Owls Coming Down

Jim Williams asked Dr. James R Duncan what can be expected owl wise this winter and here is what he had to say:

"Yes - our long-term winter data support what I call an "echo effect", in which the only significant time series correlation in winter numbers of great gray owls from year to year is that in the year immediately after an invasion/irruption year, there is typically half as many great gray owls as the invasion/irruption year."

There's not been a huge amount of great grays reported as of yet, but we are getting strong reports of snowy owls. In the last month in Minnesota there have been reports of snowys in Duluth, St. Peter, Rochester and Eagan. The Raptor Center even had an injured one brought in from Albertville. Looks like Wisconsin is getting quite a few snowy owls too. Take a look at Mike's post today.

A few years ago we had a November with several snowy owls reported and in a two week period, eleven snowys were brought into TRC starving. It was predicted to be a good winter for seeing them, but at the end of December there were hardly any more snowys reported. I wonder if this year will be the same.

Endangered Swallow on Family Guy

Oh dear, I'm watching an episode of Family Guy and a bird has just made a nest in Peter's beard. Turns out it's a white-rumped swallow...however it's animated to be just a brown bird and looks nothing like an actual white-rumped swallow. Not only that the swallow isn't eating insects, it's eating popcorn and when the chicks hatch Peter gives them milkshakes.

And now Cinnamon is hopping on the couch and trying to get on the Powerbook, I wonder what she has to say:

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Training at TRC

Warning!

This post will start out about an update on the California condor at The Raptor Center and then will go into a kind of gross mouse story. There are no photos, but if you have a problem with dead stuff don't go beyond the condor update.

On a side note: can you id the bird in the photo?

The condor is recovering nicely and will be at TRC for about another week. The camera is still up in the lobby, but is now running on battery power. Apparently the condor thought it was fun to chew on the power cord so it was replaced with a battery pack. I'm not sure how long the battery will be up and the condor will probably be gone next week, so if you want to check it out, I would do so relatively soon. I was watching the camera this morning and boy, the feet on that bird are amazing!

Today I went in for more bird handling refresher training at TRC. Even though I've handled birds since 1998, I took a few months off this year when my schedule got insane. Now that I have proper time to devote to TRC I want to be back to where I was handling-wise and I need to make sure that my handling is consistent with how everyone else handles the education birds. It's less stressful for the birds that way.

Kate the Bird Curator had me prep food for some of the birds today. When we feed the education raptors, we feed them all dead food like rats, mice, chicken, day old chicks and the like. We usually have to prep the food by removing the intestines (helps minimize the risk of salmonella poisoning to the ed birds). Today I had a first. I got a particularly fat mouse out of the fridge and began to cut open the abdomen, instead of immediately finding intestines, I found a litter inside it. It was a bit more tricky removing the intestines--the fetuses came out of everywhere inside the mouse. I know it sounds really gross, but I was amazed by not only how many were inside, but just that they seemed to be all over inside the body. At one point when I thought they were all all out, a squeezed the mouse a tiny bit and other popped out from the back. All part of the day's work if you are going to be a volunteer at TRC.

After I got the food ready got to feed a kestrel and peregrine falcon on the fist. It's a good day when you get to have one of those guys sitting on your hand. Incidentally, the bottom half of the bird in the top photo is a peregrine falcon. A big clue are the toes, peregrines have long, long toes for grabbing fat breasted bird like pigeons and teal.

Minneapolis Ross's Goose

While in Texas a Ross's Goose was reported last weekend on Hiawatha Lake in Minneapolis. I didn't pay much attention since I figured it would leave before I came home. A quick glance at the Minnesota birding listservs showed that it was still around.

