Saturday, March 24, 2007

Pale Male and Lola Back In Nest Rhythmn

Pale Male arrives at the nest Photographs G.S.
Many thanks to all the Hawk Watchers whose collected observations, have made this report possible from afar, including Katherine, John, Elizabeth, George, and Charmain.

3:55 Pale Male on nest left , Lola peeks out of bowl, Pale Male looks down at feet. Prey?


Lola rises from the bowl. Pale looks down at his feet, looks at her, scans territory.

3:59 Pale Male watches Lola go like a bullet towards the NW and the Ramble. He then walks over, situates himself in the bowl and completely disappears from sight. Not an eye or a feather visible.

Suddenly it's noticed that there is a hawk, nest right, or rather a hawk's fluffy bottom nest right, making little jerky motions. Eating? Did Pale get up for a snack? Did he bring food last trip which Lola flew off and ignored? Did Lola return without anyone noticing and Pale is still sitting on the eggs? As everyone missed it, the consensus on the bench is that it's Pale up for a snack. Except for Elizabeth who is betting it's Lola.

Lola it is. Elizabeth nailed it. Finished with dinner, Lola stands nest left, waits, looks into bowl. Then goes round the bowl, looks in, continues to nest right.

Lola turns, waits, looks around, waits, preens, waits, looks into bowl, waits for PM to get up, he doesn't. Napping?


Lola advances to bowl, waits, then head down, pause, pokes with beak. Pale Male begins to rise out of bowl.

4:21 Pale Male picks up pigeon remnants and takes them with him. Off on diagonal to NW.

4:22 Lola gets back in the bowl.

4:40 Lola up, turns eggs, preens, rouses, and down
4:51 Pale Male discovered on Oreo antenna.
5:30 Pale Male on Oreo antenna.
7:10 Pale Male swoops off Oreo in the direction of the Great Lawn.
Donegal Browne

Friday, March 23, 2007

It Must Be Spring


Photograph by George S.
You know it definitely is Spring when Lola wants to get back on the eggs so badly that she gives Pale Male a nudge to get him out so she can get in,

And Eleanor Tauber is out taking photographs of buds about to burst.

Donegal Browne

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Cathedral Hawks and Woodcocks


Isolde on Gab's Head Photograph by Donegal Browne
From Cathedral Hawk Watcher Robert Schmunk
(See link for his Bloomingdale Village blog in links area.)


I did not see Isolde in the Cathedral nest today when I checked between6:10 and 6:25 this evening.


First hawk sighting came at 6:45. I was down near the pond and heard somedistant shrieking from the near the Cathedral or to the south. A moment later Tristan was circling about in the air and then flying over to the hospital roof.


When I got up to Morningside Dr. it was apparent that he was eating. A minute or two later, he flew over toward the 114th St. entrance to the park, carrying food with him. Shrieking in the treetops followed, to the extent that I figured Isolde was there too and that hawk sex was occurring. But no, when I got there it was just Tristan perched right over the dog run entrance. He was

there by himself until close to 7:00, eating more and shrieking a few more times.


Isolde then showed up and started on the leftovers. Tristan took off for partsunknown. Isolde was still there at 7:20 when I left. No idea if she then opted to spend the night in the nest or elsewhere. So... apparently all the shrieking just meant "Honey, I have take-out".Also, the take-out was a rat. The first picture I got of Tristan clearly showedthe long skinny tail. It must have been a big one if it took two adult hawks that long to consume.


rbs




Photograph courtesy of UCM Ed.


Get ready folks for a drenching. Here in Cheeseland ,as a friend from long Island calls it , we were getting ready to build an Ark by the time evening was coming on around here.



It was reasonably quiet at the Fifth Avenue Nest today, according to hawkwatcher Katherine Herzog but there is always a new adventure in Central Park somewhere nearly everyday.




Here's Katherine's report:




The Fifth Avenue nest was relatively quiet having settled into the incubation mode and Lola taking short breaks and apparently eating all meals away from the nest. Then returning and assuming the incubation sitting position. Status quo...nothing too exciting except several intruder hawks which were guided out of the area by another hawk who we couldn't identify as Pale but it might have been. Saw a mystery bird flying high over the nest which some people thought might be a Turkey Vulture but the color patterning looked more like a Bald Eagle. The little Woodcocks have been the center of attention for CP birders since they have not been seen in such quantities for many a year. The ones in the oven section of the Ramble are only some of the individuals throughout the wet, forested parts of the park. Chickadees were the great missing bird species this year, especially in the Ramble...only a relative few sighted in a place which is usually thick with them in the winter and yet the related species, Tufted Titmice, have been unusually abundant...(but the Black-capped Chickadees have been seen a plenty in other areas of the NY Metro Area)...I suppose it's a food availability issue but the huge swings in the appearance or absence of difference bird species is always an interesting topic of conversation and wonder especially when the abundant vs. the scare species seem to feed on the same food source. Nature is endlessly interesting and surprising.


All the best, Katherine