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24256  Member Activities / Puzzles / Re: Puzzle of the Week 234 - It's busy at the feeder on: 14-Dec-09, 06:38:26 PM
Hi Donna,

Quote
I did auto solve as I have to go babysit now.

You're lazy.  Wink

My time 1.02 (20 pieces classic)


Greetings
Annette

Yes Annette, I am! I'm also impatient and have to see the pic....quick. Later on, I go back and do the puzzles.  silly
24257  Member Activities / Puzzles / Re: Puzzle of the Week 234 - It's busy at the feeder on: 14-Dec-09, 02:49:52 PM
Very nice Aafke..........I did auto solve as I have to go babysit now. Thanks for the great puzzles.
   stupid
24258  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest on: 14-Dec-09, 02:37:20 PM
Lennoxman says:
December 14, 2009 at 10:20 am

I wondered why Quest was hanging out over the water, now it makes sense. The reason the air temperature readings are higher than expected might have something to do with the roof vents on top of the power station. It’s actually quite balmy at certain locations on the roof. We just installed a new surveillance camera near the front gate of the station which is capable of being pointed at the nest box. The camera has an excellent zoom function so I’m hoping that we’ll finally be able to see her Smiley     clap   

Thank you Lennoxman

Just hope she comes back there for her photo shoot.   pfalcon flash C'mon Quest.

WooHoo!  This will be very exciting, if we can see her!   clap 2thumbsup
24259  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Re: Quest on: 14-Dec-09, 01:27:41 PM
Lennoxman says:
December 14, 2009 at 10:20 am

I wondered why Quest was hanging out over the water, now it makes sense. The reason the air temperature readings are higher than expected might have something to do with the roof vents on top of the power station. It’s actually quite balmy at certain locations on the roof. We just installed a new surveillance camera near the front gate of the station which is capable of being pointed at the nest box. The camera has an excellent zoom function so I’m hoping that we’ll finally be able to see her Smiley     clap   

Thank you Lennoxman
24260  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Allen's Hummingbird at Leola, Lancaster County, PA on: 14-Dec-09, 01:09:34 PM
http://home.earthlink.net/~pomarine/id93.html  PICS


Birders humming over discovery here
First of its kind ever verified in Pennsylvania
   hummer

Scott Weidensaul, a nationally known birdwatcher and author, was in the question-and-answer portion of his talk to the Lancaster County Bird Club Friday night when a woman shot up her hand.

"I have a friend who still has a hummingbird at her feeder," the woman said.

Weidensaul, of Schuylkill Haven, was intrigued. He knew any hummingbird still in these parts in winter just might be a rufous hummingbird, a hummer that lives in Western states but sometimes strays East.

Weidensaul, a licensed bird bander, in fact, had caught and banded five rufous hummers this fall, including one in Ephrata and one in East Earl Township.

Still, Saturday was the last day of deer season and he wanted another chance to get one.

In the end though, Weidensaul drove down to Debra Raudenbush's townhouse outside Leola after the English as a second language teacher at Reamstown Elementary School extended an invitation.

Within 25 minutes of putting out a cage trap, he could not believe what he held in his hand.

It was an Allen's hummingbird, the first one ever verified in Pennsylvania.

The tiny hummer breeds only in coastal California and southwestern Oregon. At this time of year, it should be in over-wintering digs on a mountainous plateau in central Mexico.

Yet, here it was in Pennsylvania Dutch country — and had been, it turns out, happily lapping at Raudenbush's feeder with a homemade batch of sugar water since the end of August.

Now this isn't on par with the 2004 discovery of the presumed extinct ivory-billed woodpecker in an Arkansas swamp.

But the regional birding world is going pretty bonkers.

As word of the discovery spread, Raudenbush looked out her back window into a pouring cold rain first thing Sunday morning to see about a dozen birders with binoculars, spotting scopes and cameras.

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the pinnacle of bird research, dispatched a team to view the healthy female hummer on Sunday.

Those who signed a logbook Raudenbush put out on Sunday showed fans had come from as far away as Pittsburgh and West Virginia.

"I was both excited and had a little trepidation because with the first state record that people have been waiting for for years, I knew it would generate a lot of interest," Weidensaul said.

"I was concerned that when it happened it would be with a cooperative homeowner. The other question is, if they commit, do they know what they're getting into."

