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[canberrabirds] Peregrine Falcons on Bondi VET (Channel 10 TV)

To: <>
Subject: [canberrabirds] Peregrine Falcons on Bondi VET (Channel 10 TV)
From: "Steve" <>
Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2013 17:43:44 +1100
The Peregrine story on the weekend was an old repeat, I've seen it before,
possibly more than a year ago.

Steve McBride

-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of Peter Shute
Sent: Monday, 25 November 2013 3:16 PM
To: Peter Ormay
Cc: COG Chatline; 
Subject: [canberrabirds] Peregrine Falcons on Bondi VET
(Channel 10 TV)

Against my better judgement, I just watched it on the ten website.

They had streaked breast plumage rather than barred, and at one point he
said the first one was "a young adult, from the plumage", so he was aware of
the plumage difference. But I wasn't able to see anything that would
indicate they might not have fledged yet. Perhaps a tiny bit of down on top
of the head?

I assume they couldn't be breeding in that plumage. How old would they have
to be?

He may have been fooled by the fact that the building staff captured them,
yet the nest was 20m below the roof of a high building. No matter where they
were caught, roof or ground, they could only have flown there, yet couldn't
or wouldn't fly when approached. To someone who didn't know what stage they
were at, that wouldn't really add up to them being fledglings. 

He may have simply believed the staff's opinion that they were the adults,
and then the need to include something in the show other than more bloody
dogs took over.

For those who can't be bothered watching it on the web site, all 5 minutes
or so of it, interspersed with 55 minutes of ads and dog kissing, in an
interface that doesn't allow fast forward or rewind, they were released on
top of the building in the last minute of the show. One flew off and began
soaring, the other glided to the roof of a nearby building. That seemed like
a risky process with birds that might not be able to fly, but might be
frightened enough to try.

The birds were fed for a few days, and one was treated with antibiotics for
"thrush", so probably no harm done? Do peregrines abandon their young if
they've been handled like this? Do they still feed them after fledging?

Peter Shute

Sent from my iPad

> On 25 Nov 2013, at 12:03 pm, "Peter Ormay" <> wrote:
> 
> I saw that Bondi Vet show and got the impression that he mistook the 
> juvenile falcons for adults or just made up a story out of ignorance. 
> The adults were clearly buzzing him. He ever asked for a hard hat.
> 
> 
> 
> What I missed in the story was where the supposedly injured falcons 
> came from. Were they collected at ground level?
> 
> Peter
> 
> 
> 
> From: Philip Veerman 
> Sent: Sunday, 24 November 2013 11:36 PM
> To: ; 'COG Chatline'
> Subject: [canberrabirds] Peregrine Falcons on Bondi VET (Channel 10 
> TV)
> 
> 
> 
> I saw bits of this story yesterday in between other things but I 
> couldn't work out what was supposed to be happening. He had a family 
> of Peregrine Falcons that were nesting in some building in Sydney, 
> that were supposedly having some problems (that I missed hearing what 
> he thought that was) but then he had two clearly young birds (by their 
> plumage) taken from there that looked like they were probably about to 
> fledge. The story seemed to me to be that he thought these two were 
> the adult breeding pair, which they clearly weren't (both showing all 
> the features of juvenal plumage) and that something was wrong with 
> them, but they looked fine. Then when looking in the nest site he 
> couldn't work out where the chicks were (but he had them in a box). 
> The footage also cut away to what were clearly the adults flying 
> around the nest site as they normally do. So I was lost as to the 
> message he was trying to tell. It seemed completely wonky to me. He 
> seemed surprised that these two birds seemed reluctant to fly but it 
> makes sense that they probably had never flown before. Did anyone who 
> saw this make better sense of it than I did? Of course there is no
mechanism that I can see to send this message to the show.
> 
> Philip
> 
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