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24526  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Chat Anyone? on: 14-Nov-09, 07:17:11 PM
CHAT ANYONE???? C'mon guys
24527  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 14-Nov-09, 06:57:24 PM
Soooooooooooooooooooo???????????????? No Quest?   secret2 She couldn't possibly do this twice to you all.  Shocked
24528  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Guanacos in Monte Leon NP, Santa Cruz. (Patagonia, Argentina) on: 14-Nov-09, 03:32:48 PM
Ok, you know it's coming....
I WANT One!   heart  I love lamas!  One acre more and I'd be able to have Alpacas.


Spitters!!! So cute though.
24529  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 14-Nov-09, 03:17:12 PM
We are working hard to find her...  Just checking in from the hotel business computer.



She went on a fly-a-bout...someone tipped her off.
24530  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: 1:21 PM EST, November 14, 2009 on: 14-Nov-09, 01:30:04 PM
Quote

pefafollower (Kathy O): Arrived Lennox PP. Still questless falcon quest.



Link:
http://twitter.com/pefafollower/statuses/5714765706

You have to find her this time and we'll all be waiting. 
24531  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: 7:57 AM EST, November 14, 2009 on: 14-Nov-09, 08:55:54 AM
Quote

wnyfalconfan (Joyce): 11/14/09 - Our "quest" has begun...



Link:
http://twitter.com/wnyfalconfan/statuses/5708220543

Is this a riddle??? Quest for???  "QUEST"???
24532  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Guanacos in Monte Leon NP, Santa Cruz. (Patagonia, Argentina) on: 14-Nov-09, 08:48:43 AM
Mirta, he is so cute and so sorry about his mom. So now what?? Will he stay around and just hang out with the visitors or will he suddenly get the urge to join others? Very interesting story. A PUMA.. scared blue wow, how often does one get a chance to see that? No wonder no one took pics...all frozen with complete amazement. Thanks so much for the story and pics. He is really a cutie...have fun.
24533  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Defiance, the Peregrine Falcon on: 14-Nov-09, 08:31:46 AM
What an great story, thank you for sharing it with us Donna!   clap  Peregrine falcons never cease to amaze me...and I'm thankful they have such resiliance because it would be a sad world without their presence.

They are amazing!
24534  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: OK, so they are having a Whiteout now on: 14-Nov-09, 07:46:50 AM
These pics are as follows:

The first pic is McMurdo Station where he is working. LOL

The 2nd pic is the Ice Runway.

Jeff has quite the sense of humor.  silly

He actually sent 4 pics but even though they were 4 different shots, they all looked the same to me, so I only posted the 2.  stupid

I think these were the best pics he's sent so far, Donna!   hysterical

 ditto thanks2 whistle
24535  Anything Else / Totally OT / OK, so they are having a Whiteout now on: 14-Nov-09, 06:46:03 AM
These pics are as follows:

The first pic is McMurdo Station where he is working. LOL

The 2nd pic is the Ice Runway.

Jeff has quite the sense of humor.  silly

He actually sent 4 pics but even though they were 4 different shots, they all looked the same to me, so I only posted the 2.  stupid
24536  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Travels with Whitey This was back in July when he was fitted with Transmitter on: 14-Nov-09, 06:33:42 AM
Travels with Whitey

By Jim Williams, Special to the Star Tribune

July 7, 2009

A golden eagle from the prairies of southeastern Minnesota and neighboring Wisconsin is taking some researchers on an Arctic adventure.

Golden eagles are relatively unknown in Minnesota, infrequently seen, counted in small numbers and for a long time thought to be lone wanderers from the west.

These huge brown birds do winter here, however. They hunt for prey on the steep grassy slopes in the driftless area. Any given winter, about five dozen golden eagles cross the Mississippi River from Minnesota to Wisconsin and back.