Happily, Raudenbush, herself a birder, has extended the welcome mat to fellow birdwatchers. She allows the army to approach within a line of arborvitae trees, about 15 feet away from the feeder on her back deck.

Local police have been notified in case crowd control is needed.

"I actually had a sense that this was something unusual because she showed up after the other hummers had left," Raudenbush, 55, said of her historic feathered freeloader.

"I was expecting it was a rufous. I thought she was a little mixed up."

But she had never heard of an Allen's hummingbird, which is almost identical to the rufous in appearance and habits. Identification is made by checking the width of the outermost tail feather.

She and the unusual visitor have settled into a ritual. She takes the feeder in each night at dark so it doesn't freeze. She hangs the feeder each morning around 5 a.m. Usually, the bird is dipping her beak within minutes.

Weidensaul's theory is that the hummingbird's genetic software that tells a hummingbird when and where to migrate is more than slightly off.

Hummingbirds migrate alone so there was no other of her ilk to keep her on course.

More and more rufous hummingbirds in recent years are wintering farther east along the Gulf Coast.

Weidensaul thinks the local Allen's hummingbird will reluctantly head in that direction by Christmas.

Don't worry about the bird freezing to death in the meantime. The bird is building up fat reserves from the sugar water and insects still around, Weidensaul said.

At night, while she roosts, her body goes into a semi-torpor state, with a slow heartbeat and a body temperature lowered from 108 degrees to 50.

"They look, for all intents and purposes, as if they're dead," Weidensaul said. "They are extremely cold hardy."

And don't fret that the hummer will starve on the journey.

"With a full fat load, one of these birds can fly from here to northern Georgia in about 24 hours without stopping to rest or re-fuel," Weidensaul noted.

There also is a chance the hummer will elect to stay. After all, rufous hummingbirds are known to breed in Alaska's Denali National Park.

But staying could be dangerous.

"Cold weather is dangerous to small birds. If they stay too late and there is a cold snap, it could kill them," Weidensaul said.
24261  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / The World’s Fastest Animal Takes New York on: 14-Dec-09, 01:05:44 PM
The peregrine falcon, whose salvation began 40 years ago, commands the skies above the Empire State Building

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/multimedia/photos/?articleID=79001057&c=y  Pics


I’m standing a thousand feet above the streets of New York City, on the 86th floor observatory deck of the Empire State Building, looking for birds. It’s a few hours after sunset, and New York City naturalist Robert “Birding Bob” DeCandido is leading our small group. We can see the cityscape in every direction as the cool wind tousles our hair, but our gaze is focused up. Migrating songbirds, many of which travel by night to keep cool and avoid predators, are passing high overhead on their autumn journey. DeCandido has taught us how to differentiate the movement of small birds—“See how they flap-flap-glide?” he tells us—from the erratic motions of moths, But there is another denizen of the city’s skies that we’re all hoping to see.
A blur of a bird zips past the western flank of the building, level with the observatory. It’s too fast for a gull, too big for a songbird. Maybe a pigeon. Maybe something else. There is an excited buzz as we fumble with binoculars, unable to track the receding figure.
Ten minutes after that first flash, an unmistakable form draws our eyes directly overhead. Collectively, we cry, “Peregrine!” The falcon is smaller than the red-tailed hawks that live in Central Park, and sleeker, with a long, narrow tail that flares as the bird turns and sharp, pointed wings that propel its body fiercely. It loops around the building, in complete control as it navigates the blustery night air, its undersides transformed into a ghostly white by the upward shine of the building's glaring spotlights. It closes in on a potential perch midway up the spire and then suddenly veers south and disappears into the night.
“Come back,” someone whispers plaintively.
“Show me the top of the food chain,” says another.
There is a reason fighter jets and football teams are named after falcons. At their standard cruising speed of 40 miles per hour, peregrines are apace with pigeons and many other birds that are the basis for their diet, but falcons can go into overdrive in an aerial feat known as a stoop. They rise dozens of feet above their prey, tuck their wings in tightly against their bodies, and dive – a furious, feathered mission. The fastest animal on earth, they have been clocked at over 200 miles per hour as they descend upon their target, balling up their talons to stun their prey and then – supremely agile, able to turn upside down with a quick flip of the wing – scooping up their meal.

