Monday, April 30, 2007

Birds of Central Park Events

There are two events in May in Central Park where I will be making a presentation and/or signing copies of my book, "Birds of Central Park."

The first event is at the Dairy on Sunday, May 6th and is part of the Central Park Conservancy's "Meet the Author" series. I will be at the Dairy from 1pm to 3pm signing books and discussing my photos. The book will be for sale but you can also bring your own copy if you want me to sign it.

The Diary is located midpark at 65th Street.

The second event is on Saturday, May 12th. I will be presenting a slide show of my work and signing books as part of the "Celebrate Urban Birds" event at the Dana Discovery Center. Here is the info about that event:

Celebrate Urban Birds at the Dana Discovery Center in Central Park
Saturday, May 12, 12:00 pm - 4:00 pm

The Charles A. Dana Discovery Center is inside the Park at 110th Street between Fifth and Lenox Avenues.

Join Cal Vornberger, the Central Park Conservancy, the Urban Park Rangers, and the Cornell Cooperative Extension for fun, bird-related activities and celebrations throughout the day, including:

• a theatrical performance
• a public arts project
• a mural creation by a Harlem youth group and NYU students
• bird walks
• a slide show and book signing by Cal Vornberger, author of "Birds of Central Park"
• a workshop on native bird habitat

For more information, please call 212-860-1370.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

New Rules for Dogs (and Owners)

On May 10th the Parks Department’s long-standing "courtesy hours" policy will become a formal part of Park Rules and Regulations. The policy states that with proof of current dog license and rabies vaccination, owners can allow dogs to run off-leash in certain designated areas from the time the park opens until 9 a.m., and from 9 p.m. until the park closes. You can download the actual regulations here.

Dogs are never permitted off the leash in "Forever Wild" areas and I have been assured by the Commissioner himself that the leash laws will be aggressively enforced in these areas including the Wildflower Meadow, Ramble, and the North Woods.

Dedicated to our dog-owning friends, this is one of my favorite poems by one of my favorite poets.

The Revenant by Billy Collins

I am the dog you put to sleep,
as you like to call the needle of oblivion,
come back to tell you this simple thing:
I never liked you--not one bit.

When I licked your face,
I thought of biting off your nose.
When I watched you toweling yourself dry,
I wanted to leap and unman you with a snap.

I resented the way you moved,
your lack of animal grace,
the way you would sit in a chair and eat,
a napkin on your lap, knife in your hand.

I would have run away,
but I was too weak, a trick you taught me
while I was learning to sit and heel,
and--greatest of insults--shake hands without a hand.

I admit the sight of the leash
would excite me
but only because it meant I was about
to smell things you had never touched.

You do not want to believe this,
but I have no reason to lie.
I hated the car, the rubber toys,
disliked your friends and, worse, your relatives.

The jingling of my tags drove me mad.
You always scratched me in the wrong place.
All I ever wanted from you
was food and fresh water in my metal bowls.

While you slept, I watched you breathe
as the moon rose in the sky.
It took all my strength
not to raise my head and howl.

Now I am free of the collar,
the yellow raincoat, monogrammed sweater,
the absurdity of your lawn,
and that is all you need to know about this place

except what you already supposed
and are glad it did not happen sooner--
that everyone here can read and write,
the dogs in poetry, the cats and the others in prose.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

No Sex Allowed

While photographing in the park today I ran across two Snapping Turtles that were in the act of mating in the far east corner of the Harlem Meer. As I pointed my 400mm lens at the pair a small crowd began to gather.

Five minutes later a Central Park Conservancy employee appeared carrying a broom and a stick and went down to the water's edge. Clearly his intent was to disrupt the amorous pair. Acting quickly I started yelling at the guy to leave the turtles alone and told him I would call Regina Alvarez (his boss) if he didn't stop. He apparently had never seen two turtles mating before and thought that something else was going on. Possibly a park patron had reported two turtles in distress.

