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Author Topic: Whooper Migration 2011 has started  (Read 7667 times)
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Donna
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« on: 02-Nov-11, 07:19:39 AM »

http://host.madison.com/news/local/article_1d1323e2-03c5-11e1-828b-001cc4c002e0.html

One of the young cranes disappeared about 10 days ago, but was found last weekend, hanging out with a few Sandhill cranes at White River Marsh.


Rare whooping crane spotted in Jackson County; one of less than 500 in the wild


FOUND!

http://www.mlive.com/news/jackson/index.ssf/2011/10/rare_whooping_crane_spotted_in.html


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Donna
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« Reply #1 on: 04-Jan-12, 09:43:51 AM »

Ultralight crane flights grounded

The ultralight-led migration of endangered whooping cranes from Wisconsin to Florida has been halted in Alabama over the failure of a group to comply with federal regulations involving their use of the small aircraft.

An attorney representing Operation Migration - the group that leads whooping cranes to Florida each fall and winter - confirmed Tuesday that the aircraft-led migration was voluntarily halted in December.

Attorney Charles R. Barnett III said he hoped to resolve the issue quickly.

Meanwhile, the nine birds and their handlers are grounded in Franklin County, in northwestern Alabama.

After departing from Wisconsin in the fall, the cranes' final destinations are two national wildlife refuges in Florida.

Operation Migration posts developments almost daily but has made no mention of standing down because of regulatory problems.

The issue: Pilots of ultralight aircraft are prohibited by the Federal Aviation Administration from flying on a paid basis, but Operation Migration pilots are compensated for their work.

A former pilot for Operation Migration filed a complaint with the FAA in 2011.

Chris Gullikson said he had been asked to conduct nesting surveys at the Necedah National Wildlife Refuge, where many of the cranes have lived since their reintroduction. But he was informed by aviation experts that he could not carry out a commercial enterprise with an ultralight.

"I was hoping for a resolution early on," Gullikson said, noting he made his complaint in early 2011 when it was uncertain whether Operation Migration would be operating from a new site to work with the birds. The group moved from Necedah to the White River Marsh State Wildlife Area. Barnett filed a petition with authorities Dec. 27 that seeks to exempt Operation Migration from the regulations, even though this year's migration was well under way.

In an interview Tuesday, Barnett said Operation Migration does not want to intentionally violate federal air regulations.

In an email, Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Elizabeth Cory said it was her agency's understanding the pilots with Operation Migration were reluctant to fly if they were violating the law.

The group's annual migrations with the birds are a key plank in a public-private partnership's in reintroducing whooping cranes to the eastern United States, Barnett told authorities in his petition.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said it is considering keeping the birds at nearby refuges if the flights can't continue.

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Shaky
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« Reply #2 on: 04-Jan-12, 10:11:57 AM »

Simple. Instead of paying the pilot, say, $100 to fly the ultralight, hand him a camera and pay him $100 to photograph the birds while on the ground. Then he can fly the ultralight for free. Or is it against FAA rules to get paid to photograph birds?
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Donna
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« Reply #3 on: 11-Jan-12, 06:59:47 AM »

FAA waives rules, says paid-pilots can guide whooping cranes to Florida using bird-like plane.   clap

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/faa-waives-rules-says-paid-pilots-can-guide-whooping-cranes-to-florida-using-bird-like-plane/2012/01/09/gIQA7IYHmP_story.html On the road again, OK, in the air!! YAY
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« Reply #4 on: 11-Jan-12, 07:04:00 AM »

FAA waives rules, says paid-pilots can guide whooping cranes to Florida using bird-like plane.   clap

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/faa-waives-rules-says-paid-pilots-can-guide-whooping-cranes-to-florida-using-bird-like-plane/2012/01/09/gIQA7IYHmP_story.html On the road again, OK, in the air!! YAY

Yippee-kai-yay, Baby! Common sense prevails.
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Kris G.
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« Reply #5 on: 12-Jan-12, 04:14:12 PM »

 clap
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« Reply #6 on: 14-Jan-12, 09:47:21 AM »

http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1115329
 In the Toronto Star today. Hope everything went well with the cold weather they faced!
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« Reply #7 on: 14-Jan-12, 06:06:56 PM »

 2thumbsup
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« Reply #8 on: 17-Jan-12, 10:13:13 AM »

