Scared the be-jay-birds out of that thing

Saw a bluejay chasing a squirrel down the fenceline so fast I didn’t know that little bushytail could do it. Just to let me know who was ruling the roost around here, Little Bird Blue came over to pose triumphantly for me.
Now look at that thing. I grew up with Eastern jays, frumpily plump. This one’s ready for a bikini and the beach. 
Meantime, I’m not quite done with the first 430 yard skein of the seacell/silk fingering weight I bought from Dianne at Stitches, and this shawl already stretches to 18″ at a guess, pre-blocking, across 397 stitches. Nice!Â
I want it short and tied in front, a style I like with a lightweight yarn like this one is. I’m going to take a second ball and add an edging, though, so I’m not done yet. Then just add water, and the lace stretches out on its towel and shows off its stitches.
And then. I got a package in the mail today, a delightful gift from Karin. This is my favorite silk jacket and her Wine colorway in an 80/20 merino/nylon blend, an on-the-heavy-side sock yarn. What a match! And unlike most such blends, it feels so soft that I was sure at first it must have been mislabeled and pure merino in real life. It is seriously lovely stuff. Thank you, Karin.
(Okay, now, hold still Miss Jay while I measure you for your suit. I’ll make sure to have enough yarn left over for you. How about a little ribbon tied at the back–you know, bow-‘tocks goes so well with that look. Can’t have you being, you know, nekkid as a jaybird over there.)
Turning tail on it
Yesterday a small scruffy-tailed gray squirrel started eyeing my birdfeeder with a determination he’d not shown before. So did a black squirrel, but it quickly decided the thing was not in range and not worth the effort.
That gray one, though, started stalking it. It approached it from every possible angle for hours, amusing me just on the other side of the floor-to-ceiling glass, including climbing the man-eating plant with the prickly trunk that in 22 years I have never, ever seen a squirrel on before. But it was eight feet away and far too low. Forget that one.
It tried going down from the awning. No go. It climbed the ladder to the left: that was the right height and straight across, but it was a good ten or twelve feet away. Hmm. It laid there on the ladder, lifting its head every now and then, judging the distance, willing the birdseed to move closer by the power of its little mind. The feeder stayed obstinately put.
I glanced over: the thing had climbed the near pole, four feet away, took a flying leap right through the twiggy branch I’d hung that was nowhere near strong enough to support it, and had lucked out and landed on the feeder, which went swinging wildly. The squirrel had a panic attack. I was coming with the camera. The dang seed wouldn’t come out! Frantic frantic panic panic GIMME THE FOOD! as I approached, trying at the last second to pull the top off with its teeth.
I reached for the door handle for a better shot and it was just too much. There was no way it could jump back to that pole. Caught. A surge of adrenalin and it managed to leap up from the top via that string it hadn’t found a way down from earlier, up onto the awning, and away.
It never came back. Neither did the black squirrel.
Round one to the feeder.
(As I knit away on Dianne’s Caribbean colorway seacell/silk from Creatively Dyed Yarns… Gotta throw in a little knitting content occasionally or I hear about it.)
Birdwatching
Thursday June 11th 2009, 4:09 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
Thank you all for the kind messages about John; much appreciated. And re the Zofran, no longer needed for now. Yay!
(Can you see the speck above the Rotunda? Up! In the sky! It’s a bird! There is one, honest. And below, fledgewatchers doing the garage band thing.)
Last night I found myself with a chance to go see the peregrines in person, in the evening when the UV was far less of an issue and when I hoped the traffic wouldn’t be horrible even if I couldn’t use the carpool lane on the freeway: originally, Michelle was going to go with me, but that hadn’t worked out. It was 6:45, it was a half hour away, the San Jose library would close at 8–I just suddenly made the decision to go anyway. I grabbed my keys and took off.
I had been told the 8th floor there was a good viewing area, and I was fortunate to find a parking spot on the street a little past the library in a handicapped zone. Walking inside, I had no idea how to find what where; the security guard’s face lit up when I told him why I wanted to find my way upstairs. Yes! The falcons!
