was responsible for the birds' decline.

It has come to symbolize the plight of many species threatened by pollution and there have been major recovery efforts in North America.

In order to safeguard the species, it has been designated by the Ontario Government as a species at risk and its habitat has been protected by regulation.

Peregrines are crow-sized birds with a slate-blue back and a cream-coloured chest.

They have a dark head with a black wedge extending below the eye, which makes them look like they are wearing a helmet.

Peregrine Falcons have pointed wings that span about one meter.

Peregrines nest on tall, steep cliff ledges close to large bodies of water and on structures such as tall buildings and bridges.

The majority of Ontario's breeding population is located around Lake Superior, however some can be found nesting in Toronto, London and Sarnia.

Cities offer Peregrines a good year-round supply of pigeons and starlings to feed on.

Recently, Peregrines have had success nesting on the northerly span of the Blue Water Bridge, thanks to the efforts of Port Huron's Blue Water Audubon Society which has built and maintained a nesting platform on the bridge.

Also thanks to the cooperation of Blue Water Bridge authorities.

An amazing flier, Peregrine Falcons can overtake flying prey with ease.

You can often see them perched on or near the Cargill grain elevator while they wait for a pigeon dinner.

It takes a lot of work to become an excellent flier and the young birds often put on amazing aerial displays as they seem to frolic with each other and their parents.

For some reason, they usually have the sky to themselves as potential prey keep an eye out, for their own good.

On Monday evening, Kariann Anderson, a former Southeastern Michigan Peregrine Falcon Coordinator for the Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Division, State of Michigan, will update the success of the Peregrine Falcon nesting program on the Blue Water Bridge.

The event is being sponsored by Lambton Wildlife.

The "Blue Water Bridge Peregrenes" presentation will be held on Jan. 25, at 7:30 p.m., at the YMCA Careers and Learning Centre, 660 Oakdale Ave.(just north of Hwy. 402, east off Colborne Road to Guthrie Drive and Court Street).

The general public is welcome.

Admission is free.
23840  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Hope for Animals and Their World by Jane Goodall on: 23-Jan-10, 08:09:40 PM

Published: 6:15AM GMT 23 Jan 2010


The conservationists whose work is celebrated in Jane Goodall’s book have demonstrated all manner of brave, messy, patient, self-sacrificing and occasionally rather barmy-sounding behaviour in their battle to preserve the Earth’s biodiversity. Some crawl through poison ivy to examine the faeces of rare wolves. Some risk death clinging to cliff faces in howling gales to peer into the nests of seabirds. One reptile lover gave the kiss of life to a crocodile.

The story that sticks most in my mind is that of William Heinrich, who had an unusual relationship with a peregrine falcon named Beer Can (BC) participating in Cornell University’s breeding programme in the Seventies. Several times a day Heinrich would climb up to one of the nesting ledges in BC’s chamber, carrying a dead bird. When BC flew over to accept the offering, Heinrich had to make eye contact with him while imitating the “eeeeeee-chip” falcon courtship call, then bow so that his head was level with the ledge. At which point (after a little practice) BC would mount Heinrich’s head and make a deposit in the man’s uniquely designed “copulation hat”. The bird, raised in captivity and consequently baffled by female birds, went on to become the first voluntary sperm donor in North America’s Peregrine Fund and went on to sire scores of birds from a spectacular species that had become extinct across eastern America.
   bguitar mbanana 2funny clap
After decades of research as a primatologist, Goodall has campaigned for conservation since the late Eighties. So much of the news she hears and has to pass on is bad. Forests are being felled, seabeds dredged and ice caps melted. She acknowledges that we are heading towards “the sixth great extinction”, this time caused by humans. In the face of global-scale habitat destruction, she knows how easy it can be to despair and to feel that it’s impossible to make a difference. So in 2002 she began collecting a few upbeat stories for what was intended to be a slender work and ended up with enough to fill this whopping volume.
I boggled at how close to the brink some of these species had come – and how well they had recovered with intelligent human intervention. Goodall tells of a tree – the last of its kind – which had almost been grazed to death by goats and was finally killed by a forest fire, yet, with a little help from horticulturists, found the strength to produce seeds from its last branch and survived. And who could fail to be moved by the tale of New Zealand’s “Old Blue” – the female black robin – whose co-operation with a biologist’s ingeniously planned avian adultery ensured the survival of her kind.

