Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘2010 Return’ Category

The other day my husband and I were at the traffic light at the Taco Bell nest. This nest has been somewhat of a disaster through the years — until now. It was a young bird I saw 3 – 4 years ago building a nest near Taco Bell on an electrical pole in the fall, when ospreys normally aren’t building nests. I watched that guy work hard. He was persistent, flying repeatedly to the woods (no quick trip) and returning to the nest site with twigs and other materials. Over and over.

The following year, there was all kinds of activity, but his nest burned after a storm. The next year, he built a nest on a platform supplied by Florida Power & Light. Nothing came of that. I watched, feeling helpless, as a mockingbird harassed and harassed the female in the nest. This year, for the first time, it looks like the tide has shifted.

Finally!

I know it isn’t a choice; it’s just nature:  The osprey tried and tried until he was successful. He persisted, and when everything failed, he kept going. At the beginning, I think he was testing things out. I think he was too young to breed, but was learning the tasks involved in breeding successfully. He was on his own and had to fail in order to keep learning. Finally, his persistence paid off, and there is a successful nest this year. We can see at least one chick in there, and will be keeping an eye out for more.

So,  we are observing the nest while stopped at a red light, watching how the father is bringing more twigs to the nest, and both parents are busying themselves fixing the nest, ensuring the chick doesn’t fall out, when we hear a man’s voice from the sidewalk nearby. He has left his two small children — one not older than 18 months — on the sidewalk while he has walked up to the corner, several yards away, to get something from a woman. The youngest of his two children is literally sitting on the sidewalk next to a very busy road. The other is in the stroller wiggling around. The father is yelling at them to stay put. Within seconds, one of those children could have moved just two feet to the side and been in the road, where cars travel  between 40 and 60 mph. Before the light turned green, the man was walking back to his children, but still too far from them to have prevented them from entering traffic had they decided to do so. When the light changed, we passed the opreys who were being so careful to ensure that their young wouldn’t fall out of the nest.

I have watched in awe as these birds — from various nests — have devoted so much effort to caring for their young, sitting in the hot sun day after day, hunting for food not only for themselves but for their babies. I have watched as they spur on the young to leave the nest, the parents sitting on a nearby branch coaxing the young birds out. The parents stay around not only until the young can fly, but until they can hunt successfully. It is only then, unless a parent is totally exhausted, that the older birds leave, allowing the young to start out on their own and continue the cycle.  It is a beautiful thing to see fledglings circling the sky above, almost as if celebrating independence, and hear all the communication among them and between them and their parents.

Easing away from the nest onto a limb — all in safety — 2009 or 2010

Learning to fly

Read Full Post »

The one fledgling, I’m assuming the one holding its wings down, died.

The one osprey that thrived seemed to show off a bit at the end of the season, before she left. She was fishing near the nest, swooping down. It’s almost like they do say goodbye. I always felt a little sorry for her. Her parents were gone. Her sibling had died. She was on her own.

We walked to the base of the tree. There was the dead bird. I took some feathers from her and saved them.

Weeks later, strong winds came. The whole branch fell where the huge nest sat.

Today I was sitting at a traffic light in Orlando and I heard a bird screaming, as if it was in distress. I began looking up, around, everywhere. Then I saw it:  An osprey hovering, screaming, with what appeared to be nesting material in his beak. He dove, came back up, hovered, and continued his display.

I smiled. This was an osprey luring in his mate. I looked around and saw another osprey nearby. I realized I almost forgot it’s getting to be that time of year again!

Read Full Post »

Nest 1 happenings

Nest 1 activities have been very private this year. This must be due to the new mom. First, Valentino disappeared. I grew very concerned. He was not perched in his usual spot. Weeks later, I learned he had changed positions, where he was much less visible. I’m wondering if he did this due to the new nervous mom…and she was nervous.

Valentino in his new (2010) post

Mom bird was very jittery. I stayed farther from the nest than I did last year, as I didn’t want to disturb her further. I also noticed that the babies were hunkered down much more than last year, very out-of-sight. Finally, they emerged, two of them. And they seemed grown up already! I really missed seeing the babies grow.

Here was my first view:

Nest two fledglings emerged in June

Mom checks me out as I’m checking them out . . .