Goldens are essentially birds of western North America. They nest all the way up to the Arctic coast in Alaska and Canada. Their range maps show nothing along the western edge of Hudson Bay. But that's where Whitey is.

Whitey is the name given to a golden eagle by Scott Mehus, education director of the National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minn. Mehus kept seeing a light-headed bird in a Wisconsin valley. He called it Whitey. When Wisconsin game officers delivered an injured golden eagle to Mehus last November, he knew he was looking at the bird he'd nicknamed.

Whitey's timing was perfect. Mehus and Mark Martell of Audubon Minnesota had been trying to trap a golden so they could attach a radio transmitter to it. They wanted to know where goldens that winter in Minnesota and Wisconsin go in the spring, where they summer and possibly nest. Their efforts to trap a golden eagle failed. It was a leg-hold trap set for a coyote that caught the bird. And that's how Whitey came to be the most studied golden eagle in this part of the country.

North to the Hudson

Whitey spent time at the University of Minnesota Raptor Center in St. Paul between his release from the trap and his release back into the wild.

The trap had punched life-threatening holes in one of his legs. Dr. Louis Cruz grafted skin to restore the eagle to flight condition. When he was released in late March, it was with a tiny, solar-powered transmitter.

In mid-June, that transmitter placed Whitey at 65 degrees north, just west of Hudson Bay's South Hampton Island.

If and when Whitey settles down this summer, Canadian game researchers will try to find him. Project participants -- including the Department of Natural Resources in Minnesota and Wisconsin, the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge and Audubon Minnesota -- want to know what he's doing up there, and if he's doing it with other goldens.

It's possible that other goldens are breeding there, although probably not Whitey, because he got a late start this year.

"Ideally, we want to track a nesting pair of eagles to learn if they stay together during the winter," Mehus said. "We'd like to prove that they have nesting territories in that part of Canada. They're not known to nest there."

Know your eagles

Golden eagles are big brown birds. At first glance, immature bald eagles are big brown birds. How do you tell one from another?

Territory is one clue. "Goldens are not river birds," Mehus explained. "Birds seen along rivers are likely bald eagles." Flight is another. "Goldens glide with a slight V to their wings," he said, "not as much angle as a turkey vulture, but more than the straight-line wing-to-wing profile of a bald eagle." Goldens also have smaller heads and smaller bills than bald eagles.

Golden eagles are named for the color of their crown. If you see a big brown bird with a golden crown and a transmitter, it might be Whitey the Research Eagle.
24537  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Peregrinations of a golden eagle on: 14-Nov-09, 06:32:22 AM
WABASHA -- A small radio on the back of a golden eagle has answered a big birding question -- where did the golden eagles that spend winters in this region go in summer?

Some assumed them go out west, where they are common, but Scott Mehus didn't think so.

The education director of the National Eagle Center in Wabasha said 100 to 150 goldens are seen each fall going past Hawk Ridge in Duluth, where western raptors are rare. He reasoned the eagles must be going north into Canada for breeding.

The radio attached to on the back of a golden eagle he knows as "Whitey" proved him right. In fact, he was much more correct than he thought.

The male bird didn't mate but ventured all the way into the Arctic Circle near Hudson Bay.

Mehus's reaction: "Wow, I never believed he would go that far north."

The bird reversed course in early October and around Nov. 3, came back within seven miles of where he was released in Buffalo County, Wis. Mehus recognized him because of where the hunter found him and the pale feathers on his head. The bird was taken to St. Paul for surgery and rehabilitation, fitted with a radio and released.

The wanderings of the eagle did more than answer a question, Mehus said. It told Canadian officials they need to keep an eye on that breeding area habitat. "We've gotten their attention," he said. The species is listed as threatened there until more can be known.

What birders like Mehus have found around here while looking for goldens for 15 years, finding up to 70 in one day, should also get the attention of people locally, he said.
Unlike bald eagles that feed on fish along the river, goldens eat turkeys, rabbits and other animals. One of their favorite places to hunt is on the open goat prairies on south-facing bluffs. But those open areas are being covered with red cedar and other trees.

