Tuesday, July 28, 2009

The Birds:

Aplamado falcons are strikingly beautiful. The second group of 7 chicks arrived yesterday and was placed in the hack box where they will mature a bit more, grow accustomed to their surroundings, and learn that the tower represents food and home base. These new chicks dramatize the development of the first 7 which have been in our care for 2.5 weeks. During that time they have grown from downy-headed 33 day old innocents into sleek adolescent pre-hunters with 26-28” wing spans. They have become individuals with subtle differences in markings, behaviors and interactions. Their days are spent in exploration of their abilities and their world; these activities interspersed with periods of preening and rest while perched upright or laying flat on their bellies. It’s a bit disconcerting that, at rest, they often close just one eye while leaving the other alertly open.
We especially enjoy watching them develop their flight skills (Aplamados, like Peregrines, are incredibly aerodynamic) and tuning into their hunting instincts – at this stage following grasshoppers on the ground and tracking flying insects with their vision (at least 10X more acute than humans). The first chase we observed involved two pursuing a pronghorn antelope! The large mammal could, of course, never be considered prey but a chase is a chase and the antelope obligingly ran. In adulthood they will fly with great agility and speed in pursuit of large insects and smaller birds, their primary prey.
Aplamados don’t generally pair for two or more years when they will “spruce up” a nest previously constructed by a raven or other large bird, lay eggs and raise young. Peregrine Fund staff also place artificial nest boxes to help the process and one has been erected just inside the electric fence (a perimeter barrier erected to discourage bison from rubbing against the tower) for these to become familiar with and to provide them another shady perch site.
It is an extraordinary experience to be given the mandate to simply observe other creatures. It is generally interesting and sometimes exciting but with long periods akin to watching paint dry. It requires attention and endurance and rewards one not only with insight into the life of these birds, but glimpses of the interconnected lives of all creatures in this superficially barren landscape. As another crimson desert dawn was breaking today we were treated to a panorama of bison in the background, pronghorn antelope with twin fawns and a coyote passing through the middle space, and quail, lizards and rabbits almost underfoot. All this set to the music of songbirds and chirping insects with the Aplamados performing aerial ballet overhead. Well worth going to work for!

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