Non Birding Bill and I were heading out of town today to hang with Lorraine and some ten year old girls around a big ole bonfire so we headed over to Hiawatha before we hit the highway. I knew this was a gamble because bringing NBB can often mean the bird will have just left ten minutes before we get there, but I risked it. We got to Hiawatha and I saw a flock of geese out on the water. We parked and as I was grabbing my scope from the back seat NBB said, "Is that white thing it?" I turned around and saw a large lump flapping away from the lake and out of view onto the neighboring golf course. It was chunky and flapping like a goose. I was sure that was in fact "it" and NBB was ready to go on our way, since we saw the bird. But to my rules of bird counting I couldn't accept that. At that distance I wouldn't have known whether it was a snow goose or a Ross's goose. The only reason I knew it was Ross's was because it had been reported there this morning and snow geese are few and far between in the Twin Cities.

So I headed over to a couple of people who looked like birders to get the scoop. Sure enough it was the Ross's goose that we saw flying away but we were informed that if we drove around the golf course we could probably find it grazing. We started driving around the golf course and sure enough there was a white blog mixed in with a bunch of Canada geese. The interesting thing was that NBB took over setting up the scope and getting the camera adapter on for digiscoping. I almost didn't have a chance to get to the scope to see the bird. Of course, this bird does fall into the catagory of intereseting birds for NBB to see: big, obvious, easy to see, and ten minutes from home. I eventually did get a chance at the scope and could see why this was a Ross's goose and not a snow goose by the shape of the face and the size of the bill in relation to the head. Now it was officially countable in my rules.

So, a life bird for me. I know I said that I was going to start keeping a list to find out how many are on it, but I can't bring myself to sit down and do it. Now off to a big bonfire and partying with Lorraine and a bunch of ten year old girls. Whoot.

Animal Reviews

The bunny disapproval is raging this morning. Non Birding Bill and I have sat down for breakfast and surfing the net (I just realized that instead of married couples using the newspaper to ignore each other at breakfast, we now use the internet--hm). Anyway, NBB came across Animal Reviews and I'm laughing so hard, I'm about to pee my pants. Cinnamon is most displeased over the rabbit review, but with her general depreciation of well, everything fun, I think we all saw it coming. All the reviews I've read so far have been hilarious, but my personal favorites include ducks and swans.

What Really Happens at Rio Grande Bird Fest

Okay, finally the word on what happened people-wise at the Rio Grande Valley Bird Festival. First of all, there were more kids at this festival than any I had seen before. These two guys were so cute, they came to get outfitted for a field trip. They selected Energy Binoculars, which fit well in kids hands and on kid faces. They were so cute, as Ben (tall guy behind the boys) was taking the binos out of the box and putting the straps on, one of the boys exclaimed, "They come with a case, we get a case?" You know you're getting serious when you binoculars come with a case. Welcome to the fold boys!

On the left we have party animal and Bird Watcher's Digest editor Bill Thompson. On the right is Jeff Gordon who co-wrote Identify Yourself (I'll have to add Jeff to the author sightings list). They were part of a book signing at RGV. Interesting thing, Bill pointed out that Jeff was also selected to go on the Cornell Ivory-bill search. I asked when and he said "First Two Weeks of December." When I asked which team, it turns out we are on the exact same team! I'm so relieved. When you do these things, you never know what kind of mixed bag of people will be involved and if the personalities will be compatible. After meeting Jeff, I will know that there is at least one person on my team who is fairly normal and easy to get along with.

Don't forget, while I'm out searching for "the great cock of the woods", Bill Thompson's talented wife Julie Zickefoose will be guest blogging for me.

There were a number of Bills at the convention--which was nice since I was away from Non Birding Bill. This Bill pictured here is Bill Clark who co-wrote Photographic Guide to North American Raptors with Brian Wheeler. Now I have both autographs in my book. He was offering a trip to band white-tailed hawks during the festival which I had to miss. What would my friends say if they found out I gave up hawk trapping for some birding elsewhere.

