In my area (just north of Aurora), poles are being replaced.  I haven't seen 
nest poles taken down, but it is obviously possible that maintenance could 
interfere with nest poles.

Linda Van Buskirk
________________________________
From: Dave Nutter (via CAYUGABIRDS-L list) <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2026 2:16 PM
To: ydeboer <[email protected]>
Cc: Karen Edelstein <[email protected]>; 
[email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ospreys will return soon

A wooden power pole with 2 parallel crossbars at the top is a very attractive 
nest site for Ospreys. When Ospreys started to nest in our region, I think at 
Montezuma NWR first, NYSEG had a policy of pulling down any Osprey nest they 
found on their poles, because the sticks can touch the wires causing a short or 
a fire. The Ospreys probably returned to see their nest on the ground, thought 
"I didn't build it strong enough", and started over. Everybody lost: the 
Ospreys couldn't raise young, and NYSEG workers kept coming back to pull it 
down and looking like meanies.

Then a forester named Paul Parradine who worked for NYSEG proposed a different 
tactic whenever such an Osprey nest start was found atop one of their poles. 
Instead of chucking the nest on the ground, they would carefully and 
temporarily remove it. Add an extension to the pole. Top it with a wooden nest 
platform, complete with a railing to keep the nest in place and a perch for the 
male, constructed by Parradine and his crew. Place the nest in the platform. 
The Ospreys return, initially a bit surprised at the new height but pleased 
with the amenities. Everyone wins: Ospreys raise young, and over the course of 
generations they spread south to Ithaca. The public loves them. NYSEG doesn't 
have to return to that pole, and they are heroes for helping Ospreys.

I don't know why the nest was removed on Middaugh road. It's possible that Paul 
Parradine has retired, or for some other reason NYSEG has decided it's too much 
trouble to accommodate every Osprey nest. But I am grateful for the work that 
NYSEG allowed, and I credit Parradine almost single-handedly for the range 
expansion of Ospreys throughout the Cayuga Lake Basin

- - Dave Nutter

PS Please correct what I got wrong, and add what's missing.

On Mar 9, 2026, at 2:32 PM, Yvette de Boer (via CAYUGABIRDS-L list) 
<[email protected]> wrote:


Hi everyone,

I live near the nest on Middaugh Road in Brooktondale. The nest has been 
removed and there is an orange cone where the nest was.

I called the DEC and although the person who oversees this was not in the 
office, the person I spoke to said that NYSEG most likely received a permit to 
remove this nest. He said that nests on power lines can be dangerous both for 
the birds as well as potential for fire.  So sometimes they are removed for 
these reasons.

I am waiting to hear back for the official word, but in the meantime the nest 
is definitely gone. If the birds do come back and rebuild somewhere close by I 
will let know.

- Yvette

On Mar 9, 2026, at 12:31 PM, Karen Edelstein <[email protected]> wrote:


And just a reminder here....

I've been maintaining THIS INTERACTIVE MAP<https://arcg.is/10uOuv3> of the 
Cayuga Lake Osprey trail for Candace and the birding community over the past 
decade or so. Due to some of Candace's mobility restrictions, there haven't 
been any additions since last winter. I'm happy to update and correct anything 
listed here, so please loop me in.

Karen

On Mon, Mar 9, 2026 at 10:17 AM Dave Nutter (via CAYUGABIRDS-L list) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Candace Cornell is no longer able to get out to check Osprey nests, but she and 
I are both interested in early arrivals.

Please post to CayugaBirds-L any sightings of Ospreys in March around Tompkins 
County, Cayuga Lake or the Montezuma area.

If you think your sighting might be the first record or you are using eBird or 
Merlin and they call it "rare", please try to snap a photo - even a lousy 
hand-held phone photo can help immensely - or say what features helped you ID 
the bird. Those records especially help to document changes in migration.

If the Osprey was at a nest please describe where and whether it is on a 
platform or not.

Thanks! And happy Spring!

- - Dave Nutter

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