Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update: Re: Injured Hummingbird

2022-07-28 Thread Linda Orkin
I am so happy that you reached out for advice and were able to save them. 

Linda Orkin 

> On Jul 28, 2022, at 5:41 PM, Carol Cedarholm  wrote:
> 
> 
> I'm so glad it survived long enough to go to the hospital and they took it 
> in.  Fingers crossed that it makes it!
> Carol
> 
>> On Thu, Jul 28, 2022 at 4:45 PM Kathleen P Kramer  wrote:
>> Many thanks to all who replied to our request for information on how to help 
>> the injured Ruby Throated Hummingbird we found at our house last evening!
>> 
>> We followed the suggestions to carefully put the little guy in a safe 
>> container for the overnight and then, if he was still alive this morning, to 
>> take him to The Janet Swanson Wildlife Hospital. The staff therel were kind 
>> and helpful and have told us that the hummingbird will be well-cared-for and 
>> released if the rehabbers are able to make him well and strong enough. 
>> 
>> Being a bit sentimental, as are many of us when dealing with injured birds, 
>> we asked that if the bird is well enough to be released, if we could 
>> possibly release him here, near our home, where he had a territory. The 
>> staff at the Swanson Hospital said we could do that and that they would let 
>> us know, via postcard.
>> 
>> Thanks again to all who so kindly and thoughtfully responded to our request 
>> for help.
>> 
>> Kathleen
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jul 28, 2022, at 9:23 AM, Jill Holtzman Leichter  
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> https://www.vet.cornell.edu/hospitals/janet-l-swanson-wildlife-hospital
>>>  
>>> If it is still around this morning, you can put it in a box and bring it to 
>>> the wildlife hospital. Link above.
>>>  
>>> Jill Leichter
>>>  
>>> Editor
>>> Center for Engagement in Science and Nature
>>> Cornell Lab of Ornithology
>>>  
>>> Email: j...@cornell.edu
>>> (463) 213-3251
>>>  
>>>  
>>> From: bounce-126699390-87248...@list.cornell.edu 
>>>  on behalf of Kathleen P Kramer 
>>> 
>>> Date: Wednesday, July 27, 2022 at 9:16 PM
>>> To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
>>> Cc: Kramer Jack 
>>> Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Injured Hummingbird
>>> 
>>> Hello,
>>> 
>>> This evening, my husband and I found a Ruby Throated Hummingbird on our 
>>> walkway. We think it flew into a window at the front of our house. It is 
>>> still alive and has moved 180 degrees from where we found it. We’ve put a 
>>> hummingbird feeder near it on the walkway and it seems to be licking at the 
>>> sugar water around the feeder openings. If it were daytime, we’d call the 
>>> Lab of O and see if there are any suggestions as to what, if anything, to 
>>> do at this point. 
>>> 
>>> We’re concerned, of course, about a possible predator, and thought of 
>>> putting a colander over the bird, but then the feeder couldn’t be near the 
>>> bird. Any thoughts? Is this a lost cause? We felt we had to try.
>>> 
>>> Thanks for any suggestions,
>>> Kathleen Kramer
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> 
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update: Re: Injured Hummingbird

2022-07-28 Thread Carol Cedarholm
I'm so glad it survived long enough to go to the hospital and they took it
in.  Fingers crossed that it makes it!
Carol

On Thu, Jul 28, 2022 at 4:45 PM Kathleen P Kramer  wrote:

> Many thanks to all who replied to our request for information on how to
> help the injured Ruby Throated Hummingbird we found at our house last
> evening!
>
> We followed the suggestions to carefully put the little guy in a safe
> container for the overnight and then, if he was still alive this morning,
> to take him to The Janet Swanson Wildlife Hospital. The staff therel were
> kind and helpful and have told us that the hummingbird will be
> well-cared-for and released if the rehabbers are able to make him well and
> strong enough.
>
> Being a bit sentimental, as are many of us when dealing with injured
> birds, we asked that if the bird is well enough to be released, if we could
> possibly release him here, near our home, where he had a territory. The
> staff at the Swanson Hospital said we could do that and that they would let
> us know, via postcard.
>
> Thanks again to all who so kindly and thoughtfully responded to our
> request for help.
>
> Kathleen
>
>
> On Jul 28, 2022, at 9:23 AM, Jill Holtzman Leichter 
> wrote:
>
> https://www.vet.cornell.edu/hospitals/janet-l-swanson-wildlife-hospital
>
> If it is still around this morning, you can put it in a box and bring it
> to the wildlife hospital. Link above.
>
> Jill Leichter
>
> Editor
> Center for Engagement in Science and Nature
> Cornell Lab of Ornithology
>
> Email: j...@cornell.edu
> (463) 213-3251
>
>
>
> *From: *bounce-126699390-87248...@list.cornell.edu <
> bounce-126699390-87248...@list.cornell.edu> on behalf of Kathleen P
> Kramer 
> *Date: *Wednesday, July 27, 2022 at 9:16 PM
> *To: *CAYUGABIRDS-L 
> *Cc: *Kramer Jack 
> *Subject: *[cayugabirds-l] Injured Hummingbird
> Hello,
>
> This evening, my husband and I found a Ruby Throated Hummingbird on our
> walkway. We think it flew into a window at the front of our house. It is
> still alive and has moved 180 degrees from where we found it. We’ve put a
> hummingbird feeder near it on the walkway and it seems to be licking at the
> sugar water around the feeder openings. If it were daytime, we’d call the
> Lab of O and see if there are any suggestions as to what, if anything, to
> do at this point.
>
> We’re concerned, of course, about a possible predator, and thought of
> putting a colander over the bird, but then the feeder couldn’t be near the
> bird. Any thoughts? Is this a lost cause? We felt we had to try.
>
> Thanks for any suggestions,
> Kathleen Kramer
>
>
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update - another vote for shelter

