2 October 2024
Good Morning Everyone,
Gosh, Tuesday was a bit nippy on the Canadian Prairies. Fall blew in, literally, Monday morning and is hanging around. The low temperature overnight was 5 C and 15 C is our high. Picture this: A wool jumper from Sweden, heavy wool socks, and some dense denim and the furnace is on. Tomorrow, some Birch will be delivered for the wood stove to drive off the chill of these early fall evenings. This morning it is rainy and damp. The Starlings are pecking at the solid suet feeder while I sneeze and cough – the first of the ‘seasonal change’ colds that happen annually. No sign of ‘The Boyfriend’. He is hunkered down somewhere warm and dry.
Tuesday was the day that I finally got the letter off to EarthJustice about the Menhaden industrial fishing in the Chesapeake Bay. It introduced the problem to see if they are interested in taking on a legal challenge to stop the fishing. It was nice to have the respite time to sit and think through this and do some data entries of osprey nests that are not on streaming cams. So tomorrow will be a good day to head off to the nature centre for a walk. So much nicer than those hot humid days of summer.
Those Canada Geese are probably flying in to sleep earlier each night as the days get shorter and the temperatures get chillier. We are set to go back and check on the geese on the evening of the 5th of October – and then I signed us up to build birdhouses on the Sunday. That should be fun!
The latest news in cat world is that The Boyfriend has either trained me or I have trained him to be ready for breakfast at 0900. He is always waiting. Sometimes peeking in the garden door (staring at Baby Hope) or sitting on a stump. Today, he got an extra treat since it was so cool – a big tin of sardines. ‘The Girls’ do not like them! Of course, Calico loved them when she was an outdoor kitty and a big dish of those very stinky fish is what lured Baby Hope into the trap to come inside. Think they would go near them now? Not on your life. Too funny. Too spoiled. And very much adored.
All of the garden animals are caching food in a frenzy now. Little Red even jumped on the back of a Crow today! They are brave those reds – the greys not so much.

The Florida Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers are overcome with birds and other animals in need. It is the same for Tennessee.
Continuing on with the Menhaden…some agencies are just useless.

An unusual patient in The Netherlands.

I am seeing an Osprey at Captiva, but there does not appear to be that fish bone in the leg. Not Jack?


At the NE Florida Nest of Gabby and 24E1, the couple are working tirelessly on getting that nest sorted!


One of the questions on the NE Florida chat had to do with eagles bonding for life. Do they break up? Now sit back and think about this. Ma Berry left the Berry College nest. She was seen in Alabama. Pa then took Missey as his mate. What others can you think of? Send me your list!
Still waiting to see if Holly Parsons caught a glimpse of a pip at Orange or if it was something from the nest attached to the egg. We are in hatch range, 34-36 days. Oh, I so hope we have a lively little one this year. One is good.

Lady came down from her branch to join SE33 and SE 34 in the nest. Looks like they might be getting a wee snack.


A good look at that nice fish Dad brought to the eaglets yesterday. https://youtu.be/M5T5dQOG_PM?

One eagle working on the Duke Farms nest on Tuesday.

Poor thing. Its toes are caught in the shell of the turtle.

32 year old Bald Eagle Ambassador Dies.



As many of you are aware, there have been concerns about the Achieva Credit Union Osprey Platform in St Petersburgh, Florida for a number of years. This past winter the hatchling slipped through a hole in the nest that was part of a drainage system and died. Hurricane Helene has caused much damage in Florida and this nest is not a priority. For many of us, it is because there are no eggs and no chicks yet. It is not clear what work the Tampa Bay Raptor Centre undertook in the winter of 2024, if any. The platform needs a real overall – the drainage system needs to be amended so that no eggs or chicks fall through. There needs to be two perches. A predator baffle needs to be installed. The adjacent tree must be trimmed or critters can climb it and get on the nest. That is just a beginning. I was informed today that the Audubon Society erected the original platform. They are at Clearwater. This is their e-mail address:
cas@clearwateraudubonsociety.org
If you feel so inclined, please write to them. There are many, many priorities in Florida right now, but this platform needs to get on their radar because of the timing of the breeding season coming up. Maybe someone will be hear by and can lend a hand. I always say it is worth asking. All they can do is say ‘no’, but they might say ‘yes’. I will be sending them a note today or tomorrow. Thank you.
Ospreys do rebuild nests. So do Bald Eagles and they can do it in record time. It is the overall structure of the nest and the issues of predation that need to be addressed not the mess on top, but that would be nice, too.
We have also seen PSEG clean out the nest at Patchogue. The ospreys did the best they could with the upside-down material they were left with.

Wouldn’t it be nice if the Achieva Osprey platform looked like the one on Lori Covert’s property on Captiva? I wonder if Window to Wildlife might like to take the Achieva platform on as a project of theirs?

Connie and Clive were both at the Captiva Bald Eagle nest Tuesday.

Frances and Franklin are working on the Bluff City nest. Boone and Jolene lost their tree but this tree and nest seem in pretty good shape.

Migration count to date at Hawk Mountain, PA. I wonder how much Hurricane Helene impacted the weekly total??

Vinny, the Black Vulture, has been hanging out at the Little Miami Conservancy Bald Eagle nest.

Black Vultures are large raptors. They are exquisitely black, with just the tip of their under wings clad in a gorgeous silver.
How big a problem are Black Vultures to cattle ranchers? Purdue University did a study.
Calico’s Tip for the Day: Do you love crusty bread? We love it and Mark Bittman’s No Knead Bread is often baking away in my great grandmother’s cast iron lidded pot. The problem is cutting it. Calico will tell you that it seems every time I bake bread or bring a baguette home from the boulangerie, crumbs get all over the kitchen floor. She knows that it happens right after I clean the floor, invariably. My Japanese knives do not cut the bread correctly – they cut everything else so thin but make a mess of bread. So, Calico has been reading Wirecutter again and we now have a very inexpensive knife with a serrated edge that has made my life so much easier!
Calico says you can thank her later, but remember – crusty bread!
Thank you for being with us today. Take care. Stay safe. See you soon!
Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘MP, Dierenambulance Den Holder, Window to Wildlife, NEFL-AEF, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, Olympic Park Eagles, Nesting Bird Life & More, Duke Farms, Missouri Department of Conservation, Back to the Wild, Castilia, Ohio, Achieva Credit Union, ETSU-Bluff City, Hawk Mountain Migration, Little Miami Conservancy Bald Eagle Nest Cam, Brian Collins – Menhaden, Little Fish, Big Deal, and Purdue University.
First, I want to say the emotions that the people at Back to the Wild, Castalia, Ohio whose bald eagle past expressed brought me the strong emotion of loss. I felt their pain in their loss and want to say how sorry I am for that loss. Remember, just because humans feel doesn’t mean other animals don’t. We don’t have a monopoly on emotion. That is a little nacissistic to say the least.
I want to say to anyone who cares about osprey to get moving on the upgrade of the Achieva nest in Florida. We’ve had a lot of tragedies with this hurricane we don’t need to add to it by ignoring Diane and Jack’s home. The platform is directly responsible for the failure in this nest. I saw a squirrel sitting right in the middle of the nest today. It came right up through the hole in the middle of the platform. The same sized hole you can see on the upper side of the metal disc that the nest sits on. If a squirrel can fit through the hole an egg can or a chick. Please everyone think of such an easy fix as an upgrade to the Achieva platform to save generations of osprey. What a win win.