Showing posts with label Challenger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Challenger. Show all posts

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Challenger the Bald Eagle Plus Dusk Bunny and Doorstep Dove Wait Out the Hawk


Photograph courtesy of www.arlingtoncemetery.net
Bald Eagle Challenger does his stuff during an Arlington funeral.
From eagle nest photographer John Steffen Jr.--


"Read the narrative before viewing. This is an awesome music video...featuring a special free-flying Bald Eagle named 'Challenger' (in honor of the lost space shuttle crew) cared for by the non-profit American Eagle Foundation (AEF). He's an accidentally 'human socialized' bird as he was raised by the people who rescued him - after being blown from a wild Louisiana nest in a storm as a baby in the late 1980s.


Declared 'non-releasable' by federal and state wildlife authorities, he was trained by the AEF to perform educational free-flight demonstrations at high profile public events. He's the first Bald Eagle in U.S. history that learned to free-fly into stadiums, arenas and ballrooms during the singing of the Star Spangled Banner.


The celebrity eagle has appeared at numerous major sporting events...like the World Series, Pro-Bowl, All-Star game, BCS National Championship, Fiesta Bowl and Men's Final Four, etc. Challenger has also flown before 4 U.S. Presidents! His life story is told in a children's storybook titled 'Challenger, America 's Favorite Eagle."

YouTube - Amazing Free-Flying Bald Eagle "Challenger" (AEF)
Turn on your speakers and click on link above.


It was beginning to get dark and I walked into the kitchen and was about to turn on the light when I looked out the glass door. Dusk Bunny and Doorstep were both frozen in place on the patio.


Ah ha! The Cooper's must be out there. Slowly, very slowly, I back out of view. I don't want to flush either prey animal into giving their position away. I slowly creep to the window, and pull the curtain just a touch to the side and peer up into the trees. Nothing. Drat! The hawk must be on the roof of the house or over at the neighbor's yard. I could try going out the front door. I stand and continue to peer, mulling that one over ,when sure enough, the Cooper's Hawk glides through the backyard possibly from the roof, continues on into the park, and keeps going.


I go and check on Dusk Bunny and Doorstep. Both have disappeared from the patio.

But there she is on the bath. Doorstep is sitting in her favorite sunset spot. Look carefully at this photo and you can see why she has such grand peripheral vision. See her eye on the right? There is only one small area directly behind her head that isn't covered by her peripheral vision.

She notices me and we bob our heads at each other. The light is dim so I can't figure out whether his head is covered with pin feathers or it's wet. It has been raining but when I left New York most of the city's pigeons were going through their molt and were suffering from pin feather head.

On second thought, I think her head is wet. It's chilly and her eyelids have begin to droop. Very soon she will leave the warmth held by the bath and settle into her roost for the night.

Donegal Browne

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Sunday Miscellany: White Red-tails, Alex & Me, Golden Eagle, Turtle with Wheels, Eleanor's Cormorant, and the Headless Bunny


Photograph courtesy of Dr. Ruth Boll, DVM
A beautiful "white" Red-tailed Hawk in Utah, being treated for gunshot wounds. Notice her white beak, though still with black eyes. Which is a good thing because beyond being an easily seen target for idiots with guns, the only other issue in being white, is the possibility of unpigmented eyes which reduces the birds chance for survival. Probably because eyes without pigment are more sensitive to light which may interfere with hunting.


These photos come our way from a heads up on the "white" Red-tail site from Jackie of the Tulsa Hawk Forum--

Donna,
Here is a site we've been exploring; it reports on a number of white/albino/leucistic red-tailed hawk sightings, and offers some wonderful photos. The various degrees of "whiteness" are interesting.


http://www.diversityinutah.com/albino1.html

Enjoy!
Jackie (Tulsa Hawk Forum)


Alex & Me
How a Scientist and a Parrot Discovered a Hidden World of Animal Intelligence--and Formed a Deep Bond in the Process
By
Irene Pepperberg

Harper has released some teasers from Alex & Me on their website. Check it out.
http://www.harpercollins.com/book/index.aspx?isbn=9780061672477



SEAN M. HAFFEY / Union-Tribune
Dr. Todd Cecil treats a sick golden eagle that was found on the ground on the Viejas reservation.
Socal from the Tulsa Hawk Forum sends this:

Has anybody read about the Golden Eagle that was rescued here in San Diego County recently? It was on our local t.v. News shows. Poor thing had kidney problems and was very sick. It was delivered to a veterinarian who was nursing it back with I.V. fluids etc., and there were plans to eventually transfer the bird to Project Wildlife, a local wildlife rescue foundation. I haven't heard how the eagle has fared since, but I'll try to find out more and get back to you... Meantime, here are some links to articles and videos:



Ailing eagle rescued on Viejas reservation

By Onell R. Soto
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
5:29 p.m. September 29, 2008

EAST COUNTY – A golden eagle with kidney problems is recovering at a La Mesa veterinary clinic after it was rescued Saturday night on the Viejas Indian Reservation.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20080929-1729-bn29eagle.html

http://www.10news.com/news/17591006/detail.html

http://www.news8online.com/features/special_assignment/story.php?id=141954


R of Illinois sends us news of Tonka the Turtle

BAY AREA TURTLE GETS NEW SET OF WHEELS

KNTV-TV

SAN JOSE, Calif. - A screwdriver and some Velcro has changed the life of a once-homeless turtle living on the Peninsula.
When handyman Kohl Williams fitted a three-legged tortoise with a set of toy wheels, suddenly Tonka was off a rolling -- slowly.
Peninsula Humane Society workers think Tonka was bitten by a dog


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27010640


A gorgeous shot of a Double Crested Cormorant at the Model Boat Pond
by wonderful Central Park Photographer Eleanor Tauber.


The next photo is not for the squeamish, so if you are, don't keep scrolling down.

I went out to the front yard this morning to see if any of the plants had been nipped by the frost last night and discovered this-- A neatly decapitated upper de-pawed bottom section of a Cottontail Rabbit. The head was no where to be seen and I looked for it. I also looked for tracks of a possible predator but the ground is very dry so no luck.

My first thought was that a cat had done the deed. But why would a cat take the head and leave the rest? And it's so neatly done.

A Red-tail flushed off the kill? So she just took the head? Does that make sense? But it doesn't really look like the work of a Red-tail if the technique for rabbits is similar to that used for squirrels. Though as Manhattan hasn't many rabbits I've not seen the leavings from a Red-tail Bunny kill.

As far as I know we have no Prairie Wolves in the neighborhood. And I sincerely doubt it was Rocky the Raccoon, or Fluffy the Opossum.

Any ideas?

D.B.