Hi everyone,
By the time Rose and I made contact today, it was too late in the
day for me to get back to Interlaken and confirm the bird was still
visible and for her then to make the trip arrive before sunset. I
will look again tomorrow morning and see if I can find it on my way to work.
As of 5:30 PM today, the hawk was on the ground in the spot marked
with a pin here http://tinyurl.com/py5lx62. It had just crossed 96 and
was hopping/flapping generally north. While it is injured, it still is a
powerful and alert animal I doubt anyone without the right experience
and equipment can catch it without hurting both themselves and the hawk.
My suggestion is that if you see the bird and it is possible for
you to wait in the area while help comes, then call either the Cornell
Wildlife Center (607-253-3060 and follow the prompts to the Wildlife
Center to discuss the situation and get directions) or call Rose at the
number she gave below and see if someone can come catch it. You /must/
stay with the bird to keep an eye on where it goes, though - it is
unlikely someone would be able to just show up a half hour later and be
able to find it unless you do this, as these fields have lots of cover
in and around them!
If someone does try or succeed in catching this hawk, could you
let me know?
Thanks -
Alicia
On 4/1/2014 6:18 PM, Rosalie V Borzik wrote:
Hi Alicia,
If you go back to that area, tell me the hawk is still there and wait
for me to arrive, I will come. Otherwise, it's a long drive for what
is likely to be a wild goose chase.
Email me at rbor...@audubon.org mailto:rbor...@audubon.org or call
my cell 607-342-0271 tel:607-342-0271
Rose Borzik
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE Smartphone
-- Original message--
*From: *Alicia Plotkin
*Date: *Tue, 4/1/2014 6:08 PM
*To: *CAYUGABIRDS-L;
*Subject:*[cayugabirds-l] Injured Red-Tailed Hawk
Hi,
On my way home from work, at 5:30 PM, an injured mature (and
gorgeous) red-tailed hawk was in a field just south of Interlaken. It
was able to jump and flap for very short distances - maybe 3' in lift
and 10' in distance - and was progressing through a series of flap/hops,
but appeared to have an injury to the left wing and possibly weakness in
the left leg. It was extremely alert - it watched crouched by the side
of Rte 96A for a series of cars and trucks to scream past and then
flap/hopped across the road - but surely will tire quickly. The field I
last saw it in is I think the same one where a Snowy Owl was seen
briefly earlier this year (not be me) and is a favorite of foxes and
coyotes.
Anyone have the name/phone number of someone willing to go after
this strong but injured bird? I can give more specific directions then,
or meet someone there to show them where it was last seen.
Alicia
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