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24571  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Catching up - Raptor watches early Nov. and Eagles at Iroquois. on: 10-Nov-09, 08:40:20 PM
Dana, your photos are beautiful...thanks so much. Where does everyone think Mariah is? She wouldn't leave although she has been known to take a little vacation during the Fall/Winter months. thumbsup
24572  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Outdoor cats on: 10-Nov-09, 08:20:08 PM
Re: My local pound gave me a jar free of charge...so far it works Carol.
Thanks!  I have requested that they contact me, as I have a couple of outside unowned cats for whom it would be a godsend.
Carol
WV

Hopefully they will give you some as it is kitten control. Good luck..let me know.
24573  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Ok...who flewed N Pooed on: 10-Nov-09, 07:20:27 PM
<a href="http://shakymon.com/rfc-clipper.html?4af9c4600501" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20091110/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20091110-1452.jpg?" >[/url] (movie)  Could it be Beauty up above or just a fly-by-poo???

Also, Shaky, what happened to the temperature on the pics? Not there anymore.

Oh, Man!  Girlfriend is making Poo Movies again!   crazy 2funny

I was waiting for you to say that Janet!!! hysterical Your right on cue. thumbsup
24574  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Alcoa Anglesea, Australia on: 10-Nov-09, 07:19:23 PM
Funny, I submitted a name for Alcoa and my first choice was Barega "aboriginal" then I thought..ahh, someone else probably submitted that name, so I changed it to Aero. Oh well...all good names. Poor Froona all alone in there. Hope the boys are OK.
24575  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Outdoor cats on: 10-Nov-09, 07:12:46 PM
My 3 are indoor and stay indoors. The 3 outside....2 females spayed ($90 per cat) and 1 on birth control...every Tues, I give her a dose of Feral Stat. So far, no more KITTENS!!! They've been here for 8 yrs now, 2 sisters and 1 baby from one of them 4 yrs ago. I probably had 50 kittens in 10 yrs..all adopted....PHEW!!!

Donna

Feral Stat?  Please tell me more!
Thanks :-)
Carol

At Last! An Oral Contraceptive for Cats.

As anyone trying to curb the growth of a feral cat colony knows, it is often difficult—if not impossible—to trap every cat for spay/neuter surgery before it reproduces.

Now FeralStat, a feline oral contraceptive, is aiding in the management of feral cat colonies worldwide.

FeralStat is a synthetic progestin that prevents female cats from coming into heat. The active ingredient in FeralStat was patented and FDA-approved in the early 1950s. It is used extensively in human medicine, and has been prescribed by veterinarians for over 30 years for cats with skin, urinary tract, and behavioral disorders. It also has FDA approval for extra-label use as a feline oral contraceptive to postpone estrus in cats.

FeralStat is intended for use as a complement to spay/neuter and Trap, Neuter, and Return (TNR) programs for feral cats. To administer, simply mix FeralStat with wet cat food once per week and feed to all the cats in the colony.

Although it is designed for female cats, FeralStat has been given to male cats, pregnant females, and kittens who are sharing the food supply with no report of negative side effects. That is because a miniscule dose does the trick.

A cat's minimum effective daily dosage of FeralStat is approximately 0.04 milligrams—which is smaller than a grain of sand. In contrast, the daily dosage of this same compound, when used for treatment of tumors in humans, is two teaspoons or 20,000 times the amount.

FeralStat was developed with the assistance of veterinarians, research pharmacologists, chemists, compounding pharmacists and feral cat caretakers.

FeralStat is recommended to curb the growth of feral colonies in places where there is limited access to sterilization services or too many cats for TNR to be effective.

FeralStat is available by prescription only. For information on obtaining a FeralStat prescription, call 860-399-0097 or e-mail info@feralstat.com (inquiries must include a contact telephone number for follow up).
WV


My local pound gave me a jar free of charge...so far it works Carol.
24576  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Outdoor cats on: 10-Nov-09, 06:53:39 PM
My 3 are indoor and stay indoors. The 3 outside....2 females spayed ($90 per cat) and 1 on birth control...every Tues, I give her a dose of Feral Stat. So far, no more KITTENS!!! They've been here for 8 yrs now, 2 sisters and 1 baby from one of them 4 yrs ago. I probably had 50 kittens in 10 yrs..all adopted....PHEW!!!