From the upper corner, I got a good view of the side of City Hall: the nestbox, the louvers above the windows to the side starting just below it, the hallway lights turned off on the two top floors for the fledglings’ sakes. And best of all, the peregrines.
A parent was up there near the top, identifiable by its white chest so tiny in the distance. I had binoculars, not a great pair, but something, at least. Two babies over there, one over that-a-way. Clara (I was told later it was) then went soaring slowly around and around City Hall, floating effortlessly in the wind currents, taking her time, surfing the skies.
There were far fewer details than what I could have seen looking at the cam on the computer at home, but to see them alive and in person!
And then it was hitting eight and I headed out. But this time, going to my car, I knew what I had had no idea of when I’d pulled into the space: my car was half a block directly to the side of the building that the peregrines were on, in some ways a better view even than from the library. Fabulous!
So I stayed. I saw a young’un taking off and flapflapflapping furiously, trying to gain altitude, finally getting high enough to ride the currents a moment too but perhaps too tired from all the energy expenditure to keep at it long. Later, one running the ledge when Mom arrived and two more flying over from the louver to join in. One, however, stayed on the louver, their latest favorite place. Having claimed the most perfect spot, it wasn’t giving it up.
There are three babies up there–I wish you could embiggen this. I saw their huge wings outstretched and then folding in again, again and again.
I saw, once the Momma-mobbing was over, what looked like one juvie on her return ever so gently missing and hitting the wall above the louver, wings outstretched, before settling down with her siblings. Like this, (thank you, Eric!) which happened a day or two earlier; some of them are still working on their landing gear.
Veer, however, is quite the flyer. He’s been practicing the prey handoff thing, and actually, after I wrote the other day that that was something they had yet to learn, I got a report that he had actually done it for the first time that very night. He had received a large pigeon in a handoff from Clara, they flew together to the top of another building, and then when she went to fly off to the other babies, it was, Hey, don’t leave me! He took off after her.
Without the pigeon. Making excuses. Mom! I don’t know how to cook this thing, here, you do it!
Clara noticed, swooped back, collected it and reinstated the dinner menu, and one can just picture the eye-rolling to go with the wing-rolling.
I loved Eric’s picture of Clara above while some of the juvies played at hand-it-over. If you mouse over it and see the comments, you’ll understand, given the end of yesterday’s post, why I guffawed out loud when I read them.
The whole thing was absolutely thrilling. I was so close. There were quiet moments, with a baby pancaked here and others sitting there and Clara on guard above, where nothing much was happening for about twenty minutes, with the dark gathering quickly. I reminded myself that I am a knitter: I am well versed in quietly waiting for things to unfold and come to be.
The other thing I want to mention? Every person I encountered, whether I interacted with them or not, had an air of happiness about them. Quite a few glanced with a smile towards the top of City Hall or above: San Jose State kids waiting for a bus, downtown diners, random people walking by on the sidewalk. The peregrines–so nearly disappeared permanently from all of life so recently–were right there, in plain sight, alive, graceful (or at times still just aspiring to be, like the rest of us) and glorious.
And life was good.
Juvenile peregrine theme song
With apologies to Paul Simon (and an extra verse added by special request of the peregrine group)…
The problem is all inside your wings, Clara said to Kya
The answer is easy if you practice, and eventually…
I’d like to help you in your struggle to fly free
There must be fifty ways to leave your louver.
Fifty ways to leave your louver.
Dive out of the way, Jose. Set a flight plan, Esteban. Watch your Clara, Tierra. And set yourself free. Look and fly clear, Veer. Try it today, Ilahay! Just hop off the ledge. Fledge. And set yourself free.
The watchers said it grieves us so that Carlos went astray
We wish there were something we could do, to make him show again
But Esteban is here. A peregrine papa too, now, teaching,
Fifty ways to leave your louver. Fifty ways to leave your louver.
Dive out of the way, Jose. Set a flight plan, Esteban. Watch your Clara,
Tierra. And set yourself free. Look and fly clear, Veer. Try it today,
Ilahay! Just hop off the ledge. Fledge. And set yourself free.
Glenn said it’s really not my habit to intrude
But the more I see you’re grounded and your directions misconstrued–
Don’t want to box you in. But at the risk of being rude
There must be, better ways to leave your louver. Better ways to leave your louver.
