photo courtesy of palemale.com
Beautiful Pale Male looks at the camera.
Remember
the Red-tailed pair who nested in the oak in the middle of a field off
County Highway M in Wisconsin? Well, they've still managed to hide their current
nest from me but I did catch Mrs. M hunting from their old nest tree.
She of course recognized my car and took off before I could her picture
perched.
This
male Cardinal menaces another in a male Cardinal brawl at Mud Lake. I
say brawl but it was mostly about glaring and posturing.
A Great Blue Heron Heads for His Night Roost
Dale Dean and Edie Baran
of Landscape Restoration start the fire for the burn of an oak
savannah, in which the landowner's house complete with their big propane
tank are smack in the middle. All went well and the mistress of the
house wasn't even bothered by smoke coming in her windows. These folks
really know what they're doing.
Photo by Edie Baran
(How can you tell this is a photo op during my lunch? I don't have my gloves on.)
My
apologies for the absence of posts the last few days. For two days I
worked very long days on prairie burns then came down with the flu.
(Obviously
I didn't get the flu from the prairie burns but rather from a cast
member in the show in which I'm working as a vocal coach.)
My big excitement at the burns occurred when a stand of Common Reed, Phragmites australis,
that nasty tall invasive that often crowds out the native plants in wet
areas given half a chance, went up in flash, leaving me looking at a 14
foot wall of fire. Beyond setting a small patch of a nearby old
cornfield on fire, that I with my flapper (the thing I'm holding above)
and a guy with big boots stomping, managed to put out before it spread
in the wrong direction.
Speaking
of flappers, just how does that flap of rubber tool work anyway? It
can be used two ways. If you've only got a small leader in the fire
making it's way in a direction you don't like, you lay the flapper on it
and press he rubber down with your booted foot. If you've a somewhat
bigger blaze that is a problem, you raise the flapper up high and bring
it down with all your strength whacking the fire, which blows it out in
that area. And you keep doing it until it behaves or needs stronger
measures
If
the fire is blazing a bit higher yet but in a controllable line though
starting in a bad direction a fire broom may be the answer. This is a
special broom that lives when not in use in a bucket of liquid, I
assumed water, but upon thought might have had some additive in it,
where it saturates. When it is needed you pull it out and sweep
whatever fuel is in front of the flames, such as debris in a cornfield
or dead leaves back into the fire where it burns leaving the area in
front of the flames less fuel to spread.
And
if there is a bigger problem? Everyone on the burn was told a height
on their body, for me as I'm short a place a little above my knees where
if a long flame line has taken a bad turn, it's time to get yourself
out of there, pick up the radio and call for the water truck.
I'd
seen the resident Red-tails sky dancing earlier on the property then I
spied their nest in a typical location of choice. Rural Red-tailed
Hawks like one of the highest trees available with a configuration that
will hold a nest. That way the nest has a view. Not only can they see
what might be coming at them, they can keep an eye on the territory and
perhaps best of all while sitting a nest with not much to do but sit,
they watch prey patterns for use later on while hunting.
Photo D.B. A Wild Turkey in flight.
By the way, that puff of smoke left of center is way back where I am with the camera. It isn't anywhere near the turkeys.
Not
to worry about the birds and animals during this burn, great areas of
the habitat are saved and not burned by the slow moving fires every
year. Everybody just moved to those areas of the land which weren't
affected for a little while and in many cases then moved right back.
Because of the early Spring there were many green spots that didn't
really burn at all. The fire dealt with the invasive woody stuff, such
as Asiatic Honeysuckle and Buckthorn.
Next
up from Richard Fleisher, a prof over in the Political Science
Department at Fordham in the Bronx and a chief watcher of Rose and
Vince--
Writing
to let you know that one of my recent photos of the Hawks was selected
by Popular Photography magazine as their photo of the day. It is posted on their Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/ popularphotography) and on their website (http://www.popphoto.com/ photo-of-the-day/04-02-2012). This shot as well as other recent photos of Rose and Vince can be seen on my flickr page (http://www.flickr.com/photos/profman_wildlife_photos/)
Rich
Congratulations
Rich! Great work and super publicity for urban hawks. The more people
who get to know Rose and Vice and love them, the safer all hawks are!
The
Sandhill Cranes have returned to Wisconsin and are busily finding mates
if they need one plus nailing down their nest-sites.
PROTECTING
RAPTORS BROCHURE --For those who haven't had much luck convincing folks
that immaculate sanitation is the only real answer to rats, New York
City Audubon has produced a brochure which names the
kill-everything-including-your-hawk-child-or-dog poisons in hopes they
may be avoided and those with less chance of secondary poisoning for
those who just can't live without using rat poison.
Along
with tips on sanitation, blocking rat entry to buildings, plus the
recommendation that no poison at all be used from March through August
when the parents become hunting maniacs to feed their young and
inexperienced fledglings are doing their initial hunting.
The brochure may be ordered from NYC Audubon or you may download it online.
http://www.nycaudubon.org/images/protecting%20raptors.pdf
Donegal Browne
Some of the Eastern population whooping cranes are back in Wisconsin also and have started building nests.
ReplyDeleteThe oak trees are okay with the burn? Their bark must have developed a tolerance to mild burns?
Phragmites - infest the waterways where I live. I don't know how they can be gotten rid of here, since there is not solid ground to stand on.
Nice brochure. i will be sharing it, although I thought one of the "use sparingly" poisons was that which killed the Riverside Eyasses?
ReplyDeleteHi Karen Anne,
ReplyDeleteThe southern part of Wisconsin was originally Oak savannah when the Europeans arrived. That ecosystem was a creation of fire. There is some dispute whether the fires were due to native people burning off areas in order to be able to hunt deer more easily or the fires were due to lightening or a little bit of both. Burr Oaks in particular are pretty impervious to fire. These days the burners tend to rake the "fuel" out from around the base of the oaks before a controlled burn so that the bark isn't disfigured for aesthetic reasons as opposed to worry about killing the tree.
Hi Sally,
ReplyDeleteNo poison I know of is completely devoid of the possibility of secondary poisoning. Some are just somewhat less likely to kill than others. Any poison for an eyass is likely a death sentence. The reason we always try to get people to do without poison, particularly during hawk season, and use other means of rat control but some of the unenlightened just won't stand for not using poison.