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Listening to Falcons: The Peregrines of Tom Cade

10,000 Birds

Author Sherrida Woodley thinks deeply about dearly departed birds. That summer of 1938, when he was ten years old, Cade read of two brothers, Frank and John Craighead, who wrote of their experiences with falcons in National Geographic. I knew no falconers. such as California Condors and Passenger Pigeons.

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More Rewarding Rock Outcrops near Bonn

10,000 Birds

After my previous post on my sighting of a Wallcreeper near Bonn, I guess I shouldn’t write a second post on the same bird. However, I visited the same site again to see the bird, and was surprised with two unexpected sightings. However, for a long time I was even more impressed by two Peregrine Falcons.

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Feather Trails: A Journey of Discovery Among Endangered Birds–A Book Review

10,000 Birds

The chapter titles of Feather Trails: A Journey of Discovery Among Endangered Birds represent both ends of the spectrum: “A World Full of Poisons,” “Malaria,” “Forest Intruders,” “Lead Shock,” “Shot.” Conservation. It’s not easy.

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Snowy Owl vs. Peregrine Falcon

10,000 Birds

As we have already mentioned here on 10,000 Birds, Snowy Owls are in the middle of a pretty epic irruption , and they are facing all kinds of pressure, from people harassing them to crows and falcons taking exception to their presence. Peregrine Falcon in flight by Tom Johnson. Snowy Owl defending itself by Tom Johnson.

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Electric falcon

10,000 Birds

It is barely visible, but on it there seems to be an endangered Saker Falcon. Gentle March sun, bare oak branches, short grass, and bird migration in full swing. We were searching for the territories of Saker Falcons. Okay, but falcons do not nest in the grass? A bit further away, another occupied nest: a falcon!

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Wisconsin Falconer Legally Traps Snowy Owl

10,000 Birds

But a falconer did legally trap a snowy, I saw the picture on his Facebook page before he deleted it after a firestorm of controversy exploded. ” But then I thought of the other wild raptors falconers can take like a Northern Goshawk, Gyrfalcon, Great Horned Owl and Peregrine Falcon and debated with myself about why an owl is different.

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The Beach Falcon

10,000 Birds

I am watching from the main coastal road and do not see much – several Little Egrets and Grey Herons , one Common Kingfisher … is he going to be my best bird here? Long and very narrow – too long and too narrow even for a falcon, all but one: Eleonora’s Falcon ! Trips falcons Greece' Of course you do!

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