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24916  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Peregrine Spotted at Greece Marriott - Saturday, Oct 3, 2009, at 10 am on: 04-Oct-09, 12:23:44 AM
Imagine my surprise!   yahoo
No sign on needed.
http://www.kodakgallery.com/ShareLanding.action?c=171aim5l.2rcn833h&x=0&y=-9xggrs&localeid=en_US
Let's hope this works.
Carol P.

Do we know if it's banded...M/F.....Very nice Carol.
24917  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Katydid goes for a ride on: 03-Oct-09, 05:36:08 PM
Ok, so me and my daughter were at a light going to the mall. Kara said "mom, look at that leaf bug on that car in front of us". I said...WOW, that looks just like the one Janet saw. So we were on a mission to rescue that leafy bug. We followed the car and kept making sure Katy didn't fall off. The next light....phew, Katy still there. We followed the car into Office Max and waited until the man was in and out of sight. I took out my phone and took a pic. Kara said let's put it in the trees over there. Ok, so she went to pick it up and it flew right over to the trees where we were going to put it. We both looked at each other and laughed because Katy could have left if she wanted while riding on the roof of that car but Katydid-nt want to.
24918  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: 3:29 PM EDT, October 3, 2009 on: 03-Oct-09, 05:18:54 PM
Quote

wnyfalconfan (Joyce): 3:25 A&B still on OCS (these 2 are not too exciting to watch). Had 2 RTHs  flying around gorge.  Beautiful.


M&K were more exciting!!! Thanks Joyce.
24919  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / A&B at the nest earlier on: 03-Oct-09, 02:49:33 PM
<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20091003/MainCamera_HighRes_20091003-1018.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20091003/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20091003-1018.jpg?" >[/url] Archer arrives first
<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20091003/MainCamera_HighRes_20091003-1022.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20091003/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20091003-1022.jpg?" >[/url] Then Beauty
<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1/20091003/Camera1_20091003-1021.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1_Thumbnail/20091003/Camera1_Thumbnail_20091003-1021.jpg?" >[/url] "Come in my little Beauty" She didn't, she bowed to him from her perch and soon after, they both flew off.
24920  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / 3 Ca Condor chics found dead on: 03-Oct-09, 07:21:06 AM
Three Condor Chicks Dead

Three young California condors in our area were found dead recently, spelling bad news for recovery efforts. On the bright side, seven chicks were born in the wild in California this year, bringing the statewide tally to 89 birds.

In late July, biologists found condor chick #503 lying in thick brush below a redwood tree adjacent to the Los Padres National Forest in Big Sur. It's gut was full of microtrash—small bits of plastic, glass, bottle caps, bullet shells and other items that condor chicks are unable to digest. The second bird–condor #358–strangled itself on a rope abandoned near Tar Creek Falls along Sespe Creek near nesting areas. The third bird—condor #539—was retrieved from its nest near Sespe Creek earlier this month. Microtrash is suspected of playing a role in its death, too, though biologists are still awaiting the report on the final cause of death.

ForestWatch and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service launched a joint effort this month to remove microtrash from 8 sites in the Los Padres National Forest. Our first cleanup took place Saturday, Sept. 26, coinciding with National Public Lands Day. We worked to remove trash from the Sespe Creek area.

On October 3-4, join ForestWatch and the Sierra Club to help remove abandoned barbed wire fencing in the Carrizo Plain National Monument.

