T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2464.1 | We're still waiting for ours ... | HDLITE::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon May 15 1989 12:58 | 19 |
| Oh, wow, Elaine! That sounds fantastic!
One of our turkeys down in RI has been sitting on her eggs under
the house (the house is built on piers) for the last three weeks. We
figure that next weekend should be hatching time. She's got 17 eggs,
so if they all hatch ... . We've got three other hens whom we think
are nesting elsewhere on the island, so if all of them have 17 or so
eggs and they all hatch ... that's a lot of turkeys ;-) !!
Plus we've got pheasants on the island too who are probably
nesting, and I've got one that's been sick. She's going to Tufts
tomorrow and if the vet gives the okay, we'll release her back to the
wilds of the island this weekend. (I'll be bringing her in tomorrow to
MRO4, so if anyone wants to see a real, live hen pheasant ...)
Isn't nature great??
- Andrea
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2464.2 | Sure it's feline...Catada Geese? Why not... | 31754::MASON | Explaining is not understanding | Mon May 15 1989 13:03 | 6 |
| Elaine -
Were there any cygnets around? The swans were not on/near their
nest this am.
Thanks...Gary
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2464.3 | What is a cygnet?? | PENPAL::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Mon May 15 1989 13:43 | 9 |
| re: .2
Gee, I don't know - from the windows near the outside thermometer,
all I could see were mom, dad, and 5 chicks. I'm not sure I'd
know a cygnet if I saw one ... Gee, baby Swans must be really
cute. Let me know when and where they are, if you happen to
remember.
E.T.
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2464.4 | | CRUISE::NDC | | Mon May 15 1989 13:49 | 3 |
| I always thought baby swans were ugly....remember "The Ugly Duckling"?
Nancy DC
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2464.5 | Nature delays yard work. | CPDW::MCDONOUGH | I'm a friend of THUNDER | Mon May 15 1989 14:39 | 18 |
| Re .3
That's the correct name for a baby swan...
I just bought a new "chipper/shredder" so I could get rid of a huge
pile of brush that's been collecting in my yard for years....but I'm
gonna have to delay things for a few weeks..
A Mallard Duck and her mate have set up housekeeping in my brush
pile, and they regularly dine-out at a pan of cracked corn that we've
left in a convenient place for them...
Guess the yard work will wait...
And last Friday a mommy squirrel brought two of her babies down to
show them how to take food from a couple of "squirrel-proof" bird
feeders. The 'kids' were a bit awkward, but very proficient
nevertheless...( Oh, well, they have to eat too....)
JM
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2464.6 | I think baby swan sounds cuter!!!!!! | PENPAL::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Mon May 15 1989 16:47 | 11 |
|
ohhhhh. Well, re the yard work - some things in this life are
much more fun and much more important - when the guy comes to
spread my top soil that is in a huge pile in the back, he better
be D*^()n careful of the VERY LARGE woodchuck that lives in that
area - she had quite a family last year - haven't seen any babes
yet, but they are probably around! Boy, is she(or he) huge!!!
tanx,
E.T.
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2464.7 | NO BABY SWANS | GYPSY::ADAMS | | Mon May 15 1989 17:17 | 6 |
| Looks like there won't be any baby swans for awhile. Last year
the female couldn't figure out how to build a nest. This year she
got the nest right, and though she sat on it for the required length
of time, she forgot to lay the eggs! She is young yet . . . maybe
next year she'll get it right
|
2464.8 | Well, life do go on.....one way or another!! | PENPAL::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Mon May 15 1989 17:40 | 7 |
| re: 7
oh boy - that's something!! The gooses and ducks don't seem
to have much problem populating MK - just check for the green
yukky stuff on all the paths!!!! They are pretty, though.
|
2464.9 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon May 15 1989 19:16 | 5 |
| My mother lives in Rhode Island on the edge of a bay, and all sorts
of wonderful birds -- ducks, swans, etc. have "moved in" since I
was a tiny tot. Is this a widespread thing in N.E.? If so, anyone
know why?
|
2464.10 | Falcons in Springfield | WFOVX4::BAIRD | | Tue May 16 1989 11:52 | 19 |
| For the bird lovers in this file:
Springfield, MA has a vcity wide bird watch going on as a Peregrine
Falcon has made her nest here on the 21st floor of Monarch Place!!There
are two chicks hatched already and a third egg is waiting to hatch.
These are the first falcons to be born in Western Mass in 41 years
quite an accomplishment! The parents are thaought to be two adults
raised in captivity and released.
/the states Endangered Species Program is watching carefully
as the third egg needs to hatch soon so as not to be too far behind
it's nestmates. If it is, the parents won't take care of it. The
director of the program says they will take the last chick if it
is born too late, as the Peregrines are very endangered.
It was noted that if you want to watch the falcons, the local
cable station has set up a camera so that veiwers can watch it on
cable channel 18b. I'll have to check it out when I get home!!
This info comes from the Springfield Union News.
Debbi
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2464.11 | Just in case... UPNRTH::WILD_BIRDS | HILLST::MASON | Explaining is not understanding | Tue May 16 1989 14:23 | 1 |
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2464.12 | Life goes on at MK01 | TOPDOC::TRACHMAN | Exotic Babies are soooo Cute | Tue May 08 1990 13:45 | 6 |
| Just thought I'd update this note!
The geese have hatched at MK01 - we have three babies so far - there
may be more, but I didn't have time to check!
E.T.
|
2464.13 | We've got 'em at DLB12 too! | ESIS::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Tue May 08 1990 14:51 | 9 |
| We've got 3 white goose babies and 3 Canadian goose babies. Don't
know if the pond outside is an offshoot of Solomon Pond, but it seems
to be a good place for baby geese!
