Migration North Spring 2015

“Can’t wait to get home.”

Well, here I stand on the Pueblo Nueva Peninsula of Venezuela. Several other Osprey are gathered here too. There are the young, middle aged and the older/wiser.

The Caribbean Sea

We assess each other, hoping to find a strong, experienced leader; one that can lead a skein across this never ending body of water. I want to be part of that skein. Crossing the Caribbean Sea is the hardest part. We’ll have to fly straight through and hope to spot San Juan or Santa Domingo in the next 36-48 hours.

download (5)

Wish me luck.
I can’t help but think of Ozzie’s experience last year. He almost perished following that fool friend of his that led the skein far out into the Atlantic Ocean never to be seen again. I think that guy’s navigational instincts had been damaged by a winter of berry juice and cocoa beans. That old buzzard had his half-witted entourage bring him fish during the winter of 2014. To read more about this harrowing experience check out The miracle.

Posted in Ospreys | 2 Comments

Osprey distribution

119196Take they look at this map. The orange area is where we breed. The blue coloration is the area to which we migrate. Some of us stay locally year-round. These areas are colored in green.

In South America we are termed “non-breeding migrants”.

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Man’s best friend

Cleo, Marley and Daisy.

th (3)    digging(1)

 

Daisy

Marley, Cleo and their friend Daisy spent the weekend hunting for gremlins. You may remember last year; gremlins were quite troubling.

th (6)  th (7)

Not only did they disrupt the image by chewing through the coaxial cable, but somehow they made the live camera stream difficult to view from the Internet.

“The Doctor will have none of that this year,” said Harriett emphatically. “He has recruited Marley, Cleo  and their friend Daisy to scour the premises for the least evidence of gremlins.

“Arf!” Said Marley. There are no gremlins out here.”

“Arf, Arf!” Agreed Cleo.  “No gremlins to be found.”

And find them they would, if they had still been hiding in the marsh.  Gremlins have a very distinctive odor, not pleasant if I might add. Any dog with a respectable snout can root them out.

“The area is secured Doctor,” barked Daisy.

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Pandion haliaetus

images (1)

The osprey (Pandion haliaetus), sometimes known as the fish eagle, sea hawk, or fish hawk, is a diurnal, fish-eating bird of prey. It is a large raptor, reaching more than 2 feet in length and 6 feet across the wings.

Osprey size

Size relative to a 6-ft man.

 

Reader prime number # 37 wants to know why Harriett is discussing the moments before the Big Bang.

“Let me ask you this,” said Harriett, hoping not to sound condescending. “Say you have a mission, a calling, to teach children. Would you walk into a classroom of 5 and 6 year-olds without having prepared yourself for your mission? Didn’t you have to learn the alphabet and how to read and write? Didn’t you have to go to school; didn’t you have to go to college; didn’t you have to learn how to interact with children? In short, didn’t you have to do everything in your power to prepare yourself for your mission? Only a fool would set off to accomplish a mission, especially a very complicated, important mission, such as Saving the World or at least Life on Planet Earth as we know it, without studious preparation.  More on this subject later.

Respectfully,

Harriett

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Good Morning

DSC_0036 DSC_0033DSC_0039 DSC_0041DSC_0043 DSC_0044DSC_0045 DSC_0046

Posted in Ospreys | 4 Comments

Did you know?

  • When diving after fish, Ospreys can completely submerge themselves underwater and still be able to fly away with their prey. Most other fish-eating birds of prey can only pluck fish from the surface of the water as they fly by.

Hittig the water  Osprey as he dive-bombs river... and lands a whopper 4

Fish too big fishing  big fish

The 1st picture shows an osprey hitting the water as he dives. The 2nd shows him coming up with his catch. In the 3rd picture, this Osprey is clutching a large fish with its talons. The fish is so large he is having trouble taking flight. There are reports of Osprey drowning because they could not free their talons from the fish. The 4th picture shows the size of fish they can catch.

 

  • When they dive into the water, Osprey close their third eyelid – called a nictitating membrane – which is semi-transparent. It acts like goggles and helps them see clearly beneath the water.

1nictitating membrane  dive - nic membraine                       notice the nictitating membrane in the center picture)!               And dis is mah membrane! It haz a bugz in it!

You will have to enlarge the 2nd picture to see how completely the ospreys eyes are protected at the instant he hits the water. In the 4th picture, look closely there is a bug on this guy’s nicititating membrane.

 

  • When Osprey carry their prey, they always reposition the fish aerodynamically.

download

fish carry

 

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Facebook

I have a Facebook page now.

Doctor's backyard

The Doctor is busy. I can’t wait to get home and see what he has prepared.

20150201_104229_resized
Do you really think he can do it?

DSC_0002

He spelled “co-sine” incorrectly.  And he’s trying to divide the sine/co-sine ratio by the co-tangent.  Duh!  You can’t do that.  Well at least he’s trying. Do I see “Rotation Earth, Wind Resistance, Summer Tide Schedule, and Moon apogee” on those plans?

He’s come a long way since that 1st platform.

00 Duck blind                         bent screw benntn2TH                                    Ozzie starts the nest on new platform - Copy

 

Get a load of what’s happening out back.

DSC_0012

Taj Mahal.

I get giddy just thinking about it.

Hugs and kisses!

Harriett

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

2015 – I Know Not What to Expect

The universe expanded from an extremely dense and hot state and continues to expand today.
13.8 billion years ago all of space was contained in a single point from which the Universe has been expanding ever since.

After the initial expansion, the Universe cooled has sufficiently to allow the formation of subatomic particles, and later simple atoms. Giant clouds of these primordial elements later coalesced through gravity to form stars and galaxies.

