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Health & Fitness

A Day in the Life

Retailed hawks, baby buntings and nature watching

A day in the life

I watched as a retailed hawk flew overhead. It was a plastic shopping bag that had been set free and took flight.

I was unhappy to see such a thing. Plastic bags sack the landscape and are far too persistent.

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Later, I spotted a dead cardinal on the road near my home. A male that had visited my feeders regularly and had nestlings to feed.

Not a happy sight. Cars hit birds and birds hit windows. Those things are going to happen, but let's keep the retailed hawks from flying.

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The blessing of baby buntings

Bryce Gaudian of Hayward found an indigo bunting nest in a giant ragweed plant while he was dispatching weeds from a cornfield. Bryce said that it was as if he’d found a gold mine on his farm because, other than brown thrashers and kingfishers, the indigo bunting is his favorite bird.

Bryce added that helping to make his sighting off-the-charts sweet, is that he has a dear friend, Randy Fossum, and a mother-in-law, Edie Tennis, who rub it in that they see indigo buntings before Bryce does every spring and see more of them than Bryce does. Up until the discovery in his field on July 31, he’d been hanging his head all spring/summer because he’d not seen even one on the farm.

Q and A

"Could a bald eagle eat too much to fly?"

Young eagles sometimes make the mistake of overheating, which makes them too ill to fly. We’ve all been there. They recover if allowed to.

Robert Sibilrud of Hartland asked if hawks would kill cats.

No hawk would ever kill a cat kept indoors. With cars, dogs, coyotes, disease and a neighbor who hates cats; a hawk is the least of a cat’s worries.

The outdoors is not a feline’s friend. It would be possible that one would attack a cat, but not probable. A red-tailed hawk will occasionally feed on roadkill and that might include a declined feline. A great horned owl will prey upon cats. I have never talked or heard from anyone who has seen a hawk take a cat, not even a small kitten—other than on a forwarded, forwarded, forwarded e-mail.

Consider a cat of your acquaintance that you have tried to take somewhere it didn’t want to go. It’s more than a handful. A small hawk—and all of ours really are∏—would have a battle on its talons. It would be a battle it might not win. I know of a cat killing a red-tailed hawk used as an education bird.

The University of Georgia did a study on house cats. As a cat owner (of two black cats that have never set a paw outdoors), I found the research enlightening. Reptiles and amphibians took the brunt of the feline assault.

Lizards, snakes, and frogs made up 41 percent of the animals killed by the Athens, GA, area cats equipped with collar cameras. Rodents (chipmunks, voles, etc.) made up 25 percent of the prey, insects and worms 20 percent and birds 12 percent.

Birds can fly or their numbers would be higher. The study found that 30 percent of roaming house cats kill prey—an average of two animals per week. Cats brought home 21 percent of what they killed, ate 30 percent and left 49 percent at the scene.

The cats exhibited some risky behaviors—45 percent crossed roadways, 25 percent ate or drank things they found, 20 percent explored storm drains and 20 percent entered crawlspaces. Whether it becomes predator or prey, the safest thing to do is to keep a cherished cat indoors.

"I enjoy watching birds. How many people in the US share my hobby?"

According to a survey done by the US Fish & Wildlife Service, 71.8 million people 16 years old or older fed, photographed and observed wildlife in 2011. Birdwatchers make up 46.7 million of that number. Wildlife watchers spend $55 billion annually. There was no significant change in the number of wildlife watchers from 2006 to 2011, but there was a 7 percent increase in the money spent on wildlife-watching from 2006 to 2011.

Comparing the 2011 survey with the two previous surveys done by the USF&W shows no significant change from 2006 to 2011 and a 9 percent increase from 2001 to 2011 in overall wildlife-watching participation. Adding children to the survey would increase the numbers substantially.

Thanks for stopping by

"This is my living faith, an active faith, a faith of verbs: to question, explore, experiment, experience, walk, run, dance, play, eat, love, learn, dare, taste, touch, smell, listen, speak, write, read, draw, provoke, emote, scream, sin, repent, cry, kneel, pray, bow, rise, stand, look, laugh, cajole, create, confront, confound, walk back, walk forward, circle, hide, and seek."

—Terry Tempest Williams

"It's not what you say out of your mouth that determines your life, it's what you whisper to yourself that has the most power."

—Robert Kiyosaki

DO GOOD.

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