AL: WHOOPING CRANE MIGRATION EFFORTS GROUNDED AGAIN

Operation Migration officials attempted to continue leading a migration of nine whooping cranes to Florida on Sunday, but eventually aborted the flight because the birds kept breaking off from the pack.

http://www.timesdaily.com/stories/Whooping-crane-migration-efforts-grounded-again,186485
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« Reply #9 on: 22-Jan-12, 07:25:21 AM »

http://www.timesdaily.com/stories/Cranes-return-to-skies-briefly,186586 Cranes return to skies — briefly

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« Reply #10 on: 01-Feb-12, 06:36:46 AM »

Whooping cranes looking for home after assisted migration ends
By Dennis Sherer Staff Writer
A flock of whooping cranes that has spent the past six weeks in northwest Alabama are looking for a new home.

The assisted migration of the rare birds has ended after bad weather, a government investigation and the reluctance of the young cranes to continue flying south. The the journey that was scheduled to end in Florida has been on hold since early December.

"The Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership is meeting this week in Wisconsin. A decision will be made at the meeting about where we will go from here with the cranes," said Liz Condie, CEO and co-founder of Operation Migration, the group that was leading the birds from Wisconsin to Florida.

The partnership includes Operation Migration, the Fish and Wildlife Service and seven other agencies and organizations working to restore the whooping crane population.

Among the options likely to be discussed include hauling the nine birds to Florida in crates where they would be released at two wildlife refuges. Another is to release the cranes at Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge in Decatur.

"We're really not sure what all the options are that will be discussed at the meeting," Condie said. "All the options that have been considered so far have pros and cons. There could be some new options develop before a decision is made on Wednesday or Thursday."

Times Daily
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« Reply #11 on: 03-Feb-12, 07:28:43 AM »

 Whooping Crane Migration Will Finish By Truck: Whoopers uncooperative

An effort using ultralight planes to coax essentially orphaned whooping cranes all the way from Wisconsin to their wintering grounds in Florida has ended for the season. The problem this time isn’t a possible violation of Federal Aviation Administration rules, but rather the birds themselves.

“The birds haven’t been cooperative,’’ said Liz Conde, a spokeswoman for Operation Migration, the group that organizes the flights. “The birds are refusing to follow the ultralights any further.’’ The last time an Operation Migration pilot flying an ultralight tried to guide them a few days ago, on a morning with perfect weather for flying, “the birds would just come out of the pen, fall in behind the ultralight, take off in beautiful formation, fly for a short bit and then break away.’’

“It’s a game of ‘Can’t catch me!’ or something,” she mused.

The decision is something of a disappointment after an epic struggle to get the F.A.A. to allow the migration to resume. Acting on a complaint that the flights were commercial, and that the ultralights and their pilots are not certified for commercial use, the agency grounded the flights after the birds and pilots reached Alabama. It relented after a chorus of experts said that it was important to re-establish a wild population of endangered migrating birds, that this was the best way to do it, and that time was of the essence.

It may already have been too late. The weather has been unusually balmy for this time of year, around 61 degrees today, Ms. Conde noted, and the increasing hours of daylight are a cue to the birds that winter is already waning. The birds may also have been undergoing some hormonal changes, she said.

In any case, the only way to get the cranes moving will be to put them in crates and drive them by truck to the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge near Decatur, Ala., she said, where six or seven whooping cranes, alumni of earlier migrations, are already wintering.

Operation Migration has never led birds to Wheeler, only to Florida, she said; the wild cranes that are there now picked the spot on their own. But that’s O.K., Ms. Conde said: “You never want to second-guess a wild bird.”

Wheeler is about 45 miles northeast, as the crow flies, from the cranes current position.

The cranes that are being trucked might return year after year to Wheeler or they might go elsewhere; no one is really sure. If they remain impressionable and fly with a group of other whooping cranes, they might make it to Florida next year, Ms. Conde said; or they might pair off with mates and fly to Florida.

The group is posting progress reports on its blog.  http://www.operationmigration.org/Field_Journal.html?utm_source=EB+Feb+2.12+Wheeler&utm_campaign=EBFeb+2.12+Wheeler&utm_medium=email

NYTIMES
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Bobbie Ireland
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« Reply #12 on: 03-Feb-12, 08:12:22 AM »

Oh, dear!
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Donna
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« Reply #13 on: 03-Feb-12, 08:26:21 AM »

Oh, dear!


Kids!!
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Bobbie Ireland
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« Reply #14 on: 03-Feb-12, 08:26:41 AM »


There ya go!
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