| Nov. 10 |
After
11 days of weather delays in Green County, WI, they flew to
Illinois! |
| Nov. 5 |
The
carcass of DAR juvenile #35-08 was
found on Necedah NWR. She had been killed by a predator before
she even began her first southward migration. |
| Oct.
22 |
Crane
#810 was released
on Necedah NWR. He is now a free-flying young bird who should be able
to migrate by following older Whooping or Sandhill cranes south when
they leave the refuge this fall. He wears identifying legbands. |
| Oct.
18 |
This
year's DAR
juveniles (six in all) were released shortly before roost time
on October 18. |
| Oct. 17 |
Migration
2008 begins! See Video Clip >> |
|
| Oct. 16 |
All
14 birds followed the ultralight to an unfamiliar site on the refuge
on a migration-eve test flight and their first overnight in
the travel pen. They did well! |
| Oct. 11 |
At
last, weather permitted a training flight for the whole group! |
| Oct.
10 |
The
entire group flew together for the first time today. Alas, it was
only 5 minutes of air time before the winds took over and forced
a safe landing. |
| Oct. 7 |
In a first-ever decision, the team removed Crane #810 from the migration roster because his aggression is a risk to the
other birds. |
| Oct.
5 |
The
costumes let all the chicks out onto the runway together to mix
for the first time. Crane #810 didn't play nice with the others
and was fenced away from them. |
| Oct.
3 |
The
four oldest chicks followed the ultralight to join the 11
younger chicks at the same site. All birds are together for the
first time, socializing through a fence dividing the pen. |
| Sep.
25 |
The
chicks of combined Cohorts 2 and 3 flew together for the
first time. |
| Sep.
19 |
Cohorts
2 and 3 shared the same pen for the first time. No problems! |
Sep.
15
|
Cohorts
2 and 3 (middle and youngest) are now at the same site. Soon
they will live and train as a group. |
| Sep. 11 |
The
target departure date has been set for October 17. The youngest
bird will be 124 days old on that date. (The shortest period
between hatch and departure was in 2007 when the youngest birds
was 125 days old, so this is ambitious.) "Oct. 17 equals the latest
date we have ever left Necedah," says Project Leader Joe Duff.
"That was in 2001 when we only had 8
birds and it took us just 48 days to
reach Florida. Let’s hope for the best." |
Sep. 10 |
The
Class of 2008 is down to 15 chicks after the removal today of #811 due to poor feather formation and other issues. |
| Sep. 9 |
Richard and his birds climbed to 200 feet above ground
level (AGL). A military
jet
flew overhead and the chicks did not like that, "so we went back
down, with the chicks trying to hide under my wing. After the jet
cleared
the area we were fine and flew back to the pensite." |
| Sep. 2-3 |
Pre-migration health
checks for the Class of 2008! |
| Aug. 26 |
The oldest birds (cohort one) flew behind Brooke's
ultralight for 17 minutes on a perfect training day! |
| Aug. 24 |
Chick
#824 became the first bird in cohort three to
fledge! The others are flying in ground
effect.
Photo Operation Migration
|
 |
| Aug. 15 |
Cohort
two birds now are all able to fly. |
| Aug. 2 |
Cohort
one birds now are all able to fly. |
| July
29 |
Cohort
3 chicks
(#824, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830) arrive in Wisconsin. As they bid
them farewell from Maryland, trainer Barb said, "Over the
past week Brian and I have worked constantly on this little social
group. Over the last few
days we have actually been able to train all the chicks together
and have them all in one pen together at the pond for the day.
We still do not trust them together overnight." This is the latest
date chicks
have been shipped to Wisconsin. (Shipment of these youngest chicks
was postponed
as the group needed more time to learn to get along together.) |
| July 28 |
Chick
#816 from cohort 2 was put on a plane and sent back to Maryland
because of a wing abnormality noticed soon
after his arrival at Necedah. He will become a captive breeder at Patuxent
Wildlife Research Center. |
| July
9 |
Cohort
2 chicks (#812, 813, 814, 818, 819) arrived in Wisconsin today.
They were flown in a private plane (thanks to Windway Capital
Corp.)
from
Maryland. Today #811, one of the chicks hurt in an attack
by chick #810 on their second day at Necedah, was moved from cohort
1 to join the friendlier birds in cohort 2.
Photo Operation Migration
|
 |
| June 27 |
Today
aggressive chick #810 attacked three other chicks in the newly
arrived cohort at Necedah. The hurt birds were treated at
ICF. When chick #807 died, its sibling (#809)
became even more valuable as the only living offspring of its captive
parents. The chick was now too genetically important to risk in
the wild,
so
was flown
back to Maryland to live and breed safely in captivity. |

Chick
#809
Photo Brian Clauss, PWRC
|
| June
25 |
Cohort
1, the oldest group (#803, 804, 805, 810, 811),
left Patuxent WRC aboard a private plane and arrived a few
hours later at Wisconsin's Necedah National Wildlife Refuge for "flight
school." |
| May
6 |
The
first chick for the
2008 ultralight flock began hatching at Maryland's Patuxent
WRC. Chicks start Ground
School training with the trike (without its wing) when they
are just a few days old. |