Donna
24577  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Ok...who flewed N Pooed on: 10-Nov-09, 06:43:22 PM
<a href="http://shakymon.com/rfc-clipper.html?4af9c4600501" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20091110/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20091110-1452.jpg?" >[/url] (movie)  Could it be Beauty up above or just a fly-by-poo???

Also, Shaky, what happened to the temperature on the pics? Not there anymore.
24578  Member Activities / Events / Re: Refuge Tree Planting on: 10-Nov-09, 09:10:42 AM
Hi Everyone!
This past Sunday Don and I participated in a US Fish & Wildlife work day event...planting 450 trees!  The trees were purchased with some of the money raised by the Muckrace.  Remember Team Peregrine?  The trees were all native species and planted in a soybean field on a recently acquired farmland parcel.  Someday it will be a lovely bird and bat friendly forest!
Suzanne 

 clap thumbsup Way to go!
24579  Anything Else / Totally OT / Blasts from the past on: 10-Nov-09, 08:54:42 AM
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-873495770229754023&ei=52z5SpS_NJHuqgLf29SWCg&hl=en# Romper Room

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-873495770229754023&ei=52z5SpS_NJHuqgLf29SWCg&hl=en#docid=-1369615182726672065  Sonny Fox

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2OXrg8v16I  Bride and groom show (My mom and dad were married on this show in 53) 2funny
24580  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Young Love (a fawn a spike and a young buck) on: 10-Nov-09, 06:51:15 AM
Young love   

It’s not easy being a young animal in the wilds. Their slower body and mind often make them targets for predators. Mature animals are quick to physically force them out of their way to get to the best food.

Their inexperience means they go through the breeding season unwanted, unsuccessful and totally confused.

But they sure are fun to watch.

Saturday afternoon’s trip to a Butler County treestand furnished an hour of entertainment as I watched three young whitetails try to figure out their roles in the on-going breeding season.

Actually the first deer on the hilltop was a big, mature eight-pointer that disappeared into a dense thicket with an old doe. They knew how the mating game is played.

Minutes later a doe fawn, a deer born this summer and just forced away from its mother, came wandering through. It wandered back and forth across the prairie, confused at being away from the doe that looked after it all summer. Equally confused at why a yearling spike-horned buck followed her every step.

The 18-month-old buck was in its first breeding season with enough hormones to know something special’s going on but not enough experience to know exactly what it was supposed to be doing.

The first comedy came when the spike passed downwind of where I knew the old buck and doe to be. Scenting something special the spike trotted into the thicket  and seconds later came running back out at full-speed.

The old buck obviously didn’t want to be disturbed by the upstart young ‘un.

Back by the doe fawn the spike alternated between walking inches from her tail and raking tree limbs with pencil-sized antlers.  That she probably wouldn’t begin estrous for at least another month, if at all her first year, didn’t dim his interest.

Repeatedly he nudged the fawn no bigger than my hunting dog and when she’d run a short distance he was literally trying to get on her tail. Finally, totally confused and frustrated, the doe fawn plopped down in thick grass 15 yards from where I watched.

I could almost read the sigh of relief on the fawn’s face and the look of even more confusion on the spike’s. It was if he was saying, “Hey, I’m not sure what we’re supposed to be doing but I’m pretty sure that’s not supposed to be part of it!â€

Several times the doe fawn rose to move off and within seconds the spike hounded it so much the doe fawn plopped back down again.

As time passed the spike seemed more and more confused. Several times he wandered off a ways before trotting back to check the lust of his life.

In a year or two the spike will learn November’s for mature does and not fawns. They’ll be the mating game in December.

The spike will also learn that the best way to get an almost ready doe ready is to flat-out chase it until it has to stop.

But Saturday all the spike could do was look on and try to get a nose under a very clamped tail. The spike was so close I could read its face like a book. The perplextion (somehow I doubt that’s a word) was hilarious.

Eventually when the doe fawn stood and looked north I slowly turned my head and saw a buck fawn walk into the scene. Seeing the doe fawn, possibly its sibling, it broke into a happy trot. The two were almost nose to nose when the spike charged in and split the pair.

That spooked the doe fawn into running southwest with the spike happily trotting inches from her tail.

The buck fawn stood in one place for several minutes, scanning one way and then the other, repeatedly testing the wind as it tried to figure out where the others had gone and what to do next.