Forty years ago, we couldn’t have seen a peregrine falcon from atop the Empire State Building, or anywhere else on the entire East Coast. They were nearly obliterated in the middle of the 20th century by the effects of the pesticide DDT. Seed-eating songbirds fed on treated crops and were in turn eaten by the avian predators hovering at the top of the ecological pyramid. The pesticide didn’t kill adult falcons, but it concentrated in their tissues and interfered with females’ ability to produce strong eggshells. Brooding peregrines, settling down upon their clutches to keep them warm, were crushing their progeny with the weight of their bodies. In 1962, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring was published, warning of the unintended consequences of our new chemical age. By 1964, not a single peregrine falcon was found east of the Mississippi River.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/The-Worlds-Fastest-Animal-Takes-New-York.html?c=y&page=2 continued
24262  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 14-Dec-09, 12:33:36 PM


Main cam is back! Thank you! I was getting used to watching the traffic. Smiley
24263  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A friend of mine is in Antarctica building a new runway on: 14-Dec-09, 07:06:58 AM
Jeff was on hiatus with the flu but he's back in action now. I LOVE these pics.
24264  Member Activities / Pets / Re: Falcon Watcher's Pets on: 13-Dec-09, 09:57:55 PM
~ Absolutely Adorable ~ Thanks for sharing.  heart
24265  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Annual Wisconsin-to-Florida whooping crane migration makes fitful start on: 13-Dec-09, 09:48:40 PM
And here's today's ~Whooper~ news

Date:    December 13, 2009 - Entry 2   Reporter:   
Subject:   GOOD NEWS AND GREAT NEWS   Location:   Hardin Co. TN
On December 9th, a reporter from the Toronto Star newspaper called for a telephone interview concerning the recent break in at our Necedah, WI hangar. Before I go on with this story, you have to appreciate that despite the idea for ultralight-led migration being initiated by Canadians, and researched and developed in Ontario, Canada, Operation Migration rarely attracts any coverage from Canadian media. This makes what I'm about to tell you even more extraordinary.

The Good News: As a result of the story appearing in the Toronto Star, several other Ontario media, including the Scugog community newspaper from OM’s Canadian home base of Port Perry, have called and have done or are doing articles. Although the stories focus on the break-in, there is collateral benefit in that they also describe the work of the reintroduction project.

The Great News: While the entire crew was all sitting down to breakfast after standing down from December 10th’s aborted flight, my cell phone rang. The caller was Mary Desjardins, the Executive Director of the Toronto Dominion Bank’s Friends of the Environment Foundation.

Mary said, and I quote, “I am happy to offer a donation of $15,000 from the TD Friends of the Environment Foundation to cover the cost of damages resulting from vandalism of your Wisconsin hangar. Our team was shocked by the story in this morning’s Toronto Star and felt moved to take action. Protecting species at risk is one of our funding focus areas. We hope that word of this donation may also spur additional donations for your worthwhile cause.”

Later in the day Mary emailed to tell me that she had since issued a response to the Toronto Star reporter who wrote the article, (link to it is below) indicating to him that it was the Foundation’s hope that their contribution would kick start additional contributions.

And Mary's wish would be our wish too – along with raising greater awareness for the plight of the Whooping crane with more of the Canadian public and media. Click here to read the Toronto Star article.

Our sincere and heartfelt thanks to the TD Friends of the Environment Foundation. They have helped to turn a dark cloud over our heads to one with a silver lining.

Date:   December 13, 2009 - Entry 1   Reporter:   
Subject:   Migration Day 59   Location:   Hardin Co. TN
It was already in the mid 40's at 4am this morning so no need to check a windsock for the wind direction. As for the rest of it, the weatherman was right again; its the 'R' word, and it's coming down steadily. Aloft, even it if was blowing in the right direction - which it is not - it's about 10 times as powerful as we like to see.

Today will be Down Day #2 in Hardin County, TN.

migration trivia compliments of vi white and steve cohen
HARDIN COUNTY, TN
The story of Hardin County begins with the prehistoric mound builders of the Woodland and Mississippian Periods. Savannah, the modern county seat, is built partially within a wall and trench, and amid a line of fourteen mounds on a bluff parallel to the Tennessee River.