But although Hope for Animals and Their World is packed with great deeds, it isn’t a great read. Goodall and her co-authors are kind, succinct and accurate purveyors of information, but they’re not very writerly when it comes to capturing the unique natures of the often exotic creatures they want to inspire us to help save, or the personalities of their human advocates.

As Goodall crosses continents visiting conservationists, she’s so nice she feels the need to give credit to a lot of “lovely” wives and husbands and give thanks for the “lovely” meals she’s served, generating a tone that’s more “round robin” than black robin.

That said, I was impressed by the honest way she wrote about her motivation to conserve. Although she can make all the usual logical arguments for the importance of biodiversity, she is bold enough to be emotional, even spiritual. For Goodall, and so many of her colleagues, it is simply about love. She includes an old photo of a chimpanzee reaching out to her and writes of how her “heart melted”. We see images of grown men cuddling flightless parrots. We applaud the guy causing a stink on American ferries in tourist season with his boxes of rotting quails' carcases full of endangered burying beetles. We cheer on the Columbian charity that clears plastic bags from the rainforest and helps local women make a profit by crocheting them into tote bags.

It seems small but collectively it could be huge. And if we feel this glow of goodness reading about the work of others, how great would we feel to participate? The book ends with a list of ways we can get involved. For by nurturing nature, she argues, surely we nurture our own souls.

Hope for Animals and Their World: How Endangered Species Are Being Rescued from the Brink

by Jane Goodall    Shocked Shocked Shocked WOW
23841  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Horse giving birth now on: 23-Jan-10, 08:02:18 PM
Ok Shaky, she doesn't look like a cow anymore. She has a coat on.
23842  Rochester Falcons / Rfalconcam Website News / Re: Camera updates on: 23-Jan-10, 07:55:45 PM
Hi Everyone,
Nice pictures.  A good perspective on how the cameras view the works.
Orville looks pretty happy !!
Lola
 thumbsup



Hope Beauty & Archer accept Orville just as Mariah & Kaver did. Speaking of Mariah?? Any news?
23843  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Migratory birds ending up on dining tables at city restaurants (INDIA) :( on: 23-Jan-10, 07:53:48 PM
Shocked  Cry


 viking these (I can't think of a word bad enough) need to be caught and punished. I don't know maybe doing to them what they did to the birds.

Ohhh, I can think of plenty. Yeah, sew their eyelids shut....not enough punishment.
23844  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Dozens Of Migratory Birds Shot, Dumped Near Texas Lake on: 23-Jan-10, 07:31:41 PM
snarl

I know BC.
23845  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: Blackwater Eagles are back on: 23-Jan-10, 07:30:58 PM

[/quote]

WooHoo!  More Eagles for Maryland!   happy happy
[/quote]

1002 eagles now, so far..... eagle eagle2
23846  Member Activities / Pets / Re: Falcon Watcher's Pets on: 23-Jan-10, 07:27:12 PM
This is my last Nacha´s portrait.
Hope you like it!
Mirta

Pritty Kitty Mirta...THANKS  thumbsup
23847  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Horse giving birth now on: 23-Jan-10, 06:00:28 PM

IT's A GIRL!!   gum rose rose yippee flowers
[/quote]

It's a cow!
[/quote]

That's what I thought when I first saw it...cross bred...LOL

23848  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: time lapse movies on: 23-Jan-10, 04:22:56 PM
These are really cool!  Check out the Alps at night!

http://www.magictimelapse.ch/v2/en/index.htm

WOW, these are amazing jeanne. My fav is the second one at night, with all the shooting stars.  thanks2 wow
23849  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Horse giving birth now on: 23-Jan-10, 03:03:27 PM
Water broken  hyper

FOAL is finally OUT!!!!    bow bow notworthy thumbsup silly

IT's A GIRL!!   gum rose rose yippee flowers
23850  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Horse giving birth now on: 23-Jan-10, 03:01:13 PM
Water broken  hyper

FOAL is finally OUT!!!!    bow bow notworthy thumbsup silly
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