Probably about a year away from being sexually mature the entire breeding season process is way beyond the buck fawn’s young mind.

It hung around a few minutes and headed south, towards the thicket where a true tail-kicking from the mature buck guarding a a doe awaited.

A minute or so later the buck fawn was a brown blur headed westward from the thicket, no doubt more confused than ever.

Ah, young love in the deer woods.    heart heart heart
24581  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Alcoa Anglesea, Australia on: 10-Nov-09, 06:01:55 AM
Tuesday November 10, 2009
Barega and Warrun have flown the coop!  This image was taken last night just minutes before one of the boys took his first flight.  This morning, both the boys were gone leaving Froona home alone.  She doesn't look very happy about it either !
24582  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Peregrine falcons like to winter in Va. Beach on: 09-Nov-09, 09:23:28 PM



Now that the Oceanfront peregrine falcon is back for the winter and roosting on its favorite "rocky ledges" at the Virginia House, pigeons are scarce.

"We never see a pigeon when she's around" said Virginia House manager Cassie Gronda.

After a pigeon dinner, the female peregrine leaves the remains behind, but Gronda said she would take that mess any day over the pigeons themselves.

That's because the peregrine not only acts as pigeon control, but also is a celebrity, providing entertainment for Virginia House residents and bird lovers all winter long.

"We all look forward to her coming back," Gronda said, "and hanging out with us."

Back again for an amazing 15th year, the falcon often can be found perched on Virginia House at 38th Street and Atlantic Avenue or perhaps on The Cavalier Hotel at 42nd Street and Atlantic Avenue or the Oceanside Holiday Inn at 21st Street and Atlantic Avenue, among other places.

When it's cold, the bird often will roost on the hotels' neon signs that provide warmth.

When not perched on her favorite buildings, you might be lucky enough to see the falcon as she rockets through the sky with pointed streamlined wings

Peregrines, the fastest animal on Earth, can fly up to 200 mph when dive-bombing a pigeon on the wing. They can fly leisurely up to 60 mph.

Oceanfront residents aren't the only folks in town who have the opportunity to get to know a falcon these days. This is the fourth year for a peregrine falcon to winter at Town Center. Her hangouts are on the Armada Hoffler building, either on the sign or on the tower or on one of the upper-story porches at the Westin Virginia Beach Town Center, said local raptor expert Reese Lukei.

Lukei and fellow raptor enthusiast Shawn Padgett have been keeping tabs on the falcons' comings and goings since each bird arrived for the first time years ago.

Lukei knows they are both females, but the birds are not banded so he has no idea where they nest in summer. They usually arrive here in October and leave in March to nest. Falcons nest as far away as northern Canada and as near as Norfolk.

If you go looking for either of the birds, check the wind direction before you head out. If it's windy, they will often be found on the lee side of buildings. Also remember, that though peregrines are crow-sized, they look small up high.

The Oceanfront bird has been known to roost in the center of the "O" of the Holiday Inn sign.

When you look for one of the falcons for first time, carry your binoculars to make sure you know what you are seeing and to get a close look at the bird's handsome head with characteristic dark sideburns. Once you know what to look for, you probably won't mistake the peregrine for anything else again.

And if you think that driving while talking on a cell phone is dangerous, remember that becoming a peregrine groupie in your car is more so! So be careful.   
24583  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Emerald green pigeon on: 09-Nov-09, 06:59:30 PM

really. I guess it could be but the colors are really natural looking.

It does look real Nan...hmm. Green pigeons. It's me lucky charm.
24584  Rochester Falcons / Satellite Tracking / Not Much Change For Quest on: 09-Nov-09, 06:42:49 PM
O Canada!
Our Quest’s adopted land!
True peregrine love in all thy kaks command.

I thought you were singing the South Park song at first...then NOT!!  wave
24585  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A friend of mine is in Antarctica building a new runway on: 09-Nov-09, 07:01:05 AM
Where did they arrive from?  I know they weren't in Miami Beach,  cool-045 so do they migrate from different parts of Antartica?

Migration and Vagrancy:
Little is known about post-breeding dispersal or migration. Adults stay close to the permanent ice for most of their lives. Juveniles equipped with satellite transmitters, however, migrated as far north as the polar front. Vagrants have turned up on the South Shetland Islands, Tierra del Fuego, the Falklands, South Sandwich Islands, Kerguelen Island, Heard Island, and New Zealand.
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