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25276  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: The Great Pumpkin at the Corning Museum of Glass on: 20-Aug-09, 07:48:42 PM
spider  I don't think that Suzanne has joined over here yet, so I'm going to post this.  We met up with Sue and hubby, Bob at the Corning Museum of Glass when we were in Watkins Glen 2 weeks ago.  Had a great time (pictures will follow sometime before the next century).  The CMoG is huge and it is easy to be put into overload - still great.  I bought a few glass pumpkins and she sent me the following because of that. http://www.the-leader.com/news/x2145965462/CMoG-aims-for-world-s-biggest-pumpkin   cat

That has to be hard to do.....nice size pumpkin too! (hmm, need a pumpkin smiley)

Thanks,
Donna
25277  Member Activities / Puzzles / Re: Kaver puzzle on: 20-Aug-09, 07:44:58 PM
My time was 4:13, but I was watching the news and cussing at the TV (PA Flight 103).

Donna - you are right - Kaver heart is ALWAYS going to show up when we least expect him.


I can't give up yet Janet. Ya just never know! whistle

Donna
25278  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Smileys on: 20-Aug-09, 07:41:06 PM
humming bird  Wow!  Love the new smilies.   clap

Me too, thanks Shaky. They just do something to a post.  kittykiss

Donna
25279  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 20-Aug-09, 06:25:14 AM
Someone is in the Box right now!

<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090820/MainCamera_HighRes_20090820-0621.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090820/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090820-0621.jpg?" >[/url] it's beauty Janet<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090820/MainCamera_HighRes_20090820-0618.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090820/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090820-0618.jpg?" >[/url]LOL and Archer
25280  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Smileys on: 20-Aug-09, 06:13:54 AM
[
How bout these?
25281  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Smileys on: 20-Aug-09, 05:54:28 AM
Hey Dot!  You were busy  thumbsup  LOVE the EyeCat!!!  heart

Me too!! Thanks.

Donna
25282  Resources / Links / Lots of birdcams from around the world on: 19-Aug-09, 07:35:53 AM
http://www.littlebirdiehome.com/WCPALL.html

Donna
25283  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Smileys on: 19-Aug-09, 07:05:34 AM
Want a smiley added? Post your request for it here.

If you have a requested smiley, post it the link or attach it to your reply. I will add it to the official list.

Thanks for the new thread Shaky.

I think we need some bird smileys, and dogs also. Maybe a spider or 2?

Donna
25284  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: I saved a seagull. on: 19-Aug-09, 06:12:12 AM
I grabbed a jacket and threw it over him. He was completely missing one foot and the other foot looked like it was about to fall off.

How awful for the Seagull, how wonderful of you to rescue him....thank you so much. clap

Shaky, I think we need some bird smileys also, if possible.....thanks. Kiss

Donna
25285  Member Activities / Pets / Re: Heartwarming - I am so proud of Casey! on: 19-Aug-09, 06:03:11 AM

WHAT AN AMAZING DOG
you have Joyce, a true Hero. God Bless Steve & Casey. Is Steve OK now?

Donna
25286  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Rhea Mae and Tiago's Webcam - Toronto - Canadian Peregrine Foundation on: 18-Aug-09, 10:31:58 PM
Someone on the standpipe this morning (the other cam is stuck...again)...definitely an adult...I'm guessing Rhea Mae based on size...



This just in from Big Frank:

Re: RHea Mae 08-17-2009

Jan reported one adult,in the area saw the band and it was Tiago. She also saw
one juvenile which she thought had dark tape. Later she saw one on the
pipe,definetly adult as was said and also a Juvenile with a white tape on
it,which would be Osler,so likely 2 of the juvies are still in the area. Ive
already seen a juvenile Peregrine where I count migrating raptors. While the
bird seen wasnt necessarily migrating,since there is no nest in the vicinity
that was successful this season,its a wandering juvenile.
  thumbsup
25287  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Windmills in NJ vs Raptors on: 18-Aug-09, 09:04:32 PM
Bats are already in danger from white-nose fungus, which is decimating populations on the East Coast.  We don't need any other dangers to them, they're too important to our environments!

Judi


Judi, the Bats here in Rockaway are all but gone now because of that fungus. 10's of thousands are wiped out from it.

very sad,

Donna
25288  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Hummingbird Attacks Goldfinch on: 18-Aug-09, 07:43:05 PM
I figure it was a "Jersey" hummingbird  Wink

Of course!  Evil

Donna
25289  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Archer & beauty today 8-18 on: 18-Aug-09, 07:08:36 PM
<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1/20090818/Camera1_20090818-1826.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1_Thumbnail/20090818/Camera1_Thumbnail_20090818-1826.jpg?" >[/url]<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090818/MainCamera_HighRes_20090818-1827.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090818/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090818-1827.jpg?" >[/url]Archer<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090818/MainCamera_HighRes_20090818-1832.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090818/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090818-1832.jpg?" >[/url]Beauty<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090818/MainCamera_HighRes_20090818-1834.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090818/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090818-1834.jpg?" >[/url]Beauty getting ready to leave wave

Nice to see them after an absence for a couple days.  Cheesy

Donna
25290  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Couple feeds 1,000 Hummingbirds 2 gallons of nectar a day on: 18-Aug-09, 07:47:58 AM
A labor of love

Many people, including this writer, enjoy watching the hummingbirds that visit their nectar feeders each summer. Ruby-throated hummingbirds, their iridescent feathers shining in the sun, buzz in and out to get a sip of energy-rich sugar water. A few dedicated birders carry the feeding to extremes that are hard to imagine unless you see it for yourself.