This fencing blocks rare pronghorn antelope from roaming freely, and they are unable to jump over it. We'll remove fences on Saturday, have a potluck dinner, camp and spend Sunday morning exploring the area. Go to www.lpfw.org/action.htm to learn more.
24921  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / OUTDOORS: A bird in the hand Kaiser-Manitou Beach Banding Station on: 03-Oct-09, 07:17:42 AM
We're standing near the lakeshore at Kaiser-Manitou Beach Banding Station, roughly 15 miles west of Rochester. In front of me, Dr. John Waud, professor of environmental science at Rochester Institute of Technology, gently extricates a bird - a brown, spotted thrush called a veery - from the fibers of a tall mist net (which looks something like a volleyball net with fine, almost invisible mesh). The veery in Waud's hand, along with scores of other birds, has flown across Lake Ontario in the dark of night and was captured at the banding station, which is run by a cadre of volunteers associated with the nonprofit Braddock Bay Bird Observatory.
Volunteers at Braddock Bay use mist nets to monitor the passage of songbirds during spring and fall migrations. In the last decade alone, they have tagged 98,000 birds from approximately 130 species. They place a tiny band around each bird's leg, record its physical condition, and then release it. When banded birds are recaptured - either by this crew or by another banding team in its flight zone - a picture of bird migration starts to develop.
Elizabeth "Betsy" Brooks, long-time bander and co-founder of the Braddock Bay Observatory in 1985, estimates that she has banded more than 80,000 birds in her lifetime. After handling that many birds and tracking their movements, she knows a little something about the miracle of migration. She especially knows the challenges faced by a tiny songbird as it crosses Lake Ontario during its migrational sojourn.
"On October mornings," she says, "I've seen scores of ruby-crowned kinglets dripping off the tree limbs and blanketing the ground, weak and exhausted having just been caught over the lake in a squall."
Crossing Lake Ontario is just the first obstacle for most birds. For many species, migration is a transcontinental, transoceanic event that stretches down to South America. To survive this trek, birds must find safe places all along land routes where they can rest and bulk up on a high-energy, high-protein diet of berries and insects. Ecologists call these safe zones "migratory stopovers," and studies show that in North America's increasingly fragmented landscape, a shortage of stopover habitat is contributing to population declines in migrating landbirds.
In lakefront communities like those surrounding Rochester, a shortage of stopover habitat can be especially challenging for birds migrating from Alaska and Canada. As a result, the Central and Western New York chapter of The Nature Conservancy has teamed up with a group of scientists for a study to identify local migratory stopover sites in the region, with the goal of eventually safeguarding the sites and the birds that depend on them.
The 5 billion-bird march
This fall, more than 5 billion birds will migrate across North America, each traveling a semi-predictable flight path between its breeding and wintering grounds, each requiring quality stopover sites between flights. Despite how masterfully engineered these tiny flight machines are for migration, studies show that some species, especially the fast-declining group of neotropical migrants that winter from Mexico to South America, can experience up to 85 percent mortality during their annual treks. Considering that a migratory bird spends nearly one-third of its year traveling between its breeding and wintering grounds, there's ample opportunity for danger.
Most birds migrate under the cover of night using tailwinds to boost their flight. Navigating by the stars and by the earth's magnetic field, birds dodge an incredible number of obstacles. If not eaten by a hungry hawk or owl, they may fall victim to plate-glass widows, cell-phone towers, or turbines on wind farms.
After flying hundreds of miles in a single night, lean and weary birds seek refuge, sometimes desperately, in woodlots, backyards, orchards, and wetlands where they can rest and refuel for the next leg of their journey. This hopscotch nature of migration makes birds highly dependent on quality stopovers that need to be strung out in regular occurrence along routes that cross thousands of miles.
Astonishingly, many birds return to the same backyards repeatedly over their life spans, a navigational phenomenon called site fidelity. "A bird's ability to fly hundreds or thousands of miles only to find the exact same feeder over and over again just blows my mind," says Betsy Brooks.
Clearly, then, the key to conserving bird populations is to protect habitat, not only where they nest each spring and where they hunker down in winter, but in the multitude of migratory stopovers along their flyways.

