Thursday, 13 February 2014

RE: [Maine-birds] Bangor Snowy--we missed two of them!

I volunteer Lincoln Ave in Gardiner as a relocation spot J

 

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Michael Smith MS GISP
State GIS Manager, Maine Office of GIS
State of Maine, Office of Information Technology
michael.smith _at_ maine.gov 207-215-5530

Board Member, Maine GeoLibrary
Education Chair, Maine GIS Users Group
State Rep, National States Geographic Information Council



State House Station 145
51 Commerce Drive
Augusta, ME 04333-0145
69o 47' 58.9"W  44o 21' 54.8"N

From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Erynn Call
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2014 9:28 AM
To: Susan Guare; Maine Birds
Subject: Re: [Maine-birds] Bangor Snowy--we missed two of them!

 

Hi Susan,

I just wanted to assure you that the USDA staff were telling the truth and they have plenty of experience trapping raptors and other birds at the airport.  Nice to see they are having some capture success and are transporting the owls to safer locations. 

Best,
Erynn

 

On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 5:35 PM, Susan Guare <susanguare@gmail.com> wrote:

I made a try for the BIA Snowy at about 3:30 today, and was partially successful.  I saw it from a long distance, sitting on the fence way to the right of the reported location.  It immediately flew, so no photograph.  I'm going back tomorrow, but I can't go earlier than 3; drat work.

I ran into two guys from BIA.  They were picking up the two traps they had set for the Snowies, and they told me they had already caught two of them, and were after the third.  The traps are "baited" with a live decoy pigeon, which is why they pick them up in the afternoon.  The pigeons are taken to a warm spot for the night.  I doubt if the pigeons volunteered for this, but from what I could see, they can't actually be caught by the owl.

They were friendly, and told me where to look for 'the one that got away'.  It had flown into a field on the other side of Hildreth North.  However, it had by then gone back to the airport side, as that's where I saw it on the fence, just as the guys in their truck drove past and scared it off.  The guys said that the USDA (really?) picks up the owls and transports them to a wilder location.  I hope they were telling the truth.

 

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--

Erynn Call
Raptor Specialist
Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife

650 State St., Bangor, ME 04401

erynn.call@maine.gov
http://www.maine.gov/ifw/wildlife/species/birds/raptors.html
906.630.0266 (cell)
207.941.4481 (office)

Ph.D. candidate: Department of Wildlife Ecology
University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469
5755 Nutting Hall, Room 210
erynn.call@maine.edu
http://umaine.edu/wle/graduate-program/current-graduate-students/erynn-call/

 

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