This is Dennis Paulson who wrote Shorebirds of North America. Like a dork, I didn't bring my copy of the book to be autographed so I missed out on that. Dennis was supposed to be sitting between Bill Thompson and Bill Clark during the signing, but apparently his talk was running late (or he was mobbed by shorebird groupies, we all know how fanatical those people can get). So I took a break from the Eagle Optics booth between the Bills, and took the seat for Dennis. Wouldn't you know it, but a nice lady came up to have me autograph her book. I was so tempted to continue the charade that a short sassy redhead was the true identity of Dennis Paulson, but I confessed that I was not the desired author. The woman said that she thought it was possible that I could be a "Dennis" since there were other guys with female names at the convention like Kim Eckert. For a moment in someone's eyes I was an authority on shorebirds. Dare to dream.

Tim Gallagher gave a presentation and signing at the RGV Fest too. Watching his footage of the Lunnaeu video was a very different experience than having watched it on the internet or tv news where it's blown up to grainy proportions. Having watched it on a large screen at regular speed, it makes much more sense as to why this is an ivory-billed woodpecker and not an albinistic pileated. Whether or not you believe the bird in the footage is an ivory-bill, I will tell you this, it is for sure not a pileated. It doesn't have the flight pattern a pileated does--this isn't someone speaking from behind a computer, this is someone who has considered a pileated a favorite bird since age seven and has watched it for hours in the field. If anything you could argue that the footage is an albinistic wood duck from the way the wings flap and the speed that the bird in question leaves the tree--it doesn't have the flight pattern of a woodpecker at all. What keeps it from being a wood duck is that you can see the bird clinging to the side of a tree before it takes off.

Oh dear, I just realized that went off on an ivory-bill tangent...sorry, back to the convention happenings.

Anyway, Gallagher was merrily autographing books, I have to say it was a different experience than Bobby Harrison's talk. Ladies weren't lining up to touch Gallagher. Perhaps it was his professorish air (not that that is a bad thing) and Bobby is an incredibly friendly southern gentleman? After I got my book signed I went with Amy Hooper of Wild Bird to Jeff Bouton at Leica and asked what the plan was for the rest of the evening. Jeff wanted to wait for the signing to be over and take Gallagher out for a drink. I looked at our group, even though Amy had a connection with Gallagher through Wild Bird (he used to edit the magazine too), we needed more of a presence. Bill Thompson had gone to Africa with Gallagher so I told Jeff, we should rope him in when we ask Gallagher to add credibility to our offer. Bill informed us that Gallagher would probably be tired from all the speaking engagements, but noted that Gallagher was being shuttled around and would need a ride back to his hotel. The plan was set. We would offer to drive him back to his hotel and perhaps stop for a refreshing beer. We added a few more people to our posse, waited for the signing to be over and ambushed.

Tim Gallagher came out with us. Although, Jeff did have an idea of sneaking him across the Mexican border and demand the exact location of ivory-bill sightings in Florida before returning him. It was a great time and it turns out that Gallagher is even cooler than I thought--he's a falconer. As soon as Jeff and I discovered that, the conversation quickly left talk of ivory-bills and on to the exciting flights of peregrines and Cooper's hawks.

One interesting note: Gallagher has only seen the ivory-billed woodpecker the one time--the famous time. No matter how you slice it, this is not an easy bird to see. But in a way, isn't that the nature of woodpeckers. You don't find them, they find you.

We tried to find a place for karaoke while in Harlingen and if you can believe it, there wasn't a karaoke bar big enough to fit our large group. I think at future bird festivals we are just going to have to make it an official event and hold it at the convention center. We did have a "danceteria" as a festival staff member's home. That's Katie, my coworker at Eagle Optics doing the fish in the middle. She and I are two peas in a pod and are working on an official dance when someone buys binoculars at our booth. It was a good time, especially when Katie, Bill and I did an interpretive dance to Shaft. We're bad mother birders. Right on.

I can't wait to go back next year: November 8 - 12, 2006.

Condor Video Online

Photos in this entry are courtesy of The Raptor Center. Note, the patagial tag and radio transmitter on the wing. All wild condors have that so scientists can monitor them in the wild. Nero, the TRC education Turkey Vulture (who was hatched the same year I was, 1974) was used in a early study on patagial tags. I think the idea was that if smaller Turkey Vultures could get around without problems wearing a tag, California Condors could as well.