Mark Nale Afield

One such pair of dedicated hummingbird caretakers is Jan and John Reed of Coburn. The Reeds have 25 nectar feeders hanging around their lodge along Penns Creek, most of them concentrated on their spacious front porch. They also have numerous hummingbird-attracting flowers, such as bee-balm, planted on their property.

During the peak of migration, the Reed’s porch will have more traffic than a truck stop on Interstate 80. While my family measures its homemade hummingbird nectar by the cup and has a few hummingbirds visiting our humble feeders, the Reeds have HUMMINGBIRDS — hundreds of them — and they mix their nectar by the gallon.

Based on the number of gallons of sugar water that the Reeds are now preparing this month, naturalist and hummingbird bander Scott Weidensaul estimates that they are feeding up to 1,000 hummingbirds a day  Shocked— a lot of hummingbirds in any-one’s book. According to Weidensaul, the peak of hummer migration occurs in mid-August, and the Reeds are experiencing that right now.

The Reed’s relationship with hummingbirds began when John Reed moved into a trailer on his Penns Creek land in 1969. That is when he saw his first hummingbird on the property. He bought one feeder and started feeding hummers the following week. He built Reed’s Ranch, a hunting and fishing lodge, on the site and moved in during 1986. The Reeds were married in 1990.

“We got married on Penns View, the mountain that we can see from our lodge. It was a camouflage wedding — two hunters getting married,” Jan said with a laugh. Apart from enjoying their hummingbirds and tending to the needs of people staying at their lodge, the Reeds spend a lot of time fishing — particularly on Sayers Dam at Bald Eagle State Park.
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According to Jan, they are currently feeding the hummingbirds approximately two gallons of nectar per day. The Reeds mix sugar and water at a ratio of 4-to-1 —that is one cup of sugar for every four cups of boiling water. They do not use food coloring in their homemade nectar. Jan says that the artificial coloring is harmful to the birds and it certainly is not necessary to attract hummingbirds.

Cleanliness is also important when feeding hummingbirds. The Reeds meticulously wash and sterilize their glass and plastic feeders before each filling. Almost all of their feeders were the same brand and style — an hourglass-shaped glass bottle, having a red plastic bottom and four yellow feeding stations. John said that they tried plastic feeders, but roaming bears would chew them open to get at the sugar water. According to John, bears do not seem to bother the glass feeders. They had tried other feeder types and their current model seems to work the best.

Jan shared some of the records that they keep on a calendar each year. In 2002, they mixed 56 gallons of nectar, and by 2006, that more than tripled to 175 gallons.

“That was our big year,” Jan said. “We used 306 pounds of sugar.”

Hummingbird numbers seemed to be down in 2007, and the Reeds used “only” 230 pounds of sugar to mix 158 gallons of nectar. In 2008, they used 208 pounds of sugar to make 142 gallons of nectar.

“Right now, we are on course to break last year’s total,” Jan said. “So far, we have mixed 129 gallons of nectar, and we are on our seventh 25-pound bag of sugar.” Based on their records, the Reeds have about five more weeks of hummingbird feeding. They usually see their last hummingbird of the year around Sept. 21 — the final day of summer.

Weidensaul rated the Reed’s Ranch as “one of the largest concentrations of hummingbirds in the east.”

How does one family attract so many hummers? I asked Weidensaul what makes Reed’s Ranch so popular with hummingbirds.

“All of the places that I am familiar with, that hold large concentrations of ruby-throated hummingbirds, are in stream valleys surrounded by forests with clearings,” he said. “This is important, since 60 percent of a hummingbird’s diet is insects. The other important factor is having lots of feeders for a long time, and the Reeds certainly have that.”

Although it takes money, effort and a commitment of time, John and Jan enjoy their favorite summer pastime. The Reeds love feeding the hummingbirds and sharing their pleasure with others. Aside from the avian traffic, their porch sees a lot of human traffic, too. The Reeds openly welcome neighbors, friends and other bird lovers onto their homey porch. They have also opened their property to several hummingbird banders, including Weidensaul.

I shared the better part of a day with the Reeds, and you could not find a friendlier or more welcoming couple. I am hoping to spend more time at the Reed’s Ranch later this month.

“It is interesting and we just enjoy it,” Jan shared. “We just love sitting on the porch and watching the birds.”
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