Rochester's migration scene

The Rochester region - indeed, most of western New York - plays an important role in bird migration for two reasons. First, we are located in the Atlantic Flyway, one of only four major migration routes in North America. The Atlantic flyway cuts a broad swath across Canada, funnels through the Great Lakes, hugs the Atlantic shore and continues toward the Gulf of Mexico and beyond.
Our location on the southern rim of Lake Ontario is also critical. "Lake Ontario presents a significant milestone to migrating birds," says David Klein, senior field representative at The Nature Conservancy Central & Western New York. "Birds tend to ‘pool up' on either side of the lake just prior to, and after, crossing."
In fact, avid bird watchers depend on this fact. Bob Spahn, who has birded the Rochester area for more than 50 years, combs small woodlots along the lakeshore during spring and fall where, he says, "birds tend to pass in clumps and bursts."
Birders refer to this as "migrant fall-out," and find reliably good numbers and kinds of birds in lakeside habitats such as Island Cottage Woods Preserve, Durand-Eastman Park, and Hamlin Beach State Park. Some sites further inland, such as Cobbs Hill Park and Letchworth State Park, are also migrant hotspots, especially during spring
Using his eyes and well trained ears, Spahn ticks off every bird he observes onto a card or neat checklist; his New York state bird total hovers near 386 species, out of a possible 470. Spahn finds it more challenging to identify songbirds in fall, since at that point birds no longer sing to attract mates, and their colorful breeding plumage has molted to a winter drab, allowing the birds to elude predators and focus their energies on flying.
When birds arrive on the southern lakeshore, particularly after storms, they are fatigued and hungry. Therefore, undeveloped areas on the shoreline of Lake Ontario, and to an unknown degree farther inland, are critical pit stops for migrants.
But what makes a quality stopover site? How far inland do they occur? And how might these stopovers, which occur on patchwork of public and private lands, be protected?
Large, expansive wetland complexes, such as Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge and the 17-mile stretch along the eastern shore of Lake Ontario, are well known stopovers for migrating waterfowl and shorebirds. They have been protected accordingly.
But studies show that a small, isolated woodlot in the middle of a farm field or a small patch of woods in the city (think Rochester's Washington Grove, or Central Park in New York City) can be just as vital to migrating songbirds - such as robins, wrens, warblers, thrushes, kinglets, and orioles - as long as they have abundant cover, insects and fruiting shrubs or trees.
Surveying the local bird scene
But how small is too small? How isolated is too isolated? To address these questions, staff from The Nature Conservancy has teamed up with scientists from Audubon New York, New York State Department of Transportation, and five area universities (both Klein and Waud are on this team). This study, funded by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, is part of a broader Nature Conservancy effort to identify and preserve important wildlife habitats in the Great Lakes' coastal zones.
After examining the scientific literature, the team identified three of the most important characteristics for stopover sites and developed a predictive model using remote-sensing and GIS (Geographical Information Systems) technology. The team is testing its model on 21 study plots located on a mixture of private and public land from Aurora to Syracuse.
During the next several migration cycles, experienced volunteer birders - including Spahn and others who can identify approximately 90 percent of birds by sight and sound - will walk these study plots and tally each bird they observe. Birders will submit their counts to team leaders, who will analyze the data and enter them into eBird, a continent-wide database of birds developed by Audubon and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
If predictions are on the mark, volunteers will observe a high number of migrant songbirds in plots that are closer to the lakeshore, feature woody cover within 5 kilometers of the site, and retain high habitat diversity. With this confirmation, scientists would able to use remote-sensing technology, rather than labor-intensive field studies, to analyze where quality stopovers occur.
This three-year study will result in a map of regional stopover sites and a set of guidelines that can be used by landowners, governments, and land trusts to help them make informed decisions on how to protect migratory stopovers. The study will also help organizations prioritize spending on land conservation projects that protect bird populations.
"Migration presents an exciting but fragile time in a bird's life," says Betsy Brooks. "One wrong move and a hawk has it in its talons. One sudden sleet storm over Lake Ontario and a migrating kinglet drops exhausted and drowns. A young gray catbird banded here in Rochester can be found dead a week later on an oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico..."

http://www.rochester-citynews.com/news/articles/2009/09/OUTDOORS-A-bird-in-the-hand/

Long article....continues here
24922  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / A wing and a Prayer on: 02-Oct-09, 10:04:28 PM
A wing and a prayer

Darrell Greer
Northern News Services
Published Wednesday, September 30, 2009

ARVIAT - Joseph Kablutsiak of Arviat could never have imagined what awaited him when his daughter called him outside earlier this month.
NNSL photo/graphic

Joseph Kablutsiak displays the injured young peregrine falcon his family nursed back to health in Arviat earlier this month. - photo courtesy of Nadine Lamoureux

There, standing on the ground near the side of his truck unable to take flight, was an injured juvenile peregrine falcon.

The peregrine falcon, also referred to as a duck hawk, is a bird of prey.

It's a large, crowsized falcon, distinguished by its bluegrey back, barred white underparts, and black head and moustache. What many people don't realize about the peregrine falcon is that it's recognized as the fastest animal on the planet.

Amazingly, the peregrine can surpass speeds of 322km/h (200 m.p.h.) in a dive.

The female peregrine tends to be much bigger than its male counterpart, and its breeding range stretches from the Arctic tundra to the tropics.

In fact, the peregrine falcon can be found nearly everywhere on Earth, except extreme polar regions, very high mountains and most rainforests.

Kablutsiak figures his peregrine falcon must have hit overhead wires and fell to the ground.

The bird's benefactor said once he was certain the falcon couldn't fly, he took it inside, put it in a box and fed it with chicken and mice.

Kablutsiak said he contacted Renewable Resources, but its officers were all out of town. He was informed the bird would be looked at once they arrived back in the community.

"We decided we could keep it until it could fly again, and we could even provide a cage for the bird," said Kablutsiak.

"We looked after it the best we could, hoping it would be able to fly soon and we wouldn't have to keep it all winter."

The falcon began to look healthier every day and started trusting Kablutsiak more as he and his family nursed it back to health.