The threat of calling his boss (and possibly the fact that I actually knew her name) was enough to get him to stop. I did call Regina (figuring she might be in the park since it was Earth Day) but did not reach her. I left a message in her voice mail.

The turtles continued for another fifteen or twenty minutes watched over by an ever expanding crowd. At one point there were close to fifty people watching the love struck pair.

Regina called me back later in the day and I explained the situation. She told me she was thinking of holding a class on wildlife behavior for her employees. Many times park patrons will spot some natural behavior (like snappers mating) and believe something bad is happening. They will go over to a park employee and the worker, not knowing any better, will attempt to remedy the situation.

I have seen this happen at Turtle Pond when the Red-eared Sliders come out to lay their eggs. They will crawl across the lawn looking for an appropriate place to deposit eggs and people (and park employees) will think there is something wrong with them and put them back in the water. The poor turtle, who was only doing what comes naturally, will have to crawl back out of the water again and repeat the process until her eggs are laid.

I was shocked by the lack of knowledge in the crowd that was watching the Snapping Turtles. One young lady in her mid-twenties asked me if they were frogs. When I asked her if she had taken biology in high school her answer was unprintable.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

It's Official: No leash required in Central Park!

I wouldn't mind this so much if the city actually enforced the leash laws in Central Park and the rest of the city. As far as I'm concerned let us have the Ramble and North Woods ( "forever wild" areas) free of marauding canines and let the rest of the park go to the dogs.

I saw Rita McMahon, a friend and bird rehabilitator, last night and she said she recently stitched up a mallard that had been badly bitten by a dog.

The mallard survived but my old friend Ducky didn't.

It will just keep getting worse until the Parks Dept. decides to enforce the leash laws.

Send an e-mail to Parks' Commissioner Adrian Benape telling him you would like to see better enforcement of the leash laws in Central Park between the hours of 9 am and 9 pm.

This photo is from the Pool last spring. A woman who runs an Upper West side dog walking business let's her dogs run off the leash and this one went right in the water after the geese. I wonder if people who use dog walkers near the park really know what's going on with their dogs.


April 11, 2007
Metro Briefing | New York
New York Times
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS

The Parks and Recreation Department announced yesterday that a policy of allowing dogs off leashes during overnight hours will become effective next month. Beginning May 10, owners with a license and proof of a current rabies vaccination will be permitted to let their dogs roam in designated areas of city parks from 9 p.m. to 9 a.m. Under an unofficial policy, the department has for years not given tickets to dog owners who let their pets run free at night in parks.

Monk Parakeets in the News

I wonder if they know about the ones in my neighborhood at 103rd and Amsterdam.

Wild Parrots Make a Home in Brooklyn

April 10, 2007 — By Depti Hajela, Associated Press


NEW YORK -- It is an urban jungle. Take a walk around the soccer field at Brooklyn College, and there, among the pigeons and starlings, you will see parrots. Bright green feathers, orange beaks, native-to-South-America parrots.

What's going on? Has global warming finally gone amok?

Not quite. These Quaker parrots (also known as Monk parakeets) are no recent arrival to the borough, no harbinger of massive climate change.

They have actually been roosting in the borough for decades, those who watch them say, most likely escapees from shipments sent up from Argentina in the late 1960s or early 1970s, or perhaps accidentally (or intentionally) released by pet stores and owners no longer able to care for them.

They have made their home in a number of U.S. states, including Texas, Illinois, Connecticut, Virginia and Louisiana. In the New York metro area, they have also been seen in the borough of the Bronx and over the river in New Jersey.

While it may seem counterintuitive that parrots could thrive in the cold climes of the U.S. Northeast, Quaker parrots actually come from a part of South America that is temperate, and that has a range of weather similar to what the birds experience here.

"They're so astonishing. You see them and they're loud and they're green and you assume that they're tropical," said Eleanor Miele, associate professor of science education at the college, who has her students observe the birds for class projects. But "they are adaptable for winter."