The white goose parents are a pain when I go to feed them (hiss,
hiss, hiss, all hiss and no bite ;-) ), but the Canadian goose parents
act a lot more civilized ;-) .
- Andrea
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2464.14 | Mallards | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Wed May 09 1990 14:20 | 19 |
| I have mallards that visit my backyard and swim on my pool cover.
That is fine for now but I am worried when I open the pool and
chlorinate the water. Does anyone know if they will know that this
is not the same water and that it is chlorinated?
I thought they had their babies (maybe they did and they are on
their own by now) as one day the male (he's beautiful wih a green
neck) came alone, ate bird seed, swam and just hung out for a while.
Later in the day the female came alone - so I figured he was watching
the eggs - she ate swam, etc. Well later on they both returned.
So that took care of that theory.
Does anyone know when they normally have their babies? Could she
have had them already or perhaps not be fertile?
Oliver has ignored the whole thing - he doesn't even know that there
are birds outside let alone big ones.
Flo & Oliver
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2464.15 | Things were duckie with us.. | MAMIE::IVES | | Wed May 09 1990 14:44 | 41 |
| Flo, mallards lay their eggs over a period of time and then when
"enough" have been layed the female sits for 63 days. The male takes
no part in this or the raising of the young. She will get off the
nest for maybe 5 minutes the first couple of weeks but then will not
leave the nest until all ducklings are hatched. Mallards love to
be near houses during this period but the darn racoons usually get
the eggs anyhow. We have waited and waited for the ducklings to come
only to have the racoons eat the eggs at the 60th or so day.!!!!!!
We had a female nest near our house several years ago and often one
egg will hatch ahead of the rest and IF this happens the mother will
place her bill in the opening and litterally throw the egg out of the
nest to kill the duckling. They do this because in 24 hours that duckl-
ing would be ready to go to the water and swim and the others wouldn't
be hatched. Seems cruel but its save many and sacrifice one. HOWEVER we
had a saint bernard who bought (in his mouth) the egg that was hatching
and we took in the house and under a lamp and it hatched. We loved that
duck so much. We named HER Guliver. All 3 cats and the 2 saint bernards
were like here caretakers. They watched her from fuzzy yellow stage
thru to feathers. I don't believe she ever knew she was a duck. She
swam in the lake with us and had a dish pan under the faucet out side
for her own pool but insisted on eating in the house with the rest of
her. One night she wouldn't come off the lake when it got dark and that
is when she stared her trek back to the wild state. She always did come
up after she went back to the wild for a pat or a duck kiss, and she
continued to be friendly with our animals until we moved from there.
The ducks can swim in your cholorine pool but it is harder on the oil
on their feathers. A pan under the down spout works good. They nest 2
times a year. Oh yes, and they LOVE all kinds of grubs and worms. We
keep a plank on the ground beside the garage for Guliver to feast on
when we were out side with her.
Wish we had taken pictures of all of the cute things she did and then
written a book. (Too busy watching her do this and that.) I could go
on and on.
If you want any other info just ask.
Barbara
animals
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2464.16 | I thot this was FELINE :-) | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed May 09 1990 15:38 | 4 |
| You might want to try asking this in UPNRTH::WILD_BIRDS (kit KP-7 to
add the wild birds conference to your notebook).
Deb
|
2464.17 | Hooray!! | ESIS::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon May 21 1990 09:44 | 15 |
| Guess what! My turkey (Baby) had her babies! Fourteen little
balls of fluff!
She abandoned the runt in the nest; we tried to incubate it, but
it died yesterday. But the fourteen others are doing great, running
around, playing with each other. Baby's sister, Tiny, is helping to
"mother" the babies too.
Baby either walks around with the little ones, or lies down and
lets them burrow under her wings. There's always one, though, that
peeks out from under her wing - must be a tom!
Yippee!!
- Andrea
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2464.18 | Worth waitinf for ... | XNOGOV::LISA | | Mon May 21 1990 11:19 | 6 |
| Sounds great! Wish I had a pet turkey!!
Lisa.
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2464.19 | | ESIS::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Mon May 21 1990 13:27 | 15 |
| Hey, Lisa,
Maybe it's time to get Pookie an avian playmate ;-) ;-) ;-) . Are
there any turkey breeders in your area (or are turkeys too indigenous
to the US?)? All you need is a hen or two to start; they're fairly
quiet and fun. If you want noise (and babies) you get a tom. I'd be
careful with a tom, though ... if each hen produces 12-20 eggs and
almost every egg hatches ... ;-) ;-) ;-) ...
Are you zoned agricultural or residential/agricultural? I know
the place in RI is agricultural (where the turkeys are) but my house
in MA is zoned residential/agricultural - I can have up to 12 birds.
Hmmm ... a place for them in the winter ... ;-) ;-) ;-) ...
- Andrea
|
2464.20 | Want one, want one! | XNOGOV::LISA | | Tue May 22 1990 04:54 | 7 |
| Mmmm - sounds like a good idea, but I don't think Pookie would
approve ;-) I like the ones with wobbly bits on their beaks!
Perhaps I could train it to peck the builders!
Lisa plus Pookie.
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2464.21 | | ESIS::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Tue May 22 1990 09:55 | 18 |
| I can see it now ...
+-------------------------------+
| WARNING |
| |
| NO TRESPASSING |
| |
| Trained Attack Turkey on Duty |
+-------------------------------+
;-) 8-) ;-) 8-) ;-) 8-) ;-)
- Andrea
P.S. If you want an Attack Turkey, it'll have to be a Tom. Hens are
too passive (unless they have growing babies).
;-) 8-) ;-) 8-) ;-) 8-) ;-)
|