Es-Cape from the City

Each year, without fail, we “migrate” for a time to the open shores of Cape Cod to enjoy the weather, the sea air, and the joys of nature.  Our temporary habitat of choice? Provincetown.   The pilgrim’s real first landing spot in North America, Provincetown has always attracted free thinkers, nature lovers, and artists of every kind…including Tennessee Williams, Jackson Pollock, and Mary Oliver, just to name a few.  And because of its location at the very tip of the Cape, it also attracts a bevy of gorgeous animals on the land and sea.

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We build our annual nest at Surfside Hotel and Suites, on the east end of the main drag, Commercial Street. Suddenly our backyard is the beach where we peacefully watch the tides come and go.

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We also see all kinds of wildlife from gulls who take to the sky in droves at dawn and dusk to hermit crabs jostling about at low tide. Here is a hermit crab who won the competition for a new big shell.  Watch it jump from it’s old “house” to try out the new one.

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We’re used to scanning the sky for soaring hawks and were delighted to see our first juvenile Bald Eagles…

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…a gorgeous Common Eider (what a snout!)…

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…teams of Semipalmated Sandpipers bouncing around and poking their beaks into the tidal flats…

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…the occasional Semipalmated Plover would join them to see what all the fuss was about…

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And we even saw an elegant Long-tailed Duck, who drifted along the water and dove for 30-45 seconds at a time (using the scientific 1-Mississippi, 2-Mississippi counting method).

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On one of the days, we drove out to the Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary.  The sanctuary is beautiful – offering everything from woods, to ponds, to marshes, to beaches.  And, indeed, we saw all kinds of wildlife. Some of the highlights were a juvenile Great Blue Heron…

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…a Snowy Egret…

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…and hundreds of fiddler crabs who all have one small front claw and one GIANT front claw that makes you wonder how they can move around with an appendage that is the size of their body.

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Amidst all the serenity, we did have one difficult experience.  A Herring Gull drifted lazily up to the shore of the hotel beach.  A brave woman, Diane (another animal lover from Manhattan!), gently scooped it up and we all set out to help it. We put the injured bird in a box and called Provincetown Animal Control and Wildcare Cape Cod, a rescue organization.  Wildcare dispatched a hero named Swede (sp?) who came to pick up the bird and bring it to their treatment center.  Unfortunately, it had multiple broken vertebrae due to blunt force trauma (meaning it hit something or something hit it at a very fast speed) and it couldn’t be saved.  We were heartbroken but so grateful that people like Diane, Ruth Ann Cowing (Provincetown Animal Control officer), Swede and Wildcare Cape Cod are out there to give these animals a chance.

Despite that tough loss, something about the way the tides keep coming and going, the birds flying steadily and confidently, the clouds painting streaks in the sky…made us realize that things will be alright.  

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And the full horizon-to-horizon rainbow didn’t hurt either. 

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Elemen-tree, my dear Watson

Since the young hawks have fledged, we’ve seen them hanging out on rooftops, fire escapes, and other structures around the church, usually at dawn and dusk.  But there are days when the cross is empty and we don’t see any young hawk activity all day long…so a mystery presented itself: Where are they going? 

“How often have I said that when you have excluded the impossible whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” – Sherlock Holmes (The Sign of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle)

After we ruled out the possibility that they were summering in the Hamptons with Leonardo DiCaprio or flying by Pluto with New Horizons, we started to hunt for clues that might help us.

The first real clue came at dawn one morning when we saw one of the birds fly towards a grove of trees near the church. 

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The hawk didn’t emerge so we began a long, pain-staking camera pan of the trees nearby.  After almost giving up, like a 49er in the Truckee river, we struck gold! See if you can find the barred tail…

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So…we knew at least one hawk was perched in a tree. Then, later that afternoon, the hawks were flying/crying around hoping for a feeding. One of them flew right into the trees…

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…then flew right back out!

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Aha! So we now we knew we should check that area more thoroughly. No luck for the first hour or so, until we happened upon the second fledgling perched in a low branch!

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It seemed quite comfortable in the tree, conducting its own detective work on a tiny leaf.

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A group of pigeons sat just under the tree totally unfazed…a hint that the young hawks still aren’t hunting yet.  The fledgling took off soon after.  

We found nothing the next day.  And we searched a lot.

‘Come, Watson, come!’ he cried. ‘The game is afoot. Not a word! Into your clothes and come!’ – Sherlock Holmes (from The Adventure of the The Abbey Grange)

Not to be deterred, we continued the search the next day.  And, this time, the good old-fashioned footwork paid off.  We spotted another fledgling!

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It was quietly perched in a tree…investigating the intricacies of a branch. 

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The young hawk sat there for at least an hour, totally unnoticed by humans and animals alike. 

And finally, just yesterday morning in a different area on 3rd Street, we could hear the loud cries of a hungry young hawk. Sure enough, there we found one. 

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It cried and cried nonstop, attracting a small group of human observers. It moved in the tree a bit.