Dive out of the way, Jose. Set a flight plan, Esteban. Watch our Clara, Tierra. And set yourself free. Look and fly clear, Veer. Try it today, Ilahay! Just hop off the ledge. Fledge. And set yourself free.
Tierra said why don’t we all just sleep on it tonight
And I believe in the morning, we’ll begin to see some flight
And then Veer kicked her. And she realized, they probably were right
There must be, fifty ways to leave your louver.
Fifty ways to leave your louver.
Dive out of the way, Jose. Set a flight plan, Esteban. Watch our Clara, Tierra. And set yourself free. Look and fly clear, Veer. Try it today, Ilahay! Just hop off the ledge. Fledge. And set yourself free.
———–
A side note. My son John got T-boned by someone speeding fast, totaling both cars. He lucked out in that his passenger wasn’t hurt and only John’s shoulder got reinjured: it was operated on after a high-school wrestling team injury a few years ago. He hurts, but oh goodness. Thank you dear God for saving the life of my child and the others.
And of course, since he’s not currently a full-time student while on a mission for the Mormon Church, our insurance won’t cover him even though we pay the same premium as before he left. But that’s just noise at the moment compared to what matters.
Sparrow me the details
Tuesday June 09th 2009, 9:25 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
We hung up the birdfeeder May 20th and waited for the birds to show up.
And they did not.
Maybe they were waiting for the raccoons to invite them to the party: Hey, look, we know this seedy joint. It’s a real dive, but the chow is great. C’mon in!
I woke up this morning to find the handle pulled straight up on the mini-trashcan, but with the new tape (next step: bungee cords) it was firmly keeping a lid on it. And then, finally, this evening, a sparrow was darting around the porch, checking it out. But–but–guys! Isn’t that always how it is! You hear of a great new place, you finally go, and the health department or something shut the joint down already!
Crum. It pecked uncertainly at the concrete next to the can.
Bird. The seed. It’s hanging, right up there above your beak, don’t you see it? You know? Where you fly?
Nope. It flitted hither and yarn like a knitter with a bad case of startitis.
That did it. I’d been thinking about it for awhile. There was a loose spot in a metal brace, part of the awning near where the feeder was hanging from; I tried to push some twine through the gap. It wouldn’t go. I went back in the house, got a dpn that hadn’t been used on a sock in a long time, poked at it, and finally, got it cast on.
I looped that twine around the top of a small dead branch and hung it up there. My thought was to give them something woodsy and comfortable for them to perch on and then make the jump over from. Maybe they like to zigzag their way in, the way we’d seen some feeding their young.
Not three minutes later that sparrow, which I’d scared off, had come back and had found its way to it and another bird had flown straight to the feeder. Three minutes. After waiting nearly three weeks and getting, after that jay had been twirled off like a two-year-old on a carousel the first morning, not one single one.
All it took for the bird life to respond to food in plastic packaging was to add a little nature to the scenery in the restaurant. Who knew.
Enough of that
And so pardon me a moment while I try to track down a mystery.
A few days ago there was an amaryllis knocked off the picnic table on the patio, smashed on the ground. Who did that? When did–I didn’t do that, did I? I’m certainly not that deaf, I’d have heard it. Huh. I picked the plant up and repotted it.
A few minutes ago I went out to water the tomatoes at a nice dusky time of day, and there were two more on the ground, one with a smashed pot and one simply in Amaryllis Down mode. Curious. Michelle? No, not me, Mom.
And then I saw it. The birdseed trashcan. The lid over thataway.  But…but… Raccoons don’t eat that stuff, do they? Do possums? In my experiences growing up in a house in the woods, the ‘coons were good at prying open the cans, the possums at falling in after them and getting stuck. Dad would brave the teeth on those things, take a broom, tip the metal can over, go THWAP on the bottom, then go back inside the house and wait for them to stop playing possum and leave.
But this was a very small trashcan and easy to climb back out of at their size.
Some animal had apparently been climbing up on the table to divebomb the thing trying to get the lid off. And it had succeeded. How did I not notice that earlier? I packaging-taped it back on in two places, moved the can further away and moved the more fragile amaryllis pots away from the edge of the table, and hoped that would do it.
