Baby Raccoons
While looking for owls on Thursday, I found these three baby raccoons. Their tree had been trimmed after a branch had fallen. There mother was inspecting the changes and these three went exploring around their cavity.
While looking for owls on Thursday, I found these three baby raccoons. Their tree had been trimmed after a branch had fallen. There mother was inspecting the changes and these three went exploring around their cavity.
The eyasses continue to grow up at the Cathedral. Two of the eyasses have brown feathers on their heads now. They’re still a ways from fledging, but they’re growing up fast.
I visited Riverside Church after work to see how their pair of Peregrine Falcons were doing. Both were visible, one perched on the northwest corner, and one flying around the church tower when I arrived. I hope this is a sign that their eggs have hatched, but we won’t know for a few weeks.
Update: Robert Schmunk saw two nestlings peaking out from the Falcon’s scrape on Sunday, June 3rd. So, we’ll have fledglings within a few weeks.
I went up to the Pool this evening and was unable to find a single owl. The tree leaves are just too dense to have any hope of finding them.
This season was very satisfying. The parents and the fledgling were a wonderful group to observe and I learned a great deal about Eastern Screech-Owl behavior.
Until next year, back to hawks for the rest of spring…
The Fordham University Rose Hill campus has a nest on Collins Auditorium. This is the nest location’s second year. Both years have been successful with three eyasses last year, and three this year.
Chris Lyons and Dr. Rich Fleisher both work at Fordham and send regular reports via Rob Jett’s City Birder Blog and Dr. Richard Fleisher’s page at Fordham.
The parents have been nicknamed Hawkeye and Rose. Alan Alda is an alumnus of Fordham, so Hawkeye is named after Alan Alda’s character on the television program M.A.S.H. Rose, the female is named after the campus.
The campus is a traditional College setting with lawns, gardens and footpaths. The campus is adjacent to Bronx Park, a 718 acre park home to the Bronx Zoo and the New York Botanical Gardens.
I asked Rob Jett, who has one of the best birding blogs on the Internet, City Birder, if he would give directions to the Prospect Park nest. He said sure, but that he would need to take me in person.
These two eyasses bring the eyasses I’ve seen in person and photographed to 14 for the season! All on one Metrocard.
| Location | No. |
| Inwood Hill | 2 |
| Highbridge Park | 3 |
| St. John the Divine | 3 |
| Astoria Park, Queens | 2 |
| Green-Wood, Brooklyn | 2 |
| Prospect Park, Brooklyn | 2 |
| 14 Total |