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Season’s End

DSC_0175  DSC_0176 DSC_0178  DSC_0179  DSC_0179  DSC_0180

Mount Olympus

Some mornings Helios, his chariot and steeds must rise behind Mother Nature’s clouds.  Helios has gotten used to it.  It’s no big deal.  His ego is not injured at all.  Mother Nature does not care one way or the other, anyway; every god knows that.  Nothing new on Mount Olympus.

The North River

The North River tries to awaken but MN’s clouds proffer sleep.  Mother Nature is getting a bad reputation around here.  Does She have any empathy, concern, sympathy or harmony with life?  Apparently not.  57% of newborn ospreys do not see their second birthday.  “MN, you are one harsh mistress,” thought Ozzie.

“I do not like you,” Ozzie let slip.

MN glanced up; took a good look at Ozzie, brushed his opinion aside, and decided to let him live.

Tweedy

DSC_0015

Tweedy stands alone on her man-made perch.   Doctor’s custom design; better yet to come.

“Where did everybody go?” she asked nobody, everybody, the wind, the river, the sky.

Tweedy’s surroundings did not answer.

An ethereal, cosmic knowledge breathed down upon our child,

Tweedy felt it stir within her.  It was a strange forceful sensation; powerful, convincing and compelling; obligatory and ultimately irresistible.  Yes, it was.  Yes, it is; “#%&!” thought Tweedy. What is this thing?”

Instinct

“Instinct?  Is that all I have to go on?”  she questioned her surroundings.

Her surroundings did not respond.

“Oh, #%&!”

Tweedy realized she was on her own.

Mysterious omnipresent voice

“Ozzie, you had better check you thought processes and what comes out of your beak.  You do not know with whom you are dealing.  In other words, clam up you fool!

Tweedy, you are only two months old tweedy.  Feeling down is not an option.  There are a lot of feelings you have yet to experience.  Get your act together and follow your instincts.  Do not be one of the 57% statistics.

The Doctor

The Doctor watched Tweedy from the back porch of his big nest.  He could feel Tweedy’s distress.

Worried and concerned, he sought an urgent telepathic conference with Harriett.   He was immediately rewarded.

“Yes,” Harriett confirmed.  “I remember well the day I realized I was on my own.  It is a chilling realization.  It is so real.  As real as reality; reality: follow your instincts or perish.  That is just the way it is.”

Posted in Ospreys | Leave a comment

Migration

Ospreys from North America, Europe, and northern Asia migrate south in the fall (ospreys from North America go to Mexico, Central America, and South America; ospreys from Europe and northern Asia go to Africa, India and southeast Asia).

osprey_map
Osprey are found on every continent except Antarctica

“Why don’t you just stay in the south, where it’s sunny and warm?”  asked the Doctor

The reason is because places like the tropics are too limited in space for breeding. We need lots of space when raising a family, and northern breeding grounds offer more room, food, and nesting habitats than the wintering grounds in the south.

Birds migrate from areas of low or decreasing resources to areas of high or increasing resources. The primary resource being sought by ospreys is food. To survive they must migrate to a climate where the fish are more accessible.

Harriett fishing
Ozzie grabs a snack

The mechanisms initiating migratory behavior are not understood by humans. Migration can be triggered by a combination of changes in day length, lower temperatures, changes in food supplies, and/or genetic predisposition.  We humans really do not know.

tgggh (19)
Ozzie, third from the leader, upper

Osprey cover thousands of miles in their annual travels, often traveling the same course year after year with little deviation in the path followed. First year birds migrate unescorted to a winter home they have never before seen and return the following spring to the area in which they were born.

The secrets of their amazing navigational skills are also unknown. Osprey appear to navigate using a variety of techniques, including navigation by the stars, sensing changes in the earth’s magnetic field, and other techniques that we have discussed before.

 

Taking a journey of several thousand miles is a dangerous and arduous undertaking; one hundred miles a day, 200 over large bodies of water.  It is an effort that tests both the birds’ physical and mental capabilities. The physical stress of the trip, lack of adequate food supplies along the way, bad weather, and increased exposure to predators all add to the hazards of the journey.  It is really tough.

The fact are not pretty.

Estimated mortality among first year birds is 57%. This rate decreases to 18% annually after the first year.

First osprey nests are often robbed by raccoons, american crows, and the common raven.

Nestlings are vulnerable to predation by pine martens in Canada, and goshawks in the norther latitudes.

Nest collapses kill nestlings. Collisions with power lines, adverse weather (i.e., cold rains, high winds, etc.) can cause high mortality among nestlings and fledglings.

The eagle-owl is known to kill both adult and nestling ospreys in Europe.

In North America, great horned owls are known to take over nest sites and have been documented to prey on young and adults.

Bald eagles compete directly with osprey for food resources and will often harass ospreys forcing them to drop fish.

A few each year in Africa are eaten by crocodiles.

Here are some more pleasant facts:

On average, ospreys reach full maturity at 4.8 years of age.

Osprey been known to live 30 years when safe in captivity. The greatest number of recorded breeding seasons for a single bird is 23 (Canadian Wildlife Service 2000).

Based on banding data, one osprey in the wild was 26 years and 2 months at time of recapture.

Stopover locations

Osprey often follow preferred pathways on their annual migrations. These pathways are often related to important stopover locations that provide food supplies critical to the birds’ survival.  One of the Doctor’s goals is to locate some of our important  stopover points so he can take steps to protect and save these key locations.

As always; Love,                                         Harriett

Posted in Ospreys | 4 Comments