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Mom was on the church with food and Dad arrived and started calling, perhaps hoping to lure the young hawk closer with some food.

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The fledgling flew to a fire escape closer to the church and began a back and forth calling session with Christo that lasted a good 30 minutes.

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The young hawk argued and argued…

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…but Dad won out in the end. The young hawk flew to a nearby rooftop to await a feeding.  

And so the search continues…but we are reasonably sure that if the hawks don’t make it to Tompkins Square Park, they’ll start practice-hunting a bit closer to home.

“Education never ends, Watson. It is a series of lessons with the greatest for the last.” – Sherlock Holmes (The Red Circle by Arthur Conan Doyle)

A Feel-Good Friday in New York City

You could tell there was something special in the air this morning when even the ConEd plant looked beautiful.

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Birds of a different feather circled above…

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…and Christo was perched on the church, ready to begin another day.

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He let out a rousing call as he took off from the church, effortlessly gliding around the neighborhood.

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Then, as has become routine over the last week, from every direction, the young hawks flew in…

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…circling above the rooftops of 3rd St. and Ave A…

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…flying beautifully, higher and smoother than ever before.

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They eventually landed near the church, calling back to their father that they were here and ready to eat.

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As Dad went off to hunt, our hearts were warmed with the thought that all three young hawks are thriving.  So far, they have overcome very tough odds (hawks have about a 20% chance of survival in their first year), but these young hawks are growing stronger every day. 

A few hours later, just 2 miles down the isle of Manhattan as the crow flies, New York City celebrated another group that defeated all odds, and broke records! The “Canyon of Heroines” erupted with sheer joy honoring the amazing 2015 World Cup Champion US Women’s Soccer team (with an historic, first-ever NYC ticker-tape parade for a women’s team).  

What a wonderful start to the weekend…

You’re brazen now, little Mockingbird.  Better run for cover when that pup grows up!

A Hawk Masterpiece

We have been so happy to receive lots of photos, videos, and questions from readers all around the neighborhood (and the world!). And then local businesses Downtown Yarns and Exit9 got into the hawk-spirit during #fledgewatch.  But what we are about to show you is by far the BEST hawk-inspired work of art that we’ve received. 

Alexi, a 5 year old recent Kindergarten graduate, lives very close to the hawks’ home base in the East Village.  She has been able to watch them eat, fly, and explore their surroundings.  The fledglings have even hung out on her family’s balcony! 

Her whole family has been following their development.  As Mom put it, “We are enjoying the experience of being near the Hawks.”  We couldn’t say it better. But Alexi found a way to…she made a whole book!! 

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We urge you to go back and examine the detailed illustrations again, you’ll be delighted.  Thank you so much, Alexi, for sharing your beautiful book with us.  We look forward to keeping up with the hawks with you!

Just before Independence Day, a much smaller battle

At 5:30am this morning, we caught up with two of the fledglings sharing a special sibling moment: a battle over a rat.  

Sibling 1: Gee that’s a nice rat.  Looks like we could split it and each take half.

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Sibling 2:  Not gonna happen. 

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Dad:  Keep it down, kids.  I’m gonna go hunt for more.  Don’t hurt each other while I’m gone.

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Siblings 1&2: Mine! No it’s mine! <tug of war ensues>

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Sibling 2: Ha! I win! Better luck next time, sucker!

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Sibling 2: <moment of remorse, looks back> Maybe I should bring it back and share?

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Sibling 2: Nah. <swallows rat whole>

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Sibling 1: I’m telling! Daaaaaad….

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Happy 2 month birthday!

It’s hard to believe it’s only been 2 months since Dora and Christo’s first hatchling of this year emerged. We nostalgically look back at how quickly they’ve blossomed.

Here’s the middle child (we believe) eating a feather a month ago:

And now, just a month later, they are flying pretty well and starting to explore their surroundings…

…like a roof turbine vent (learned something new today!) in the wind…

…and a rooftop food drop (actually leftovers from the evening before). Watch how carefully the fledgling, which we believe to be the youngest/last, approaches. But it will get that food one way or another…

Red-Tailed Hawks are AWESOME!!!

In case you missed it: what happened when a class of 4th graders in New Hampshire proposed changing the state bird to the Red-Tailed Hawk this past March? You have to see it to believe it, but we’re sure you’ll agree that John Oliver rocks.

Reunited and it…feels so good?

On Sunday evening, I asked Gog if she had seen the Wayward Fledgling and she told me that all three fledglings were in the vicinity of the church.  What wonderful news! We’ve been wishing that the whole family would be reunited and it happened, at least for a little while! We managed to catch photos of all 3 fledglings within a 50-yard radius of each other…

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We still want to see all 3 together in the same frame, so we’ll be on the lookout.

We have seen the fledglings start to expand further from their home base around the church, exploring around 3rd and 4th St.  One even flew to 1st Avenue before we lost sight of it. If you see a fledgling anywhere, please let us know! We’re hoping the worst shenanigans are over, and that soon, we’ll see them learning to hunt on their own.