Saturday, December 02, 2006

More Than a Pair, Viewed from the Hawk Bench


Lola watches as Pale Male flies from the nest to take on an intruder.
Hordes of hawk action took place today viewed from the Hawk Bench. So much, in fact, it's going to take some time to try to make sense of the field notes. Therefore much more to come later tonight!
D.B.

Monks Watch a Dog , and Off Lead Right Reinforced,


The 103rd. St. Monks pause and watch a dog pass by.


When friends with dogs told me that it was okay for dogs to run off lead in the park during the early morning and late at night, I thought it was an unofficial standardized turning of the head on the part of park employees to give the dogs a break.





But as it turns out, it's an official unofficial policy. A judge in Queens ruled against a civic group attempting to put the kabosh on the practice by using the city health code. The judge ruled that the parks commissioner could decide when and where dogs could run around without a lead in the city parks.





Adrian Benepe the parks commissioner said,"We believe that the last 20 years of this policy have worked, and it's gratifying to have that support by the judge."





Wow, there's been twenty years of the official unofficial policy. I wonder how one finds out the straight scoop on when and where a dog can do this? I've never seen the policy written down anywhere. And if it is, it isn't written very big.





No wonder there is so much confusion about it.





Some interesting stats from am New York,


City Parks: 1,700


City Dogs: 14 million


Dog Runs: 44
Ahhhh, divide 14 million dogs into 44 dog runs--

A tangential thought, One of the infamous "word problems" from elementary school math.

The defecations of all NYC dogs, averaging the big dogs and the teeny dog comes out to, very conservatively, a quarter pound per dog per day. How many million pounds of dog poop are created daily in New York City?

Extra Credit: How many garbage trucks per day would it take to carry it all to the landfill?

And the last statistic-

Dog Bites in Parks in 2005: 86



Dozing on the fire escape before bed. The other bird is wide awake, just in case.



Keeping a vigilant eye out.
(Saturday, Sam and I are taking a jaunt to Central Park to watch for RTs from the Hawk Bench for a while. If you're going to be out, wear your woolies, the temp has sunk and the wind is gusting to 50 MPH.)
Donegal Browne

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

More Monks


Photograph by Donegal Browne
(For more information about the Manhattan Monk Parakeets go to www.mariewinn.com Marie's wonderful blog was the first to break the news, scroll down on this site to The Monks Do Manhattan, and go to the site of Steve Baldwin, urban parrot investigator, who took the next sequence of photographs of the Brooklyn Parrots. The link to his website follows at the end. )

Steve Baldwin, long time chronicler of the Brooklyn Monk Parrots, saw a very interesting sequence of parrot behavior on Sunday morning.


It began with a number of the parrots alighting near their communal nest

They then rather inexplicably began walking, yes, walking together with what looks like purpose.
They formed into a line and marched off. See the approaching mini-van?
Do they get squished? Just how do they handle it?
See the full sequence with Steve's original captions, and much more about urban Parrots by visiting Steve Baldwin's fascinating and informative site, http://www.brooklynparrots.com