As it turned out, Kablutsiak spent his final moments with the bird this past weekend, when he took it out to look for mice.

"The bird looked up at the sky and then back at me, and then it took flight.

"I went up to the flat rocks by the dump and watched it soar in the sky, healthy and free once again.

"I am very happy to have been given the chance to save the bird's life."
24923  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Shagged by a Kakapo on: 02-Oct-09, 11:52:05 AM
I must share this as much as possible!!
Thanks!
  rofl
Mirta

Duh, I had no clue this was a video..........just figured it out.  stupid silly OMG, this is the funniest   hysterical thing I've seen in a long time....What's wrong with me?????  drool Don't answer.
24924  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 02-Oct-09, 10:35:02 AM

 scared blue
24925  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / What is THAT???? on: 02-Oct-09, 09:11:39 AM
<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20091002/MainCamera_HighRes_20091002-0814.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20091002/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20091002-0814.jpg?" >[/url]

What is this to the left of nest box.....looks like an animal. Is it a bird???  See it??? Strange
24926  Member Activities / Birthdays / Re: Happy Birthday decafonly4me on: 02-Oct-09, 08:59:06 AM
               coffee    HAPPY BIRTHDAY DECAF   :coffee


Cute name
   clap
24927  Member Activities / Birthdays / Re: Happy Birthday Jeanne on: 02-Oct-09, 08:50:52 AM
  bdcake  jeanne, have the best of Birthdays   newyearbd


24928  Anything Else / Totally OT / Now this is one HUGE Liger on: 01-Oct-09, 10:20:18 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zOWYj59BXI&feature=browch   scared blue
24929  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Vernon Laux: person of the week in 2004 on: 01-Oct-09, 10:04:10 PM

Person of the Week: Vernon Laux
Bird Watcher Vernon Laux Makes Rare Find
By Peter Jennings
Aug. 27, 2004

Post a Comment

The 50 million birders of America have a lot to thank Vernon Laux for. Some of them are probably pretty jealous.

"The red-footed falcon was not on anybody's radar screen," Laux said. "There had never been one seen before in either North or South America. This is the first one for the hemisphere. It was just like a mind-blowing experience to say, 'Oh my God, it is a red-footed falcon.' "

A few weeks ago, Laux, who lives on the island of Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts, was out with friends looking at birds, when he spotted one he didn't recognize.

He took a picture and sent it to some experts. Lo and behold, Laux had seen a red-footed falcon.

"We were celebrating, eating steak tips, smoking cigars, it was really fun," Laux said. "This really is a once-in-a-lifetime deal to find a bird like this, so don't expect to happen again."

It was a very big deal because red-footed falcons usually migrate between the grasslands of Africa and Eastern Europe. The bird, who was only 13 months old, was really off course.

"A red-footed falcon!" said Laux. "It's like a Martian walking around among us here and it's so out of the box."

As soon as word got out, thousands of birders from around the country flocked to Martha's Vineyard to see for themselves.

"Somebody asked me what's so great about this. So I said, 'You know, falcons are sexy, raptors are great,' and I said, 'This ain't no stinkin' sparrow or flycatcher. This is an honest-to-God beautiful falcon!'"

Pretty soon the falcon had a nickname: "Red Sox."

Migration Theories

But how did he get here? There are a lot of theories.

Red Sox was most likely hatched in Ukraine and then migrated via Israel — where they are seen quite often — to southern Africa, most likely around Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe. It's a bit like going south for the winter.

When the weather changed, most of the red-footed falcons headed back to Ukraine, where they would mate and start the process all over again. But that was not the case for Red Sox: There was an outbreak of locusts in western Africa this year.

The falcons love locusts and Red Sox was distracted. After that he likely got caught up in the dust storms over the Sahara Desert, which left him disoriented. He was pushed out to sea as a result. When he began to look for land, he went west instead of east.

The guy is hardly a year old and he's been to four continents. No wonder people love birding.

"Just to get away from the cars and malls and do something different, like, 'Let's go to a beach and look for shore birds,'" Laux said. "People do want to connect with nature, especially people who live in urban areas."

Love at First Sight

Laux, 50, is a real estate agent when he's not looking at birds. When he was a boy he saw a cedar waxwing. Pretty soon, he was the only birder on the football team.

"I was a defensive tackle and I remember I had to get into a fight when I was a sophomore with some of the seniors because they didn't like it that I watched birds," he said.

Today he writes articles about birds. He recently wrote a book, and he will go almost anywhere to see a bird he hasn't seen before.