While birders are justly concerned about wintering habitat for songbirds in Central and South America, they also need to think locally, he said.

Right now, however, his attention is focused more on dead deer that have been put out to attract other eagles. If they can find birds coming to one carcass, they can live trap them and fit them with radio packs to learn even more, Mehus said. They tried it last winter, but with snow on the ground, it was easier for eagles to hunt and none came to live traps, he said. Now, without snow but still some leaves, the eagles might be coaxed into traps.
24538  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Chesapeake Birds Finally Fed! on: 14-Nov-09, 05:52:54 AM
The wind (I HATE the wind) finally stopped howling late Friday afternoon (more like evening) and we scurried out to fill the feeders.  It was so late that I don't think anyone arrived for dinner, but there is a nice breakfast waiting for all takers!   happy

  Very good Janet & Rich
24539  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Alcoa Anglesea, Australia on: 13-Nov-09, 08:28:34 PM
Wings for Aafke! (She loves wings).
24540  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Defiance, the Peregrine Falcon on: 13-Nov-09, 08:19:49 PM
Posted: 11/13/2009 01:00:00 AM MST

About peregrine falcons:

Peregrine falcon means "wandering falcon," for it is found throughout the world. In medieval Europe, it was known as the "king's bird." By 1974, the species was nearly extinct and listed officially as "endangered," but made a comeback and it is now considered "threatened" in New Mexico. Elsewhere, though, the peregrine remains on the endangered list.

During courtship, a mated pair will hunt and roost together. They do not build their own nests. They will often occupy hawk and eagle nests, tree hollows or shelves on high cliffs. Eggs are laid between March and June (usually 2 to 4). Eggs are incubated by both sexes for 28 to 35 days. The young can fly 35 to 42 days after hatching. Sexual maturity is reached after about three years and lifespan in the wild is 15 to 20 years.

During normal flight, peregrine falcons can reach speeds of 30 to 60 mph. While diving, they have been clocked at speeds of up to 180 mph. This earns them the title of the world's fastest animal. By the early 1970s, the entire North American population of peregrine falcons was limited to Canada, Alaska and Baja California due to pesticides such as DDT. Captive breeding allowed the species to avoid extinction that was expected in the 1980s.

Sources: Jessica Palmer and the Elmwood Park Zoo Web site: http://elmwoodparkzoo.org/animals/animalProfiles/birds/falcon.html

LAS CRUCES— Defiance is a peregrine falcon who lost a wing and survived agonizing
ordeals before his rescue and rehab in New Mexico. Now the feisty bird, who was not expected to live, has a birdy buddy and a posh habitat in a new territory almost 2,000 miles away.

"Defiance
earned his name because he defied animal control, his human care-giver, injury, starvation, infection and even death," said Jessica Palmer, a Chihuahua Desert Wildlife Rescue (CDWR) rehabilitation specialist who cared for Defiance in her Las Cruces home.

"Defiance was a fledgling, just 'earning his wings' when he was picked up and swept by high wind to become tangled in string or wire. As an inexperienced flyer, the peregrine could have simply miscalculated or misjudged the distance of something. Either way, he became entangled in wire, mostly barbed wire or high tension lines. He must have hung by the wing for days until the weight of his body severed the limb from his body," Palmer reports.

"Despite the ordeal, it took the Dona Ana Animal Control officer nearly a full day to capture the peregrine. She gave chase with her nets and he, as his name suggests, defied her," Palmer said.

By the time Defiance arrived at her home on July 7, Palmer's evaluation indicated the bird had managed to survive for a week without food and with a life-threatening wound that was infected.

"The severing of wing near the shoulder is among the worst injuries a bird can receive. The major arteries and veins run directly between heart and lungs into the wing. Usually, the bird will bleed to death. If it survives, the presence of infection (can be) lethal, the risk of death increased since the toxins quickly spread to the vital organs and throughout the body."

