Thursday, October 18, 2012

LEO in park!!!


It's always exciting news to hear of an owl sighting in Central Park. Two days ago, on 10/17, a little after 3pm,  Beth Bergmann [http://thebethlenz.blogspot.com] saw a Long-eared Owl in an unidentified part of Central Park - people are rightly careful about giving exact locations for these vulnerable birds. She got a few quick photos to prove it. Congratulations are in order.

Another moth lover


Beth Bergmann  [http://thebethlenz.blogspot.com]  took the amazing photo above of a Palm Warbler with an about-to-be consumed moth.

What speciers of moth? I couldn't figure it out, so resorted to one of my favorite identifying resources: The BugGuide [http://bugguide.net] But even the experts there couldn't come up with a positive ID.  One of their identifiers wrote me back:

Marie,
Sorry, but it's too small for me to hazard a guess. Judging the size of the wing in relation to the body, means most of the wing is gone, along with field marks. Whatever it is, there are a few clues. It's relatively large and has orange wings with a small orbicular spot near the basal area. Looks vaguely familiar. Maybe someone else will recognize. I do agree on your ID of the Palm Warbler :)
Robert

Any ideas, anyone?

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Article about the babies



Cathy Horvath, rehabilitator, releasing one of the babies on Saturday 100/13/12


Article from DNAinfo.com New York [a neighborhood newsletter]:

UPPER WEST SIDE — Two of Pale Male's baby hawks were returned to the ramble in Central Park this
Saturday, after spending the summer recuperating on Long Island after they were sickened by rat poison, according to local birders.

Animal rescuers Cathy and Bobby Horvath treated the poisoned red-tailed hawks at their volunteer animal rescue organization WINORR, Wildlife In Need of Rescue and Rehabilitation. They said in August they would not return the hawks to Central Park until they were sure they were safe from future poisonings and so delayed releasing them until now. 

According to Bobby Horvath, the Parks Department told him that most of the rodenticide in the area has been removed, with the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History's cooperation. Nevertheless, he said, it was a difficult decision. 

"There's always uncertainty," he said. "We can only give [the hawks] a second chance. We did the best we could do. Now it’s up to the birds."

Though the Horvaths and the Parks Department, represented by Park Ranger Rob Mastrianni, tried to keep the release quiet, a crowd of about a dozen "die-hard birders" were joined by about 20 passersby, who Horvath said were very lucky to happen upon the event.

With the "gorgeous weather," Horvath called it "a chance of a lifetime" to watch the two birds return to their habitat. 

While the birding community was split on whether to return the hawks to the park or to take them upstate or somewhere else, Horvath said he tries to return animals back as close as possible to where they were taken from. 
Plus, the hawks provide an amazing educational opportunity for New Yorkers, he said.

"[People] live here and they’re in shock. They’re in disbelief that a hawk was there," Horvath said.
Cathy Horvath wrote on the organization's Facebook page: "good luck beautiful babies and don't eat rats !!!"
Blogger Roger_Paw, who doesn't like to use her real name, reported that "the fledgling's left talons were painted with nail polish so that anyone who tracked the birds in the near future would be able to tell him apart from his sister."

According to Jean Shum, another avid birder, "the next morning, a park ranger saw Pale Male with his two children together."

To Bobby Horvath and others, this is an excellent sign, but all they can do now in his words is "cross our fingers." 


Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20121015/upper-west-side/pale-males-babies-return-home-after-recovering-from-poison#ixzz29ZWNqCR0

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Pale Male's Kids are back in the park!



Hi Marie,

On a bright, crisp fall afternoon... and after months of rehabilitation from being poisoned, Palemale's youngsters are back in Central Park.  Bobby and Cathy Horvath are the ones who rescued the hawks and devoted all that time to saving their lives.

They are seen here in good hands just moments before the release near Cedar Hill. 
Ranger Rob Mastrianni was able to catch one and he turned it over to the Horvaths for expert care. They were not banded, just a touch of talon polish to be able to see where they will go.

Murray
10/13/12

Should anyone want to support the Horvath's efforts...

Wildlife in Need of Rescue and Rehabilitation 
WINORR, Inc.
202 N. Wyoming Avenue
North Massapequa, NY 11758