I need a motion sensor attached to a floodlight and our Flip. (They wouldn’t eat my first tomato of the year, would they?) I want to see this thing in action in the middle of the night, for the amusement factor if nothing else. A coon playing falcon–look! Up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a ‘coon! It’s–super-seeded! by the tape.
Meantime, if you’re interested, here is a marvelous collection of falcon pictures taken by one of the fledge watchers, and here’s a few more. Veer bellyflopped yesterday off the nestbox ledge onto the louver just below and right onto his sister. They were all practicing their flying and landing skills today: one they will eventually master is being able to fly backwards below another one in order for prey to be passed between them.
Those juveniles need a baby peregrine theme song: “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Louver.”
Piece of Pizz’a
There was one other thing I didn’t mention yesterday on the very remote possibility I’d be spoiling the surprise. In the late morning, we picked Richard and Kim up at the airport, got to share hugs and tell him happy birthday in person, and took them out to lunch at the place of his choosing. Pizz’a Chicago. (I can just see all the locals suddenly smiling. Good place. And the one place where even Michelle can safely eat pizza, which she loves, if we’re careful.)
Birthday cake at home. Then we dropped them off at Kim’s aunt and uncle’s house a few blocks away, where they were getting ready to surprise her grandparents, who also live in town: it was their 60th anniversary. They were expecting a small celebration. Ain’t gonna happen.
Her grandfather was in Stanford Hospital the same time I was, and Kim’s mother would visit me after visiting her dad in cardiac. Sometimes life teaches you not to take things for granted; sixty years together? Hey! Everybody! Let’s ALL celebrate–to life! And so their children and grandchildren showed up.
On the falcon front, Esteban Colbert (aka Papa bird) sat on a ledge on City Hall motionless for four hours yesterday, while his adult-sized chicks, who have not yet learned how to hunt–fledge first, one thing at a time–got hungrier and hungrier. It has been reported that one parent will fly at a group of pigeons lined up across a lightpost, and as they skitter away, the other will snatch one from behind. When you’re flying at 200+ miles per hour, you want a cushion of air under your prey, not a metal post.
But this time EC was, from his son’s point of view, sitting on his duff. So Veer flew right at him and then pushed him off that ledge! His Pigeon English conveyed the message loud and clear: feed me!
Later, Veer was seen chasing after one himself. You can just picture his father smirking–nothing like a little motivation to get a kid to do some work that he’s new at and uncertain about. (A one-on-one parent/child hunting lesson happened as I was typing this. Squab-on-the-wing. Tastes like chicken.)
We’d have offered up a slice if pepperoni/veggie had been their thing.
Happy birthday, Dad!
I called my Dad today to wish him a happy birthday. (This is an old photo but I think it captures him so well.)
He gave me a mild scold that I’d been talking about birds on my blog and avoiding telling what’s going on. I allowed as how that was true. But they’re so cute!
So. How ’bout them peregrines? Two were snoozing at the end of the ledge this afternoon, and one gets up after awhile and decides it’s time to go play. He (of course it’s Veer, who else) nudges his sister with his beak. She’s snoozing. He tries again; nothing doing. He picks up that big foot of his and gives her a decided shove.
Veer–let me explain this to you. I am ignoring you. I am ASLEEP. Notice the closed eyes?
He puts his foot out again and broadsides her. Waits for a response. Nada.
Does it again, at which point she turns her head away and does all but roll her eyes, which are now finally open. VEER! I. Am. NOT. getting. UP!
On the other side of siblinghood, yesterday, when Kya was up on that roof drying off from her ordeal, a report came in this morning that said that she’d flattened herself down in the way that’s referred to as “pancaking,” the way the babies sleep, with feet out behind and bellies flat, to soon see one of her siblings (one report said Veer, one, Ilahay) who’d flown up there to keep her company. The arrival pancaked down beside her and stayed there till Kya was ready to pick herself up and give it a go again. She was not alone.
She ended up eventually safely back in the nest.
I don’t know if that was her on the ledge today with her brother or if it was another sister. C’mon! There’s a gorgeous world waiting out there for us. I’ve seen it! Let’s go fly!
Give it a rest for now, okay, Veer?
Oh, alright, be that way, and he half flew half ran off down the ledge and away.
——————-
And just because it’s Dad’s birthday and he wants me to, okay, yes, I’ll add a report. My Dr. R finally got back from his sabbatical, something I’d been waiting for (along with probably half the population in town, it must feel like to him.)
Bleeding below the endpoint of the colectomy surgery, pain above in upper GI, although less of the latter now. So. I’m to go on prednisone again while hoping it’s not enough to set off a diabetes reaction again, come in for x-rays next Thursday and see him again the next day, and meantime he scoped that bleeding stapled-off stump. (The big G search engine is not my friend on any further description here and that’s probably more than you want to read anyway.) Totally Crohn’s-y looking. Further surgery is one eventual option, but not yet. Biopsies taken.
And I had not told him anything about it nor said anything to her this morning, but it was all I could do not to snicker as he surprised me by telling the nurse I’d “already been prepped” for the scope: she had shoved a pamphlet at me last week with pre-sigmoidoscopy dietary restrictions. I’d tried to explain to her that there was no colon.
She insisted.
No connection. Does Not Apply.
She still insisted.
I drank my thoroughly-dairy-containing hot cocoa yesterday morning and this with a feeling that it was an act of defiance.
Guess who was assisting at the scope. Not that I’d said anything to her, but. A lesson to myself not to roll my eyes at any nurse ever, even just from within, because you never know when you’ll need them, and besides. Who doesn’t need a little gentleness their way anyway. It was probably at least partly a language barrier, which must be very difficult for her and I of all people, with my deafness issues, knew it.
Meantime, I am enjoying my time chuckling at the antics of teenage birds acting so much like my kids did and my siblings and I before that, while grateful to good parents who helped us learn to spread our wings well. Happy birthday, Dad!
This flying thing is for the birds
Thursday June 04th 2009, 10:21 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
How the heck do you drive this stickshift?!
Or, why the biologists committed to rescuing this species that almost came to extinction in the days of DDT are doing Fledge Watch this week with binoculars on the ground and all the trained volunteers they can find.
This picture is looking in the opposite direction down the runway from yesterday’s photos; that is the nestbox on the right. Every now and then the camera will close in on the bands on the birds so you and they can tell which one we’re looking at.
No such luck this time: I saw a juvenile take off this afternoon, which was so cool, and mentioned it to a friend but told him I was sure it had to have been one of the ones who’d already fledged: it looked too steady and too sure of itself to be a first-timer.
Boy was I wrong.
At that time, according to the report that came in a little later, Kya took off. She had a rough landing and decided to stay put on the Bris de Soleil for a few hours.
And then she decided she wanted to go home. There was a sibling at the end of the high ledge by the nest box, watching: via the webcam, I could see a falcon in flight swooping around again and again, though I had no idea which one it was. Then there was one swoop to just out of sight where I thought, wow, that didn’t look good. I assumed it was just a funky perspective of the camera.
It wasn’t.
The report that came in later said that she’d tried for the nestbox but hadn’t gotten quite high enough and had collided slightly with the building. She recovered, swooped around and tried again–and this time hit harder. Down down down, falling noisily, grabbing at the vents on the side of City Hall for 30 feet with the noise getting the attention of otherwise oblivious people on the ground as well as the fledge watchers. Everybody holding their horrified breath. Then she caught herself, winged it, and… the people standing on the nearby garage had her coming towards them and were going, she’s not going to clear it!
And then she disappeared.
They ran.
She ended up in an alley with multi-story structures on three sides and no way she could see out. A person was walking in her direction. One fledgewatcher yelled at the woman to stop coming closer! Another, the biologist in charge of the project, went over the fence that was in his way and took off his cap. When he got quite close, Kya went on her back with her talons up, ready to fend him off. He stretched out his cap, she grabbed it, and he was able to swoop it and her up and hold her wings gently in to get her into a protective box.
