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Dennis Swayze | all galleries >> Galleries >> Mississippi Kite...2014 > IMG_0087-1.jpg
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09-AUG-2014

IMG_0087-1.jpg

Many people have asked me for an update on Winnipeg’s now famous Mississippi Kites. As I mentioned on the interview I did on breakfast television http://www.btwinnipeg.ca/videos/3725151058001/) this looks to be the first nest in Canada (I checked as thoroughly as I could and found no other breeding records despite the fact that there are two records in Saskatchewan and approximately 67, in Ontario. As was posted earlier, a nest with one downy young was located by several people (two different groups who found the nest independently from two different vantage points).



On 8th August, I estimated the chick to be approximately 24 or 25 days old, and it was observed flapping its wings and standing on the rim of the nest. Both adults were moulting by that point and one has lost both p1 and p2 (in the backlighting I couldn’t tell whether male or female). Unfortunately, shortly before 5 pm that day, both adults landed on the nest simultaneously resulting in the chick falling from the rim all the way to the ground. Luckily Amanda Guercio and Kayla Putty, who are currently banding at Delta, witnessed the chick fall and rescued it from immediate danger (chicks are extremely vulnerable on the ground) and called me. Jake Gillis and I arrived within 10 minutes and, after a rapid assessment of the chick (remarkably good shape despite the fall), we used a long stick to place the chick as high on the nest tree as possible. After telephone consultation between Jim Duncan, Tracy Maconachie and myself, Tracy and I went to the site in the late evening where we were joined by Amanda, Kayla, Pierre Richard, Bob Hodgson, Michael Lloyd and Donna Martin. We assessed the situation and formulated a plan for the following morning. Bob would supply ladders and tools and Pierre found a contact in Dan Spiers, a Nature Manitoba member who operates a business called “Affordable Tree and Stump Removal” (www.affordabletree.ca). It was 10 pm when I called Dan and I soon learned that I was calling him on the eve of his son’s birthday. Not only did he forgive my intrusion, he even agreed to arrive on the scene at 6 am the following morning with his bucket truck, proving once again the exceptional generosity of Nature Manitoba volunteers!



At 6 am the following morning, Tracy and I checked the chick rapidly and were very happy with its condition. Pierre and Bob precut and pre-mounted screws into a wooden crate I had found in my garage and Dan quickly mounted it in the nest tree below the nest before the chick was raised to him. Dan took a video of this which he will put on his web site in due course. We were in and out in 45 minutes and the parents were seen and heard nearby – all indications were good! We then vacated the area because at that point in time the most important thing was that the parents find the young and we were worried that excess human activity around the nest could have delayed or prevented that.



Over the next few days careful monitoring occurred from as far away as possible (extreme care necessary not to be visible near the nest). The wonderfully generous home owners proved to be a huge asset in this aspect (and in all other aspects!) as they gave us permission to do what we needed and they observed the kite family from their home as best they could. Fortunately pedestrian traffic in the area was minimal. Nonetheless, in the days that followed, there was no evidence that the adults were feeding the chick and their presence in the neighbourhood became increasingly sporadic. The chick was alert, active and vocal. On the evening of the 11th August, the chick lay down in the crate and stayed more or less in the corner, causing concerns of malnourishment. On the following day, with no sign of either adult near the nest and the chick still lying in the corner of the crate, we enlisted the help, on very short notice, of Dennis Swayze to bring and climb an extension ladder and lower the chick to me waiting below. Tracy and I bot

Canon EOS 7D
1/320s f/5.6 at 400.0mm iso500 full exif

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Hank Vander Velde12-Nov-2014 21:25
Terrific find, experience and description. I hope the chick can be released and survive on its own.
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