That individual bird has been there for at least four weeks in that same condition. I have about 100 million pictures of that thing if you want and some of them from very close up.
When I first noticed it I thought it was a bad molt. A week later seeing it in the same spot as the week before and getting a closer look I thought the eing may be broken.
I considered bringing it to the center for Wildlife for rehab. It is not flying when the other birds flush. The bird is still feisty, I watched it steal a worm from a blackbellied plover and run away with it to devour it. It's foraging successfully as well.
I didn't "save" it because my concern was that the center for wildlife would euthanize it especially if the wing was broken and healed wrong. I felt that would be better for it to live out his life naturally, as it still foraging and interacting together birds.
If you think it could be rehabilitated, I would gladly meet you or anyone else there to catch it.
I will post some photos to the Maine-Bird list Flickr page in a few minutes.
Sent from my iPhone... So please forgive typographical errors, message brevity and any strange word choices my phone decides were better than what I actually typed.
Hi all,--Last weekend and the weekend before, I saw this dowitcher at Pine Point. It's got a bad wing, so it's pretty distinctive. I initially dismissed it as a Short-billed, but now some things have me wondering about Long-billed. Any advice would be appreciated. Link to photos on Flickr: http://flic.kr/p/giTT1CThanksDavid RankinBiddeford
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