She was then taken to the roof of City Hall, not far above the nest, where her parents divebombed the biologist–they knew what was in that box! Smart birds. He doused her with water so that she would wait before flying again and could get some rest while he got the heck out of her way, rather than having her panic and tire herself out and do more damage.
And she’s okay.
Parenting. You send them out on their first solo drive and you pray like crazy.
Boomerang kids
Wednesday June 03rd 2009, 11:02 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife

Hi, Mom, hi, Dad, what’s for dinner?
Veer! Ilahay! You’re back!
Kya and Tierra were all over the nest area today, but didn’t leave it. Their siblings returned and hung out with them, joined at times by a parent, until the late evening, when Veer flew off again.
I thought I’d share a few screen shots. The white spot in the center of the back of the one on the bottom in the third picture? Remember my Blue Jay shawl story? One of the others was on that upper ledge, and…
I asked the peregrine group if that could damage the fledgling’s feathers, given my experience with the bleaching effect of bird poop even when washed off right away and Stephanie‘s experience once with it actually weakening the fibers in her yarn. I was assured that birds’ feathers have a protective coating on them and not to worry.
Then one person chimed in about having once seen what her birding group had thought was a white-feathered turkey vulture. Till they saw where it roosted relative to the other turkey vultures. Oh. Oops.
So I guess it doesn’t harm them after all. Just makes them easy to spot.
Maybe a Nancy Drew
Tuesday June 02nd 2009, 11:21 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
Every night, Clara is perched on the high ledge by the nest box, keeping watch over her offspring so they don’t spring off.
Last week, the little ones would be mostly settled down for the evening even before it was all the way dark, barring their tails getting bounced on. (Veer!)
Today, the two remaining females spent a lot of time side-by-side, first on the lower ledge, and then finally, the last one, with her head bobbing upwards and back down to her feet again and again trying to judge the distance, okay, here goes nothing under me!, joined her sister for the first time on the upper.
Preening with a careful set of talons gripping the edge. Looking out over San Jose. Skittering backwards during wing-flap practicing, as the earlier two had done. Finally, it was enough for awhile, and one hopped back down to the runway. When food arrived to the ledge shortly thereafter via Mom , the other tried to eat it without the movements and the height getting to her, but finally gave it up and flew down with the prey to where it was a little safer. Where the two could share.
But soon they were both back up high on the upper ledge or on the top of the box rather than inside it. They could now, so they did.
I looked at the cam tonight. It was late. A parent peregrine was standing guard, as always.
And one of those eyasses was, instead of snoozing away in the box, standing on the far side of it from Mom on the lower ledge, looking out. Probably reading some chick lit under the covers with the city lights as a flashlight.
Ledgelings
Monday June 01st 2009, 10:48 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
A quick side note: my email glitched last week, and if I didn’t answer you, it means my inbox didn’t get your comment and there was no address for me to respond to; my apologies. And, Don is home now and again grateful for your support, as am I.
My children went through a stage as babies where they were so eager to finally be able to stand that they would pull themselves up in their cribs and stay there holding onto the top till their legs shook from exhaustion, but they just couldn’t let go to sit down again. When they finally fell down, crying because they couldn’t take it anymore, they would immediately stand right back up again, tired or no. This was something new that they’d been wanting to do that they now knew they *could* do and it was just so compelling to them to keep at it. No pleading from me or making them sit down would work, that first day; the effort finally wore them out enough for them to go to sleep.
The second day, they remembered that legs could bend and they learned how to let themselves back down when they needed to.
I happened to catch the moment: the camera was straight behind Ilahay, the female falcon chick among the four that the peregrine group was calling “ledgelings” yesterday. She and Veer were the first to get up the courage to flutter carefully to the upper ledge above the small runway that had been their home. They spent a great deal of time side-by-side up there towards evening.
She was again on that ledge today, looking out over the San Jose skyline below her. And then suddenly, as simple as that, she flew off as if she’d been doing it all her life, out and out and slightly downward. The camera, perfectly positioned, showed her there in the air supported by nothing but Life itself in all its glory. It was a heartstopping, joyful moment.
Off camera, a few hours later, Veer was practicing his flapping on top of the nest box when a gust of wind caught him, according to the watchers below, and he, too, learned he could at last fly.