These prehistoric peoples also built a considerable structure covering approximately four acres in the northwest corner of the county near Middleton, and several mounds at Pittsburg Landing in what is now the Shiloh National Military Park. After the Mississippian era, Hardin County, along with most of the rest of West Tennessee, became an area shared by various
24266  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: 11:58 AM EST, December 13, 2009 on: 13-Dec-09, 12:07:22 PM
Quote

wnyfalconfan (Joyce): 10am CP found Pefa adult on K Tower.  Looks lighter than B, but has band on left leg. Hard to tell in rain. I'll confirm with my pics later.



Link:
http://twitter.com/wnyfalconfan/statuses/6633169952

hmmm...wonder who this is?
24267  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 13-Dec-09, 10:28:40 AM
Ok, so I see specks.  crazy

What about pink elephants?  hysterical

It's just a matter of time Janet.   
24268  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 13-Dec-09, 08:56:46 AM
Ok see that speck right in the middle of the bridge? Could be a falcon or another larger bird. In the frame before, I see it move from the brown building next to the bridge to the bridge. Ok, so I see specks.  crazy
24269  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Eagle returns to Antrim skyline (UK) on: 13-Dec-09, 07:42:28 AM
More than 100 years have passed since eagles commanded the skies above north Antrim, but the recent arrival of one of these massive birds of prey has raised conservationists' hopes they might be back to stay.

The exact location of the bird is being kept secret and a team of conservationists and local farmers are helping keep watch over the eagle.

There is no secret though over where this female eagle has come from.

An electronic tag on its wing confirms it is one of a number released in County Kerry.
   
With a wingspan of up to eight feet they are often called the "flying barn door".
Martin Cassidy

A satellite tracking device fitted to its wing means members of the Northern Ireland Raptor Study Group are able to track its movements.

Searching for the bird in this beautiful landscape is rewarding work.

Winter has bleached the greenery from the rugged north Antrim countryside and the fields, trees and cliffs are all tones of brown, grey and white - perfect camouflage for a white-tailed sea eagle.

But a bird this size cannot hide when it takes to wing - with a wingspan of up to eight feet they are often called the "flying barn door".

The giant bird rises from a steep field over a mile to our right.

Its take off is slow, even ungainly, but when it climbs above the cliffs and rides the cold winter wind the eagle looks master of all it surveys.

The distinctive finger-like wing tips are clearly visible as it sweeps across the leaden sky.

We track it towards a small lake where it has been catching wild duck.

A bird this size will eat half a kilo at a sitting.

And as we reach the top of a small hill the giant bird is suddenly flying low across the field beneath us - a breathtaking sight.

But two crows suddenly try to swarm it.

At low speed the eagle is vulnerable to disturbance from smaller birds which are keen to move on this huge predator with its meat cleaver beak and razor sharp talons.

Brendan Dunlop of the Raptor Study Group is hoping this female eagle will eventually manage to team up with a male bird and produce young.

But these are early days and the priority now is to keep the eagle safe.

Like other birds of prey, eagles were persecuted to extinction here.

The major threat is poison laid for foxes and crows.

Feeding mainly on carrion, the eagle could easily feed on a dead bird or animal laced with poison.

Then there are the bounty hunters who would prize shooting such a prestigious bird.

The body of an eagle was recently recovered from Lough Neagh, which conservationists believe was shot.

As daylight fades we see the eagle swooping low across distant fields - after it feeds it will perch for the night.

Perhaps this young eagle will move on, but for now there is high excitement amongst the volunteers guarding it that this may represent the start of a new population.

Caption: White tails over a secret location.
24270  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Abstaining Boobies Get "Sexier" on: 13-Dec-09, 07:33:58 AM


According to National Geographic, male blue-footed boobies that take a year-long sex sabbatical get a brighter shade of blue in their feet the following year, which makes them more attractive to females, a new study says.

Breeding for these tropical seabirds involves more than just the mating itself. Boobies have a long period of biparental care in other words, the males are active participants in raising their young. The eggs are incubated for 45 days, and chicks stay with their parents for a four-month rearing period.

The study, published in The Royal Society's Biology Letters, was conducted by researchers from University of Vigo in Spain, and the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

They studied more than a hundred male blue-footed boobies over a total of six months in 2004 and 2005 on Mexicos Isla Isabel, and measured their green chroma using a spectrophotometer.

They concluded that its likely the sabbaticals from reproducing offspring may allow the male boobies to physically recover and display brighter feet in their quest in finding a mate.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/12/091202-blue-footed-boobies-video.html 

They are so cute!
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