And, says parrot fan Steve Baldwin, who has dedicated the past couple of years to chronicling the birds, there is no shortage of food because they will eat pretty much anything, like grass, the buds on trees, seeds, fruit.

"I've seen them eat pizza," he said.

The Quakers, scientifically known as myiopsitta monachus, the only member of that family, are also helped in their survival quest by their instinct for building nests. They are the only parrot species that does so.

On a recent Saturday, one of the birds could be seen carrying a branch up to an already massive nest in one of the four floodlight poles around the field.

The nests are huge, weighing up to several hundred pounds (kilograms), Baldwin said. Each floodlight at the field has one, and each nest is home to several pairs of the monogamous birds and whatever eggs they lay.

It is those nests as well as the birds' indiscriminate dietary habits that have made them less-then-popular in some places.

Argentina started exporting them because huge flocks were eating their way through crops, Baldwin said. Some states, like California and Pennsylvania, outlaw even having them in the state out of fear of potential agricultural damage.

Other states have had problems with the birds making their homes in electrical towers and other high-up equipment, which they seem to prefer.

In New York, the nests have caused electrical problems like outages and have been known to catch on fire, said Consolidated Edison spokesman Chris Olert.

"Our priority is to remove nests that have the potential to cause fires and power outages" but otherwise the nests are left alone, he said.

Baldwin, a Manhattanite who recently moved to Bay Ridge in part because there's another parrot community nearby, said the birds are not quite the threat that some perceive. He spends part of every weekend with the birds in Brooklyn, documenting them in hopes of bringing their story to the world.

"I'm kind of trying to get the word out to the world that there are wild parrots in Brooklyn," said Baldwin, who has seen dozens of them in the borough. "You can come out to see them, it doesn't cost you anything. You don't have to go to the rainforest to see truly exotic wildlife."

------

On the Net:

Steve Baldwin's Parrot Site: http://www.brooklynparrots.com

Source: Associated Press

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Loon on the Reservoir


There has been a beautiful male Common Loon in breeding plumage on the Reservoir in Central Park for the past three days.

Red-headed Woodpecker Looking Very Red


I photographed the Red-headed Woodpecker on Riverside Drive today.

Two things I noticed about him: he is getting very red and it took about two hours before I spotted him.

He seems to be ranging much further afield than in the past. Perhaps, with his shiny new head, he's looking for a mate.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Geese Unfazed by "Geese Police"

The "Geese Police" were in evidence at the Harlem Meer today but it did not seem to bother the geese or the children. These two were seen around 11:00 am, about 15 minutes after the goose patrol left the area.

There were also several geese on the pool and the Reservoir.

Couldn't the Central Park Conservancy find something more constructive to spend their money on?

Free the Geese

As I wandered around the Harlem Meer on Easter Sunday morning about the only bird stirring was the Red-breasted Merganser that has called the Meer home for the past two weeks.

It was strangely quiet but it didn't dawn on me that it had nothing to do with Easter until I say the "Geese Police" SUV driving along the path on the north side of the Meer.

That was it! No geese. The "Geese Police" and their border collies have been doing a great job because there wasn't a goose to be found around the Harlem Meer. They even carry a kayak so they can take their dogs out to the island on the Meer. You can't argue with success. Or can you?

I miss the noisy histrionics of our resident Canada Geese. They added an interesting and unique flavor to the park and I hope, after the trail period is over, they will return. So many people get so much pleasure from observing and feeding the geese that I don't see what harm they do.

Besides, the border collies just move the geese to another area. They are probably in Riverside Park or some other urban park area having a noisy cackle over how the Conservancy has so much money they could spend it on this foolishness.

About me

  • I'm Cal Vornberger
  • From New York City, United States
  • I am a professional wildlife photographer living in New York City. My book, "Birds of Central Park," was published in September 2005.
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