She ended up on the rotunda dome of City Hall. (The nest and runway are in that piece jutting out on the left side near the top of the main building.) Veer ended up outside the mayor’s office, where the blinds got pulled so as not to disturb the little political animal.
They went without dinner, there Where The Wild Things Are. At nine pm, they were still clinging to those spots.
Tomorrow, I imagine, they will learn how to let go and climb upwards again.
Clara guarding above, baby below
Saturday May 30th 2009, 7:09 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife

Trying to be productive while not wanting to miss a thing: how to get skeins turned into balls, finally, about 4000 yards’ worth that have needed it for some time.
Yesterday Veer spent hours on the lower ledge looking like he was trying to get up the courage to let go and take off but he just couldn’t quite bring himself to. Then when it was getting too dark to anyway, he tried to rouse his sisters, who’d settled down in the nestbox–go, go, I wanted to fly today, what if I don’t get to, come with me now, let’s go!
VEER. Shut UP. So then he bounced across their backsides and tails with those huge feet of his, at which they got up and yelled at him. He ran out to the nearer ledge, walked behind the box, came back the other side and laid down too. But not before he’d pushed them out of the coveted corner spot.
Little brothers!
Today after more of the same agonizing, he made the leap and flew to the upper ledge, somewhere only the parents had gone before. He then flew along half its length, ran the rest, and stood there king of all he surveyed, flapping his wings, tucking them in, watching white down feathers fluffing past from the nest area, judging distances. Finally his mother apparently thought, enough of this, and landed nearby up there with prey. He snatched it right out of her grasp and flew straight down to the safety of the runway.  Go Mom! Thank you for rescuing me from myself! Phew!
Teenagers.
Birds of a feather
Friday May 29th 2009, 4:26 pm
Filed under:
Wildlife
I opened the door a half hour ago and got an instant flashback. I don’t know where it is and the city’s emergency warning system has not sent out automated calls. But the smell was heavy in the air–there was a fire out there somewhere. There’s also a stiff breeze going on, and I don’t smell it now.
We never had fire season growing up in Maryland, that’s for sure.
We also never had peregrines that I knew of. Today the falcon fledge watch has officially begun in San Jose. I saw one of the females perched up on the low ledge above their runway near the top of City Hall, looking out over the city. Her sister stayed just below her, and as the one turned her head this way and that, looking out at such a whole new direction to take in–down–her sister started pecking at her toes.
Like siblings everywhere, the one above reacted with, Stop that! She twitched her foot away, and when she set it back down, the other started pecking away at it again: are you sure that talon isn’t a tasty bug? And again, till finally that huge falcon foot pushed carefully slowly against the other’s head and away from her: I. Said. STOP. That. NOW.
A few more pecks from below just to get the last word in.
Veer, the lone male of the four, disappeared from the camera for long hours yesterday. Males are smaller, so their feathers become fully grown out a little sooner; he’s easy to pick out from the crowd, small, dark and smooth, while the others still have a few puffs of white fuzz sticking out at funny angles, although, fewer by the hour now. When Veer was banded, they put a black band on his left foot, the opposite side from his sisters.
This afternoon, all four were in the nest box. He flew out of it, looking steady and sure as he went, baby awkwardness gone. He instantly disappeared out of view of the webcam; I don’t know if he stayed in their runway area.
All three females cocked their head to the side in lockstep unison, then further over to the side as they watched him go: how off earth did he DO that?
They will find out in the next day or two.
Chick flicks
I got in today. The nurse on the phone sounded again reluctant, at which point I played the trump card of the Urgent Care doctor having said upper-GI inflammation and that I was to be seen in GI on Tuesday. Oh. She let me in.
I adore the doctor I got in to see. Nancy, she’s the one your shawl went to. (And she was not there Friday.)
It might not be a new flare; it might be an adhesion from the surgery. Or a fistula. Or even another blockage (don’t think so). CT scan tomorrow with the requisite fasting and pre-procedure meds.
Meantime, here are a couple of chick flicks for those so interested. The second is of last year’s banding, with the parents screaming past the guy’s head every few seconds–you can tell why he’s wearing a hard helmet!