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Author Topic: RTH cam in NY  (Read 64275 times)
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Donna
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« Reply #15 on: 07-May-11, 12:55:12 PM »

Tweeted from NYT today:
Drama in #hawkcam nest, and no guaranteed happy ending. Violet's leg, and baby hawks' future at stake. Pray!http://nyti.ms/kmVGK9] http://nyti.ms/kmVGK9[/url] [/i]  Sad



I had a feeling something would happen to one of them. She had that plastic bag around her neck a few weeks ago. Plus, she brought a lot of cra# to that nest that wasn't nesting material. This makes me so mad but what can you do?  Sad
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« Reply #16 on: 11-May-11, 09:48:05 AM »

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/hawk-cam-updates-from-the-nest/ More news on Violet, her leg is badly swollen from the BAND???
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« Reply #17 on: 11-May-11, 11:11:40 PM »

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/11/hawk-cam-rescue-of-violet-planned-for-thursday/ Tomorrow (Thurs) is capture day for Violet. No matter what they decide, the lone baby will never be released unless Violet's injury from her ID band isn't that serious. It's a sad story no matter the outcome.
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« Reply #18 on: 12-May-11, 04:32:04 PM »

Updated, 3:31 p.m. | Today is the day that a team including rehabilitators and a veterinarian will try to capture and treat Violet, the red-tailed hawk and new mother whose injured leg has become dangerously swollen in recent days from a metal wildlife band.

Since early morning, rescue workers have been at New York University’s Bobst Library, where Violet and her mate, Bobby, have a nest on a 12th-floor window ledge, but as of 2:45 p.m. they had not disturbed the nest. In the afternoon, rescuers appeared briefly on the building’s roof, a site where officials had said they might put a baited trap.

The many questions that remain to be answered include: if Violet is captured, will the rescuers be able to treat and release her immediately (in which case the week-old baby hawk, or eyas, on the nest will stay put)? Or will they have to take her to the Bronx Zoo for long-term treatment (in which case they would bring the eyas with her)?

Will be on the news at 5 on CBS
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Kris G.
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« Reply #19 on: 12-May-11, 07:19:14 PM »

Updated, 5:27 p.m. | A medical rescue team, which spent Thursday observing Violet, the red-tailed hawk and new mother with an injured leg, decided not to try to take her from her nest high above Washington Square Park in order to treat her.

The wildlife specialists said that Violet was functioning well enough — and that the risks to her and her week-old hatchling were serious enough — that intervention could not be justified.
Violet, her injured leg, and her week-old baby are staying put after all.

After observing Violet on the nest up close for a full day, the team led by the state decided that she was functioning well enough, and that the possible dangers posed by intervention - both to her and the baby - were so great, that the best course of action was not to act.

"In the final analysis," said Stephen Zahn, a regional supervisor of natural resources for the State Department of Environmental Conservation, "there was not a medical imperative to intercede on behalf of the bird with such high risks to both her and the hatchling."

Elizabeth Bunting, a veterinarian specializing in wildlife from Cornell's School of Veterinary Medicine, said that while Violet was obviously having difficulty using her swollen right leg, which has a metal wildlife band stuck high on the shin, she was using it nonetheless and was still able to extend her toes.

And, crucially, she is still able to use her right foot to hold prey while she pulls it apart to feed her baby, or eyas, Dr. Bunting said. "She is compensating very well on that foot," Dr. Bunting said at a news conference in the lobby of New York University's Bobst Library building, home of the hawk nest. "She doesn't appear to have any problems feeding him."

If the specialists were to try to capture Violet on the nest, Mr. Zahn said, and she reacted aggressively, she might knock the nest off its narrow ledge; it's "a very precarious situation," he said.

Even if Violet were to be trapped away from the nest, Mr. Zahn said, she could injure herself as tried to struggle free, or while she was being held as the doctor tried to remove the metal tag.

"There's a risk at every step of the way," he said.

Dr. Bunting said that the team would continue to monitor Violet on the Hawk Cam - "We'll be able to use the webcam to have really incredible access watching this bird's progress," she said - and would not hesitate to intervene if things turned worse.

"We'll remain cautious but vigilant in observing the bird in the upcoming weeks to make sure that this hatchling will fledge," she said. Members of the rescue team will also visit the site in person, Mr. Zahn said.

Dr. Bunting was reluctant to offer a prognosis for Violet's leg. The swelling, she said, could have been caused in part by the fact that she has spent so much time lying down on the nest, and "could go down as she starts moving around - or it could progress."

John Blakeman, a hawk expert from Ohio who has been observing the situation on the nest with varying degrees of alarm, said that he was particularly encouraged Thursday to see Violet "rouse," the term for fluffing, shaking and reshuffling her feathers.

"A hawk will only rouse when at relative or complete ease and comfort," he wrote in an e-mail. "Violet is not in the state of distress most of us presumed.

"Nothing is as revealing as a good, feather-shaking rouse."