Mom checks me out

Read Full Post »

Nest 1 has been so curious this year. I’m wondering if it’s in part to an inexperienced mom. The female osprey has been very skittish, and will fly from the nest at the first sign, it seems, of anything or anyone coming anywhere near. We haven’t seen Valentino, the male, in what seems like weeks. So unusual, as last year he was so visible. I began wondering if he wasn’t hanging around IN the nest, figuring that some hatching might be going on. Wherever he has been, it’s been close by and hidden.
I tried to get some photos of the bird I saw in the nest today, keeping a good distance. When I zoomed in later on the computer, I believe I saw a little head! I think that is Valentino in the nest, possibly with a fledgling?

Is that the head of a baby peering out?

What a good dad!

Read Full Post »

But I have no photos! Each time I go down there camera-in-hand, everyone’s hiding. Every time I drive by with no camera, there the two parents are standing on the edge of the nest — or one will be perched on the side of the nest while the other’s head is peering out of the nest from below. I think I glimpsed a head of a fledgling a couple times over the weekend. It is so exciting!

I’ll do some spying next weekend with my camera.

Read Full Post »

Dad osprey – Valentino — hasn’t been seen in a couple weeks. There was a lot of activity around the nest a few weeks ago. I had a feeling the eggs had hatched. Then Dad disappeared. I’m wondering if he’s IN the nest. He’s not perched like the sentinel across from the nest as he usually is.  This is what I do see day after day. . . after day after day . . . There have got to be babies in there. I’m going to have to perch myself in a chair a little distance from them some day. And sit for a while.

This female is edgier than the old lady Shakti of last year. It must have to do with experience. I have had to stay further away from the nest this year, as this girl will take off if people come near. She has seemed much more wary. But she seems to be pretty steadfast now doing what she’s doing. I wish we had a webcam up there to really see what’s going on.

Read Full Post »

Poor Mr. Guy is trying to rebuild in the wrong place

Read Full Post »

When I saw that the nests were gone, I was a bit angry at myself: I had called FPL about them and thought they took them down — without luring the birds to a higher location, to a platform. I contacted the local chapter of the Audubon Society (Halifax River Audubon Society) to learn where I could find someone to install a platform, and the president, David Hartgrove, was kind enough to talk to me for a while about these nests. He explained that they had gone up in flames during a recent bad lightning storm.
My only sense of relief came in thinking that these nests had been “practice,” and that I hadn’t seen evidence that anyone was laying eggs. A few days later, I found the ospreys — one perched atop the pole where the nest had been, and another perched on the newly installed platform. While I felt so badly for them — I had watched that young male work on these nests since last August — I’m glad they are off the electric poles and hopefully onto a platform for good. In the one photo, the osprey appears to be holding onto a lone stick.
I just wish it had all occurred earlier (the platform installation), before disaster struck.

The Taco Bell and CVS nests are gone

Poor guy -- After all that work

Finally! A platform is installed nearby

The disaster

That's the idea!

Yes, Florida Power and Light does install platforms. Not everyone at FPL apparently knows that, though.

Read Full Post »

I’ve read that osprey offspring will return home the following year.  The other day my husband asked me, “Do ospreys celebrate when eggs hatch?”  (We’re thinking some hatching has been going on in Nest 1.)  He explained that there was a lot of commotion near Nest 1, with a number of ospreys flying around and making a lot of noise.

The following day, I was pleasantly surprised to see an osprey perched exactly where one of the babies from 2009 used to perch — a branch that seemed like training wheels to me, a  little distance from the nest, but not too far. She had stayed there for a while until near the end of summer, when she left with her siblings. I wondered if this was her, back for a reunion:

One of last year's offspring?

There was lots of racket going on while she was perched here. I could hear one osprey (the loudest) off to my left, and another to my right. Then, suddenly, the one from the right swooped down, and these two took off together. Are they the siblings? 

A sibling reunion?

Then I saw the three soaring . If these are the same birds — and I think they are — they were soaring just as they did last year shortly after they learned to fly.  It brought tears to my eyes this year, too!

Celebration!

Ok, so I need a better lens!

Read Full Post »

FL Fish & Wildlife doesn’t do it. Florida Power & Light doesn’t do it. Someone does it. I’ve seen platforms everywhere.

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »