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Fwd: Osprey rescue in WI




----- Forwarded message from TINA PAYTON <rainofautumn@HOTMAIL.COM> -----
    Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2004 06:05:20 -0600
    From: TINA PAYTON <rainofautumn@HOTMAIL.COM>
Reply-To: TINA PAYTON <rainofautumn@HOTMAIL.COM>
 Subject: Osprey rescue in WI
      To: WYOBIRDS@HOME.EASE.LSOFT.COM

I just thought this was interesting and thought I'd share it with everyone.
Tina










Thu, Aug 5, 2004

Firefighters save osprey from drowning in river
By Rick LaFrombois
Wausau Daily Herald
rlafromb@wdhprint.com

A quick response by residents and the Wausau Fire Department saved an osprey
from a watery grave Wednesday.

The Marathon County Sheriff's Department received a 911 call from the Waters
Edge Cafe Restaurant just before 7:30 p.m. about a bird, possibly an eagle,
floating in the Wisconsin River and heading toward the Wisconsin Public Service
dam. Emily Volpe, a waitress at Waters Edge, 150 E. Stewart Ave., said it was
her family that first noticed the bird.

"They were sitting out on the patio and they saw a bird flapping its wings, and
then they saw the white head and they thought it was an eagle, so they said,
'Go call the police,'" said Volpe, 17.

Lt. Rick Schultz and firefighter Pat Moucha of the Fire Department arrived at
the scene with an inflatable boat, a landing net and a large, plastic bucket.

More than a half-dozen residents had been tracking the bird since it was first
sighted, and they led the firefighters to the bird, which was floating face up
in the river less than 100 yards from the dam.

Osprey facts
The osprey is a large, powerful bird of prey. The birds usually grow to about 23
inches tall and have a five-foot wingspan when they are mature. Their coloring
is black and brown on top, and white below with a white head and tail on mature
birds that sometimes cause them to be confused with bald eagles.

More facts about the osprey:
* In 2002, there were about 400 nesting pairs in Wisconsin, including 10 in
Marathon County.

* Each bird can weigh up to 3 1/2 pounds.

* Ospreys winter in the southern United States or farther south.

To learn more about ospreys, log on to
dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/er/factsheets/birds/osprey.htm.



"If they didn't tell us where it is, it would have gone over the dam," Schultz
said.

The firefighters made their way down a steep, rocky slope through thick brush.
Schultz then leaned out over the river with the landing net as Moucha held him
to prevent him from falling in.

"It would come to the shore right to you, like it wanted help," Moucha said.

Schultz was able to net the bird, which authorities later determined to be an
osprey. He grabbed the bird and put it in the bucket.

"I grabbed him by his feet, and he didn't try to bite me at all," Schultz said.
"I think that poor bird is out of energy."
Like eagles, an ospreys also are raptors. They are more rare than eagles in
Wisconsin and are better at preying on fish, said Melissa Hiles, a worker with
Raptor Education Group International, a nonprofit organization that nurses sick
or injured birds back to health and educates the public about them.

There are about 400 pairs of osprey in the state, fewer than half the number of
eagles. The bird is listed as a threatened species in Wisconsin.

Marge Gibson, the executive director of Raptor Education Group International,
asked Hiles to pick up the bird at the police department and drive it to the
group's rehabilitation center in Antigo, where its blood will be tested to
determine its health.

The osprey is the only bird in Wisconsin that plunges straight into water
feet-first and uses it eyes, which are adapted to see underwater, to capture
its food, said Hiles, 22, of Wausau.

"They're really so intelligent," she said as she held the osprey in her hands.
"They can tell in less than a second if you're there to hurt it or not."
Authorities are not sure how the bird, which Hiles thinks might be an adult
female, ended up in the river. It bore no obvious external injuries.

Ospreys can't swim and have been known to drown, especially when their talons
become stuck in too large a fish and are then unable to fly away.

But Hiles thinks illness that might have put the bird in danger.

"She's very thin. She could be sick," she said. "The breastbone is sticking out.
That usually never happens."
Hiles drove the osprey to Antigo on Wednesday night, where the group will care
for the bird until it is healthy enough to be released into the wild.



TinaGet more from the Web.  FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.com

To post photos, please e-mail them to willcornell@onewest.net

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If you have any problems, questions, etc...  e-mail willcornell@onewest.net

----- End forwarded message -----


Salt Lake City, UT or Beloit, WI
http://www.timaverybirding.com
I just thought this was interesting and thought I'd share it with everyone.
Tina
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thu, Aug 5, 2004

Firefighters save osprey from drowning in river

By Rick LaFrombois
Wausau Daily Herald
rlafromb@wdhprint.com

A quick response by residents and the Wausau Fire Department saved an osprey from a watery grave Wednesday.

The Marathon County Sheriff's Department received a 911 call from the Waters Edge Cafe Restaurant just before 7:30 p.m. about a bird, possibly an eagle, floating in the Wisconsin River and heading toward the Wisconsin Public Service dam. Emily Volpe, a waitress at Waters Edge, 150 E. Stewart Ave., said it was her family that first noticed the bird.

"They were sitting out on the patio and they saw a bird flapping its wings, and then they saw the white head and they thought it was an eagle, so they said, 'Go call the police,'" said Volpe, 17.

Lt. Rick Schultz and firefighter Pat Moucha of the Fire Department arrived at the scene with an inflatable boat, a landing net and a large, plastic bucket.

More than a half-dozen residents had been tracking the bird since it was first sighted, and they led the firefighters to the bird, which was floating face up in the river less than 100 yards from the dam.

Osprey facts

The osprey is a large, powerful bird of prey. The birds usually grow to about 23 inches tall and have a five-foot wingspan when they are mature. Their coloring is black and brown on top, and white below with a white head and tail on mature birds that sometimes cause them to be confused with bald eagles.

More facts about the osprey:
* In 2002, there were about 400 nesting pairs in Wisconsin, including 10 in Marathon County.

* Each bird can weigh up to 3 1/2 pounds.

* Ospreys winter in the southern United States or farther south.

To learn more about ospreys, log on to dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/er/factsheets/birds/osprey.htm.


"If they didn't tell us where it is, it would have gone over the dam," Schultz said.

The firefighters made their way down a steep, rocky slope through thick brush. Schultz then leaned out over the river with the landing net as Moucha held him to prevent him from falling in.

"It would come to the shore right to you, like it wanted help," Moucha said.

Schultz was able to net the bird, which authorities later determined to be an osprey. He grabbed the bird and put it in the bucket.

"I grabbed him by his feet, and he didn't try to bite me at all," Schultz said. "I think that poor bird is out of energy."
Like eagles, an ospreys also are raptors. They are more rare than eagles in Wisconsin and are better at preying on fish, said Melissa Hiles, a worker with Raptor Education Group International, a nonprofit organization that nurses sick or injured birds back to health and educates the public about them.

There are about 400 pairs of osprey in the state, fewer than half the number of eagles. The bird is listed as a threatened species in Wisconsin.

Marge Gibson, the executive director of Raptor Education Group International, asked Hiles to pick up the bird at the police department and drive it to the group's rehabilitation center in Antigo, where its blood will be tested to determine its health.

The osprey is the only bird in Wisconsin that plunges straight into water feet-first and uses it eyes, which are adapted to see underwater, to capture its food, said Hiles, 22, of Wausau.

"They're really so intelligent," she said as she held the osprey in her hands. "They can tell in less than a second if you're there to hurt it or not."
Authorities are not sure how the bird, which Hiles thinks might be an adult female, ended up in the river. It bore no obvious external injuries.

Ospreys can't swim and have been known to drown, especially when their talons become stuck in too large a fish and are then unable to fly away.

But Hiles thinks illness that might have put the bird in danger.

"She's very thin. She could be sick," she said. "The breastbone is sticking out. That usually never happens."
Hiles drove the osprey to Antigo on Wednesday night, where the group will care for the bird until it is healthy enough to be released into the wild.



Tina


Get more from the Web. FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.com

To post photos, please e-mail them to willcornell@onewest.net

To view photos, visit http://avesfoto.smugmug.com

If you have any problems, questions, etc... e-mail willcornell@onewest.net