It seemed unlikely he would survive the night.

But Palmer, experienced in wildlife rehabilitation as well as a nurse, educator and an author of novels, sci-fi and fantasy, textbooks and nonfiction historical works, was hoping for a happy ending.

"He was provided with a warm, restful environment and given a small amount of food and water, for fear his body would reject too grand a feast," Palmer said. "When he tolerated the first meal, more food was supplied. As evening drew to a close, he had eaten well. Still, as the sun set, the death watch began. At first light he was found, still standing, with a look of defiance upon his face. As if to say: "So you thought I was going to die."

Defiance's wound was treated and he was given antibiotics, but Palmer admits that each night she "said a formal farewell, not expecting him to be alive the next day, and each morning, I found him with that same look of defiance upon his face."

The bird's survival presented its own set of problems, including a search for a home.

"Obviously he was going to live and equally obvious, he could not be released to the wild. Once it became apparent the bird would survive, verbal permission was obtained from the Federal Government to place him. The total loss of a wing usually requires euthanasia," she said, because "it may lead to severe loss of balance. Birds use their wings as much to maintain balance while standing and walking as to fly. With the total loss, the bird may fall, often sustaining further injuries."

But dauntless, Defiance "beat the odds. He learned, and he learned quickly, to tuck and roll like an acrobat. He learned to climb and he learned to jump from perch to perch."

Palmer stressed there is no warm and fuzzy bird-human love story to report.

Defiance "was neither intimidated nor impressed" by Palmer, but "tolerated" her, "as the bringer of food and human 'lunch lady.'"

He let her know that "his forbearance was conditional, every time I entered the pen, with sloshing bucket and scrub brush. Defiance would climb up to the highest perch and leap down to land on my head, shoulder or back. He would stomp around a few times to notify me that he was in charge here and I was allowed into his territory on sufferance" and then "he jumped back onto his perch and watched for any false moves."

But one of nature's fiercest predators did not attack his savior.

"Never once during this weekly assertion of territory did this creature--who could have easily ripped flesh from bone--break the skin. Never a scratch," Palmer said.

And the plucky bird was suddenly very popular.

"Competition was fierce, with six different states applying to provide a home for him. It became a choice of what was best for the individual bird and for the species of as a whole."

On Oct. 22, Defiance moved to Elmwood Park Zoo.

"It's in Pennsylvania where the peregrine is still endangered," and where Palmer hoped Defiance would get not only a home, "but also a mate, and perhaps a chance to breed and help contribute to the population of his species."

Or maybe not. The prospective female procreator, Stevie (named for Stevie Nicks), died this fall, the zoo's general curator David Wood reported in a phone conversation from Defiance's new home in Norristown, Pa.

But Wood said Defiance appears to be enjoying a happy "alternative lifestyle" with his new, as-yet-unnamed birdy buddy, who turned out to be a male, DNA tests revealed. Defiance gets along well with his companion, recently imported from a West Virginia zoo, in a brand new habitat they share.

"We have a donor who is very interested in peregrines, so we were able to build a whole new exhibit. Defiance is doing great and we're very happy and lucky to have him," Wood said.

Dr. Carol Calista, a Las Cruces veterinarian who works with CDWR rehabilitation efforts, termed the bird's survival 'a miracle,' Palmer said, adding that the "feisty bird can claim at least part of the credit."

She stressed that it took more than a village to save Defiance.

"It took the cooperative effort of county government in the form of Dona Ana Animal Control, two states--New Mexico and Pennsylvania--and the federal government to provide him with a life at Elmwood Park Zoo, where he can live a productive life," Palmer said.

He can also be a ambassador for his species to the more than 130,000 visitors who come to the Elmwood Park Zoo each year.

What a great story....what a peregrine.   crying
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