Mort tries to reach a higher box edge and squawks when he can't (turn up the volume to hear Kamala's comments as well):
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Hawk Squawk
Mort tries to reach a higher box edge and squawks when he can't (turn up the volume to hear Kamala's comments as well):
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
New findings
Guess what Mortimer has found in the past few days......his feet and his voice!! Every day I take Mortimer out of his "playpen" home and put him on the floor to change the sheet and tidy up for him. On Sunday when I did this Mortimer started to walk all around the house with such strength, confidence and curiosity that we left him out for the whole day. Kamala and I spent hours watching (and videoing) him in the gallery (front porch) as he walked and hopped and searched for places to go up, to get higher. All the while, he was making his distinct hawk call which is very different from the smaller squeaks he has been making over the past few weeks. It's as if he's saying, "watch out world, here I come"!! And, after several tries, he made it to his first perch - the side of the box in which he first came to us.
So we decided to set up a little practice area for him with perches at different heights.
He checked it out a bit but never got higher than that first box side perch (yet).
And like a true independent toddler he kept going to the places that most interested him. His favorite corner was by the front gate where he must be seeing the sky and outside and he tried to jump up several times. Luckily the gate is higher that his jump and he isn't flying yet but we know it won't be too long!! We are wondering what would be happening for Mortimer if he was still in his nest in the wild. Even though he is not flying at all as yet he is strong and mobile and obviously wanting to move about a lot. Would he be hopping out of his nest and moving along branches? He definitely wouldn't have as much space and room to move as he does in this house so we are certain we are raising this hawk to be highly advanced coming from such an enriched environment :)!!!
And when we went into the kitchen to cook, guess who came and followed us and found his own perch for himself......not sure if the plastic bags and blender should count as part of that enriched environment.....
And now it's time to go and "bird child proof" this house to minimize the things he can get into and the things that can get sliced on.....oh the joys of motherhood :)!!!
Expert advice
We had a wonderful visit from a wildlife rehabilitator and expert falconer from Atlanta, Georgia last week. She and her husband (Debbie and Brandon) were spending a few days at Asa Wright Nature Centre (a birders paradise located 8 miles from our home). They came to hear about Mortimer (thanks Peter O'Conner) and were delighted to come for a visit. We were so excited to have them!
Debbie did a thorough check of Mortimer and showed us certain things to look for with regards to his craw (where his food is first stored) and his chest (where you can feel a certain bone that can indicate proper growth) and his blood feathers and his diet and his environment and so much information she shared! Debbie says he is doing great and the set up we have here at home is ideal because our windows are unscreened and opened so when he is ready to fly he may start with perching on the window ledge and then can easily come and go as he pleases. She also suggested to start blocking him off (with a towel or something) whenever we bring food so he can stop the association of humans as a food provider. And she said to start putting food in one designated place for him so that he can always know to come back there for food (which was different from what we have heard before that the first time he flies out we may have to bring food to him wherever he is).... Time shall tell with that one. But his eyes are clear and his feathers are growing beautifully and he is preening and eating and stretching and flapping so we got an A on bird parenthood thus far :)!!
We also learned about slicing and casting.....no, these are not just golf and fishing terms. Slicing is how falconers refer to a bird pooping and casting is the important event of regurgitating a pellet of indigestible material. We have not noticed the casting process as yet so it's something to look out for as it also helps to clean out his tracts and help him stay healthy.
It was such a special treat to have these knowledgeable visitors and to hear of all the work they have done in rehabbing thousands of birds and animals. Debbie currently is part of a medieval dinner experience and works as the king's falconer to soar her falcon over the heads of diners and give them a swooping, diving and catching show at which to ooh and aah!! The chance to earn money of course peaked Kahlil's interest and he is still hoping we can keep Mortimer as he loves the thought of walking around with a hawk on his shoulder. We have heard of a falconer in Tobago and we hope to spend a day with him to get some more first hand experience of what it is really like to have a full grown bird of prey in your care. I myself will be happy to see Mortimer survive on his own but oh how I would love for him to come back and visit our yard every once in a while!
Many thanks to Debbie and Brandon for their visit with us!