2019-02-01 Thread Carol Keeler
The birds didn’t seem to be using the tree for shelter since they were on the 
tops of the branches and not in the tree.  Many do roost in my Norway spruces.  
It will be interesting to see if they do the same thing tomorrow.

Sent from my iPad

> On Feb 1, 2019, at 4:50 PM, Marie P. Read  wrote:
> 
> I was going to suggest something similar to Linda: any type of conifer can 
> provide shelter for birds, particularly in the cold, windy weather we've had 
> over the past couple of days. I have watched birds actually going to roost 
> (at dusk) in certain spruces on my property in the past.
> 
> Marie
> 
> Marie Read Wildlife Photography
> 452 Ringwood Road
> Freeville NY  13068 USA
> 
> Phone  607-539-6608
> e-mail   m...@cornell.edu
> Website: http://www.marieread.com
> 
> ***NEW BOOK by Marie Read!***
> Mastering Bird Photography: The Art, Craft, and Technique of Photographing 
> Birds and Their Behavior
> 
> https://rockynook.com/shop/photography/mastering-bird-photography/?REF=101/
> 
> From: bounce-123293506-5851...@list.cornell.edu 
> [bounce-123293506-5851...@list.cornell.edu] on behalf of Linda Orkin 
> [wingmagi...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Friday, February 1, 2019 4:38 PM
> To: Carol Keeler
> Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
> Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update
> 
> I don’t know how others responded but perhaps the tree provides some specific 
> site related shelter from the cold that may not be true or necessary at other 
> times or in the past. I sound think you would see them foraging if they were.
> 
> Keep watching and see what you see.
> 
> Linda Orkin
> Ithaca NY
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> "For the sake of some little mouthful of flesh we deprive a soul of the sun 
> and the light, and of that proportion of life and time it had been born into 
> the world to enjoy" Plutarch
> 
> If you permit
> this evil, what is the good
> of the good of your life?
> 
> -Stanley Kunitz...
> 
> On Feb 1, 2019, at 4:17 PM, Carol Keeler 
> mailto:carolk...@adelphia.net>> wrote:
> 
> Thanks to all the people who responded to my query.  Your ideas sure gave 
> some food for thought.  I looked out this afternoon at the Cedar and it was 
> covered in birds!  It looked like a birdy Christmas tree.  I counted 25 House 
> Finches on the side that I could see.  There were many more birds in the 
> trees all around the Cedar.  I’ve seen all my yard birds on it except for the 
> woodpeckers.  I’ve yet to see a bird try to eat anything from the seed cones 
> though which hang at the bottom of the ferny sprays.  Maybe they don’t know 
> how to get to them.  It’s very interesting behavior for birds that never go 
> to that tree.  Thanks again.
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> --
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RE: [cayugabirds-l] Update - another vote for shelter

2019-02-01 Thread Marie P. Read
I was going to suggest something similar to Linda: any type of conifer can 
provide shelter for birds, particularly in the cold, windy weather we've had 
over the past couple of days. I have watched birds actually going to roost (at 
dusk) in certain spruces on my property in the past.

Marie

Marie Read Wildlife Photography
452 Ringwood Road
Freeville NY  13068 USA

Phone  607-539-6608
e-mail   m...@cornell.edu
Website: http://www.marieread.com

***NEW BOOK by Marie Read!***
Mastering Bird Photography: The Art, Craft, and Technique of Photographing 
Birds and Their Behavior

https://rockynook.com/shop/photography/mastering-bird-photography/?REF=101/

From: bounce-123293506-5851...@list.cornell.edu 
[bounce-123293506-5851...@list.cornell.edu] on behalf of Linda Orkin 
[wingmagi...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, February 1, 2019 4:38 PM
To: Carol Keeler
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update

I don’t know how others responded but perhaps the tree provides some specific 
site related shelter from the cold that may not be true or necessary at other 
times or in the past. I sound think you would see them foraging if they were.

Keep watching and see what you see.

Linda Orkin
Ithaca NY

Sent from my iPhone

"For the sake of some little mouthful of flesh we deprive a soul of the sun and 
the light, and of that proportion of life and time it had been born into the 
world to enjoy" Plutarch

If you permit
this evil, what is the good
of the good of your life?

-Stanley Kunitz...