As for the baby, which has been growing quickly on a half-dozen or so meals a day and has begun wiggling its stubby wings as it tries to move about the nest, Chris Nadareski, a raptor specialist and section chief with the city's Department of Environmental Protection, said that it appeared to be doing just fine, a reflection of Violet's effectiveness as a mother.

"We can say she's doing a good job," he said.



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« Reply #20 on: 12-May-11, 08:00:17 PM »

 2thumbsup   VERY good news 
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« Reply #21 on: 12-May-11, 09:57:41 PM »

Updated, 5:27 p.m. | A medical rescue team, which spent Thursday observing Violet, the red-tailed hawk and new mother with an injured leg, decided not to try to take her from her nest high above Washington Square Park in order to treat her.

The wildlife specialists said that Violet was functioning well enough — and that the risks to her and her week-old hatchling were serious enough — that intervention could not be justified.
Violet, her injured leg, and her week-old baby are staying put after all.

After observing Violet on the nest up close for a full day, the team led by the state decided that she was functioning well enough, and that the possible dangers posed by intervention - both to her and the baby - were so great, that the best course of action was not to act.

"In the final analysis," said Stephen Zahn, a regional supervisor of natural resources for the State Department of Environmental Conservation, "there was not a medical imperative to intercede on behalf of the bird with such high risks to both her and the hatchling."

Elizabeth Bunting, a veterinarian specializing in wildlife from Cornell's School of Veterinary Medicine, said that while Violet was obviously having difficulty using her swollen right leg, which has a metal wildlife band stuck high on the shin, she was using it nonetheless and was still able to extend her toes.

And, crucially, she is still able to use her right foot to hold prey while she pulls it apart to feed her baby, or eyas, Dr. Bunting said. "She is compensating very well on that foot," Dr. Bunting said at a news conference in the lobby of New York University's Bobst Library building, home of the hawk nest. "She doesn't appear to have any problems feeding him."

If the specialists were to try to capture Violet on the nest, Mr. Zahn said, and she reacted aggressively, she might knock the nest off its narrow ledge; it's "a very precarious situation," he said.

Even if Violet were to be trapped away from the nest, Mr. Zahn said, she could injure herself as tried to struggle free, or while she was being held as the doctor tried to remove the metal tag.

"There's a risk at every step of the way," he said.

Dr. Bunting said that the team would continue to monitor Violet on the Hawk Cam - "We'll be able to use the webcam to have really incredible access watching this bird's progress," she said - and would not hesitate to intervene if things turned worse.

"We'll remain cautious but vigilant in observing the bird in the upcoming weeks to make sure that this hatchling will fledge," she said. Members of the rescue team will also visit the site in person, Mr. Zahn said.

Dr. Bunting was reluctant to offer a prognosis for Violet's leg. The swelling, she said, could have been caused in part by the fact that she has spent so much time lying down on the nest, and "could go down as she starts moving around - or it could progress."

John Blakeman, a hawk expert from Ohio who has been observing the situation on the nest with varying degrees of alarm, said that he was particularly encouraged Thursday to see Violet "rouse," the term for fluffing, shaking and reshuffling her feathers.

"A hawk will only rouse when at relative or complete ease and comfort," he wrote in an e-mail. "Violet is not in the state of distress most of us presumed.

"Nothing is as revealing as a good, feather-shaking rouse."

As for the baby, which has been growing quickly on a half-dozen or so meals a day and has begun wiggling its stubby wings as it tries to move about the nest, Chris Nadareski, a raptor specialist and section chief with the city's Department of Environmental Protection, said that it appeared to be doing just fine, a reflection of Violet's effectiveness as a mother.

"We can say she's doing a good job," he said.





I think they made the right decision.  Poor Violet  and her hatchling.  Keep her and her chick in your thoughts.  Nature can be kind.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #22 on: 13-May-11, 03:31:54 PM »

The little one looks good today with Violet watching over it.  Just wished they could get some of that junk out of there before the baby gets tangled in it.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #23 on: 17-May-11, 07:43:58 PM »

And the baby RTH's name is...

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/17/hawk-cam-the-christening/?smid=tw-nytimes&seid=auto
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« Reply #24 on: 17-May-11, 08:14:29 PM »

 bow  fittingly named. Just hope they let everyone get what they need. We would all love to see that thing off Violet's leg.  It stll could happen.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #25 on: 20-May-11, 08:01:46 PM »

Pip is 2 weeks old today and doing well!


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Donna
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« Reply #26 on: 20-May-11, 08:06:43 PM »

Pip is 2 weeks old today and doing well!




So cute, thanks.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #27 on: 26-May-11, 07:29:51 PM »

Hawk Cam | The Story of Violet’s Leg Band

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/25/hawk-cam-the-story-of-violets-leg-band/#more-311949
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Donna
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« Reply #28 on: 26-May-11, 11:08:33 PM »


Still sad to look at!
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Donna
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« Reply #29 on: 06-Jun-11, 06:37:48 AM »

http://www.livestream.com/nytnestcam?utm_source=website-home&utm_medium=grid&utm_campaign=nytnestcam Look how big Pip is getting. 1 month old today
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