If you missed seeing the California Condor from The Raptor Center on tv last night, you can see a video of it at the KARE 11 website. This morning when I came in for my segment, the crew was teasing me that they "saw me somewhere". Were there party photos of Rio Grande Valley bird fest that I wasn't aware of that started circulating on the internet? No, they were referring to the condor segment. I missed it myself last night and watched it online today. Sure enough, I am all over the background taking photos. I look like some cheeseball trying to get on camera, but I was just trying to take as many photos as possible of the condor.

By the way, if you watched the segment and are curious about the bird id question that stumped me, I got a couple of emails from viewers with suggestions and it seems that the caller was seeing a flicker. I think that the bird being described as six inches totally threw me. Also, I tend to think of flickers as tan and spotty, not gray. Ah well, all part of the fun of trying to id birds in 30 seconds.

Okay, I promise that the next entry will be an ornithotabloid report on the Rio Grande Fest. It will include what the other blogs aren't telling you about the festival...mwa ha ha ha ha.

KARE 11 Segment

If you are interested in any of the heated bird baths that I talked about on KARE 11 today, I got them from the All Seasons Wild Bird Store in Wayzata. Call 952-473-4283 with questions or stop into any of their stores to see their selection.

Rumor has it that they are going to be having some fun holiday specials starting after Thanksgiving next week.

Rio Grande Valley Report on Birds

Yesterday 87 degrees, today sloppy drizzle that has just turned to snow. Wow. I'm not feeling sorry for myself, I love cold wet weather. Yeah snow!

At left is a photo of a Great Kiskadee that coworker Ben Lizdas digiscoped with my camera and Kate's Swarovski scope.

The Rio Grande Valley Bird Fest was a great time. If you have never birded south Texas this is a great way to get an idea of how to bird it. You may not see every target species while there, but that's okay you will want to return. These are places I birded:

Bentsen Rio Grande State Park where some of the highlights for me were Plain Chachalacas (pictured below), Green Jays, Great Kiskadees, Olive Sparrow, Least Grebe, Common Moorhen, Glossy Ibis, Altimira Oriole, White-tipped Dove, Javelina and Black-crested Titmouse. There was so much more, but that's all I can remember at the moment. The park has a really cool hawk tower where you can look down on the Olive Sparrows and ducks, grebes and herons on the water. As it gets later in the morning, raptors come up on the thermals. I so want to go back and watch for Gray Hawks.

Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge
was my favorite I think. Lots of birding by car, especially for raptors. Katie, my cohort at Eagle Optics pulled over to some water to look for kingfishers and pointed out an alligator. I thought she was just messing with me, but for sure it was an alligator--sweet! Bird highlights for me included - 20,000 coots, White-tailed Hawk, Crested Caracara, Green Jays, Northern Harriers, Osprey, Loggerhead Shrikes, Merlin, Osprey, Roseate Spoonbills, Reddish Egrets, Sandwich Terns and Snow Geese. I missed seeing the Aplomado Falcons that are possible there, but that just means another bird for another day.

Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge was small but chock full of birds. Hook-billed Kites are possible, but I missed them--again, another bird for another day. Bird highlights here for me were Green Jays (sensing a pattern here-they were EVERYWHERE), Red-shouldered Hawk, Harris Hawk (pictured left), Couch's Kingbird, Ground Dove, Black-necked Stilt, American Bittern, Great Kiskadee, Common Moorhen, Mottled Duck, Olive Sparrow, Altimira Oriole and Golden-fronted Woodpecker.

Frontera Audubon Preserve was a quick little stop but is one of those magical urban oases where you can get a good fallout. Here the highlights were Black and White Warbler, Summer Tanager, Buff-bellied Hummingbirds, Inca Doves, Great Kiskadees, Plain Chachalacas and lots of mosquitoes--still scratching.