On Feb 1, 2019, at 4:17 PM, Carol Keeler 
mailto:carolk...@adelphia.net>> wrote:

Thanks to all the people who responded to my query.  Your ideas sure gave some 
food for thought.  I looked out this afternoon at the Cedar and it was covered 
in birds!  It looked like a birdy Christmas tree.  I counted 25 House Finches 
on the side that I could see.  There were many more birds in the trees all 
around the Cedar.  I’ve seen all my yard birds on it except for the 
woodpeckers.  I’ve yet to see a bird try to eat anything from the seed cones 
though which hang at the bottom of the ferny sprays.  Maybe they don’t know how 
to get to them.  It’s very interesting behavior for birds that never go to that 
tree.  Thanks again.

Sent from my iPad

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update

2019-02-01 Thread Linda Orkin
I don’t know how others responded but perhaps the tree provides some specific 
site related shelter from the cold that may not be true or necessary at other 
times or in the past. I sound think you would see them foraging if they were. 

Keep watching and see what you see. 

Linda Orkin 
Ithaca NY

Sent from my iPhone

> "For the sake of some little mouthful of flesh we deprive a soul of the sun 
> and the light, and of that proportion of life and time it had been born into 
> the world to enjoy" Plutarch
> 
> If you permit 
> this evil, what is the good
> of the good of your life?
> 
> -Stanley Kunitz...
> 


> On Feb 1, 2019, at 4:17 PM, Carol Keeler  wrote:
> 
> Thanks to all the people who responded to my query.  Your ideas sure gave 
> some food for thought.  I looked out this afternoon at the Cedar and it was 
> covered in birds!  It looked like a birdy Christmas tree.  I counted 25 House 
> Finches on the side that I could see.  There were many more birds in the 
> trees all around the Cedar.  I’ve seen all my yard birds on it except for the 
> woodpeckers.  I’ve yet to see a bird try to eat anything from the seed cones 
> though which hang at the bottom of the ferny sprays.  Maybe they don’t know 
> how to get to them.  It’s very interesting behavior for birds that never go 
> to that tree.  Thanks again.
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> --
> 
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Update on Weather and front

2018-04-14 Thread david nicosia
 Well, the front set up farther north than expected and so did the heavier 
precipitation today. So we had a shallow front across central NY today. The 
surface front was in far northern PA and the front at 5000 feet (roughly) was 
actually across Lake Ontario. So north of this in Canada was the main 
precipitation shield and hence no fallout conditions down here. Central NY saw 
chilly conditions with northerly winds between the surface and a few thousand 
feet with southwest to west winds above this. Overnight many birds were 
migrating north so presumably birds that migrate higher than a few thousand 
feet up kept going into southern Canada on the southwest winds and stopped 
where the rain was. In reality the bird migration likely was sorted out based 
on how high each species or even individuals migrate. To get a fallout we need 
a solid batch of precipitation which typically has cloud tops around 10 to 20 
feet which is a wall for the migrants. Since this precipitation set up farther 
north than predicted is why it wasn't that impressive. However, winds between 
5000 and 15000 feet were strong from the west-southwest and maybe this could be 
why the western meadowlark showed up?  It is also interesting that in western 
NY the front was a bit deeper and could explain why Jody saw more migrants. 
Anyway, always learning. 
Tonight we will see south winds aloft, north winds close to the ground. 
Precipitation again will be across northern NY. More arrivals will be the norm. 
I think once the cold front comes through Monday with heavier rain we will see 
more migrants. 
Thanks and good birding to all! Dave 
On Friday, April 13, 2018, 7:33:30 AM EDT, David Nicosia 
 wrote:  
 
 Last night there was massive migration in the eastern U.S that stopped in 
northern NY state where there was a rather diffuse front. Not sure if there 
will be any significant concentration of migrants. This morning as of this 
writing the front at the surface is across the northern counties of PA and then 
drops southeast south of the Catskills. At  about 5000 feet up the front is 
farther north roughly from Buffalo to south of Albany but again it is not a 
very sharp front yet. At about 1 feet up the winds are from the west and 
its hard to find any front. So what this means is that birds that migrate 
between 5000 and 1 feet and up probably will keep going unless they 
encounter precipitation. At this point there isn't much precipitation near NY 
or in the northeast U.S. Once the storm intensifies in the midwest and pulls 
east, the front at all levels up to 10-15 thousand feet will sharpen up and 
precipitation will spread east. 
Right now it looks like the surface front will lift back north to the southern 
tier of NY state today but the precipitation will stream across northern NY so 
I wouldn't expect too much just arrivals and some pockets of migrants. 
For tonight, the precipitation and associated front aloft shifts south and 
looks to be setting up from about Buffalo to Albany and it will be raining 
north of this. The surface front will actually drop south into northern PA but 
it will be shallow as the precipitation will be farther north. So I would 
expect best conditions across upstate NY north of the southern tier, which 
includes the Finger Lakes area, and Buffalo to Albany. 
Its hard enough to predict the weather so trying to predict what the birds will 
do is even harder. Hopefully some of this will pan out. 
Good Luck!Dave Nicosia -- Cayugabirds-L List Info: Welcome and Basics Rules and 
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