A 5th Avenue Couple

On Saturday, I got to see a great deal of Pale Male and his new mate.  She’s being called lots of things, Pale Beauty, Pearl and Paula, but until there is some consensus, I’ll be calling her Pale Female.

Pale Male caught a pigeon.  He plucked it, eat some of it and then called for Pale Female.  She eat it, and when she had finished, called him to eat the remains. 

Later, she was on a “Linda Building” (920 Fith Avenue, two buildings south of the nest building) window railing, when he arrived with another snack.  Having both just eaten, he cached the bird on their nest, and returned to the railing where they copulated.

They sat together for about half an hour, before Pale Male left and went to roost on a tree at the bottom of Pilgrim Hill.  She however remained on the railing and was still there when I left the part at 7 p.m.

As we get to know the new female, each of the 5th Avenue bird watchers were sharing tips about how to tell the two birds apart.  His white/light brown throat vs. her dark  throat.  Her droplet like chest spots vs. his oak leaf patterned barred vertical strips.  Her broken tail feather and lighter tail.  His two missing primary wing tips.  I’m sure we’ll find more, but I think most of us are starting to find it easier to tell them apart.

After the failed nests of the last years, we have a new variable.  Will the nest work with a new female, or not?  We’ll know in a few months.

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Pale Male and Mate Late On Friday

I got to watch Pale Male and his new mate go to roost on Friday.  They choose different trees near the East Drive.

One of the funny things about hawk watching is explaining to tourists that hawks don’t live in their nests like Monk Parakeets, but that they perch and roost all over their territory when not actually using the nest to raise offspring.  I think anyone who watches Pale Male has repeated this explanation thousands of times.

In the video Pale Male is at the bottom of the screen, and his mate above.  The shots in the tree are all of the female.

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Sleeping Together

I’m enjoying getting to know Pale Male’s new mate.  On Friday and Saturday, I got to see a great deal of her and Pale Male.

On Friday evening she was on the antenna of a building at 79th and Fifth.

On Saturday, I got to see a great show.  It began with Pale Male eating a Blue Jay.   After he was done eating his new mate arrived and they went up to the nest building.  One sat on the roof and one was in the nest.  It happened quickly and I could not tell who was who.

Then they moved further uptown.  After a brief perch on a building on Fifth Avenue, Pale Male when to sleep on a tree at the base of Cedar Hill.  His mate went to a nearby tree and played cat and mouse with a squirrel, before joining Pale Male on the same branch.

It was great to see them roosting together.  I think she’s the one.

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