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Growth on steroids
Raising a baby bird is like watching growing up in fast forward. Every day there are such big changes. Mortimer is now stretching out his wings and starting to practice flapping them as well. This meant he needed another upgrade to his home and he is now in a padded container with some branches for perching. We have only see him go up once on the branch but hope he may start to use it more. We have also stopped feeding Mortimer by hand and now just leave the cut up meat on a small Tupperware top. He picks at it and has figured out how to hold the bigger pieces with those taloned feet. We have also put in several live prey - small lizards and grasshoppers - and watched as he tracks and captures and devours. Of course we did give him the advantage by removing the wings from the grasshoppers and holding on to the lizards till he had them in his grips...as all good parents do ;)!!
Friday, May 10, 2013
Poop Shoot
This is the name Kamala has given to Mortimer since we discovered his interesting pooping habits. I will let Kamala explain: "Mortimer stands up, raises his butt high and shoots the poop out. This means the poop gets all over the sides of his box but keeps him clean. He is a grey lined hawk and all his names are Mortimer, Mort, Dylan and Poop Shoot. Good night" We are all pretty amazed at this ingenious method of keeping his nest clean. Since we had no idea about this method at first we just had a few cloths around the bottom of the box he was brought to us in. We have now upgraded him to a bigger box, lined it with a garbage bag and then lined all around with cloths which we change and wash daily.
We all definitely feel like parents to a newborn baby around here. Carl removed the three bot flies from the left side of his face, I am counting the poops and equating that with doing well, we are on the look out for any moving living creature that could possibly provide sustenance to Mortimer and when he threw up the other morning we all spent the day fretting if he was ok. Kamala says we are foster parents but human foster parents to a bird. And it seems our baby is doing well. He is making soft tweeting noises, standing up more, growing more feathers and today he started stretching out his wings and holding pieces of meat in his talons and biting at that. Oh yes, I am feeling those maternal instincts abounding!!
Bot fly removal.....soooooo gross!!
Wing stretch number one......
One sided wing stretch......still to capture the full wing stretch on camera......
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
A New Family Member
Wow! It has been faaaaaaaar too long since I last visited this site and made a contribution!! Reading past posts makes me feel sorry for all the happenings over the past few years that have not been recorded in this way. But....glad to be back and with especially exciting stories to tell!
Last week Kahlil was saying how much he wanted a falcon as a pet. Saturday we arrived home to a young baby hawk in a box from a neighbor who found it on his land - obviously fallen from a nest but looking healthy otherwise. The bird seems barely weeks old with a body full of downy feathers and only tiny pin feathers now starting to grow. Together with some researchers living with us, we found a few lizards and a bunch if guppies and Mortimer (named by researcher Julian) was well fed.
Day 1 both kids were scared to feed the bird. On Sunday morning they put a sock on their hand and were fighting over who could feed the baby and by evening the sock had been abandoned completely! Mortimer is gentle and smart....he takes the raw meat carefully from our fingers and never picks at our hands or fingers when we are retrieving meat that has dropped close to him. We were advised to put lots of cloth to keep him warm and feed him as varied a diet as possible.
An interesting dilemma immediately presented itself of course. Mortimer is a carnivore. He is a grey lined hawk which mainly eat lizards and snakes but will also eat small mammals, birds and insects. We have a small bird nesting in a brick in our bathroom so we decided to take the baby chick to feed Mortimer. Carl got the bird from the brick hole and the plan was to kill it. But we saw it was infested with bot flies (google it) and Carl removed 12 from the tiny bird which of course meant we saved its life so we couldn't very well kill it now. So back into the nest it was put and was happily fed by its mommy while we were sent to look for other prey. Lizards are abundant around our house but not an easy catch by any means! We were successful enough to fill Mortimer's craw and he went to sleep happy again.
Monday (day 3) was another adventure. A large (over four feet) snake (locally called a dos cocorite) came into the bathroom to eat the same baby bird we had saved the day before. After a few failed attempts, the snake was captured in Kahlil's net but now what.....Carl's not going to kill it, I don't want to either....are we really cut out for raising a carnivore? Discussions ensued about killing of animals for food, the cycle of life, the fact that be hardly think about it much since any meat purchased in a store bears no resemblance to the cute creature it was when alive, etc, etc. In the end, Kahlil said he would kill the snake and I said I would cut it up. Big kill #1 completed (no pictures this time) and the happiest we have seen Mortimer yet!
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