At the beginning of this week, Laux had a feeling that Red Sox was beginning to look antsy. On Tuesday, the bird left Martha's Vineyard.

The theory is that Red Sox will be headed south. He certainly made the biggest impression on Martha's Vineyard since Bill Clinton vacationed there.

"This bird sort of took people out of themselves," Laux said. "It was like a shooting star, a celestial event and it really, I was amazed how it just grew. The bird turned into a star, it was amazing."  clap
24930  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Article by vernon Laux on: 01-Oct-09, 09:52:31 PM

Birds : October arrives

By E. Vernon Laux
Published: October 1, 2009

    * Reader Comments
    * Printer-friendly version

Early October is as good as it gets. This is a fantastic time of year for birding. There are birds everywhere, as everything comes together in a perfect synergy of weather, birds, fish, and shortening photoperiod to create the absolute perfect time of year. From common to rare, big to tiny, birds are on the move.
peregrine falcon, Martha's VineyardThis immature peregrine falcon rocketed around a field last week, making dives or stoops at killdeer, semi-palmated plover, black-bellied plovers, and American golden plovers without getting very close to any of them. Photo by E. Vernon Laux

Mixed in with the more common species are some bona fide rarities. Sorting through all the common birds to get to the rare birds is a tough job, but somebody's got to do it. At this time of year, the Vineyard is one of the finest birding locations in New England. Many "weekend warriors" come from the mainland to bird this under-birded Island.
 falcon
Peregrine falcons are on the move and almost a daily sight. These tremendously strong flyers can and do go wherever they want, whenever they want. The majority of the falcons passing by are birds that nest in northern Canada, Baffin Island, or Greenland. The Latin name of these birds is Falco peregrinus, which essentially means wandering falcon. They are found on every continent except Antarctica and on many remote and distant offshore islands.

They are capable of capturing and eating almost any bird. I have seen these birds, 300 miles from land, just coasting along a few hundred feet in the air, reaching down and taking bites out of some bird they took on the wing. Superbly adapted to their particular lifestyle, they don't need to land to eat or rest, and they fly with the greatest of ease.

The peregrines that pass by are mostly heading to southern South America. It seems the further north they nest; the further south they go to spend the winter. Other peregrine falcons that nest in Massachusetts may overwinter along the state's coast or move farther south.

This reminds me of Quest... crying
Unless one has been rigged up with a satellite transmitter, it is impossible to say what an individual bird will do. What is certain is that this species can and does do almost anything in terms of migration. This species, with its many subspecies, is clearly the most successful raptor on the entire planet. The osprey also has a worldwide distribution and is very successful, as well.

The Island has been jumping with lots of reports from lots of birders. Rather than list the birds, suffice it to say that the birding has been terrific and a wide variety of species has been seen. The mix is shifting away from insectivorous flycatchers, warblers, vireos and the like to more seed-eating (finches and sparrows) and frugivores types of birds. Robins, cedar waxwings, blackbird, raptors, sea ducks, and sparrows are increasing in numbers and many of these birds are now arriving to spend the winter here.



The appearance of large numbers of yellow-rumped warblers, the last of the warblers to appear in migration and a common overwintering species, signals the end of the warbler migration. Impressive numbers, hundreds of these birds, were visibly on the move over this past weekend. With so many yellow-rumps around, it essentially swamps the observer, making it difficult to find anything else.

The waters surrounding the Island are getting crowded with bird life. Migrating loons, grebes, a wide variety of ducks, northern gannets, and many species of gulls are enjoying the bounty of seafood present. With the gales of November just around the corner, not to mention the 40 mph winds on Friday morning, and decreasing water temperatures, small fish are slowing down and big fish and birds are there to eat them.

Over the next month, the waters continue to get increasingly productive for birds, while the land birding gets less interesting. Still, the next few weeks are inordinately good for rare birds. Vagrant flycatchers always come to this writer's mind as the calendar ticks into October. More typical, almost expected rarities like the western kingbird should appear, and the chances for an ash-throated flycatcher or some long-tailed tropical-looking beauty like a scissor-tailed flycatcher or fork-tailed flycatcher from South America are very real.

Blackbirds and sparrows are abundant right now. Several huge flocks of mixed blackbirds, comprised primarily of common grackles with smaller numbers of red-winged blackbirds, European starlings, and brown-headed cowbirds are roaming the Island. They can show up anywhere and one big flock has been daily visiting the woods on Lambert's Cove Road both in Tisbury and West Tisbury. Should they descend on your yard you can count on your feeders being quickly emptied.

Until next time - keep your eyes to the sky.
foxbinocs
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