The nest site is not giving off any noticeable odor now. Hal Harrison wrote
that careful concealment of the nest from predators was imperative, because of
the strong odor that results from feeding carrion to the young. Perhaps
“careful concealment” includes eating and defecating off-site during
You have a lot of predators down there, Geo.
So they are a threat to baby TVs.
I did notice that there was very little odor in the boathouse while the birds
were there, even tho baby Hissy did poop inside.
Maybe lack of odor will help hide the chick(s) from predators.
Here’s hoping.
Donna Scott
K
Thanks Donna, that gives me a lot to look forward to! I had undertaken a bit of
slow, desultory salvage work at the abandoned shack in the woods, but after
discovering the Turkey Vulture scraping in the debris on the floor there on
April 29-30, I avoided the place for weeks. It does seem like a
cornell.edu
-Original Message-
From: bounce-127459297-15001...@list.cornell.edu
On Behalf Of Kevin J. McGowan
Sent: Monday, June 5, 2023 9:14 PM
To: Geo Kloppel ; CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Turkey Vulture egg(s)
Cool.
Donna Scott, what is your experience with timing of eg
Geo Kloppel
Sent: Monday, June 5, 2023 8:09 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Turkey Vulture egg(s)
In late April I found a Turkey Vulture scraping around in the domestic debris
on the floor of one of our abandoned shacks deep in the woods. I coded it as NB
(nest building).
Over
In late April I found a Turkey Vulture scraping around in the domestic debris
on the floor of one of our abandoned shacks deep in the woods. I coded it as NB
(nest building).
Over the next few weeks I observed several comings and goings that I
interpreted hopefully as shift-changes. She’s stil