Washington Square Prognosis

I’ve gotten a few letters about how excited individuals were about the Washington Square Hawks.  I think it’s important to say that until we see how these hawks do in Washington Square, we should have limited expectations about how things will turn out. 

In general, 70% of all birds die in their first year of life.  It’s a hard fact of nature.  Birds have a high mortality rate.  Most birders learn this their first or second year of birding.  For me, it came when I was watching a mallard and her ducklings.  I was photographing the ducklings and an elderly birder came up to me and said “Don’t get too attached to them, there will be one less ever few days.”  She was right.  Mallards start with a large number of ducklings, maybe a dozen and as much as they try, they slowly get taken by turtles or other birds.

Since that day, I start with low expectations when watching a nest.  It makes birding easier.

Whenever we have a new nest I do my own estimates about the conditions of the nest location and the parents.   I ask:

  • Is the nest in a safe place?
  • Is their enough food and is it safe?
  • What will fledgling be like?
  • What will the area that the fledglings grow up in be like?
  • Are the parents young and inexperienced?

At Washington Square, two issues worry me.

  • The food supply includes rodents that have been exposed to second generation anticoagulants.  Both the parks department and the health department have been using Contrac, which has an active ingredient of Bromadiolone, in and around the park. 
    I don’t know if the other major cause of death for young hawks, frounce is present in the pigeon population in Greenwich Village, so it’s unclear if this will be an issue.
  • The park is the smallest area other than the Houston Street nest (which didn’t end well) we’ve seen for the fledglings to mature.  The density of the park patrons and number of unleashed dogs is a serious concern.  There most definitely will be some conflicts.

So, my guess is we have a below average environment for these hawks.   If one or two make it until the end of the summer, we should be happy.

Although taken on 4/23/11, this form appears to be dated 4/30/11.  I don’t know if the poisons have already been places, or this is a notice they will be placed on 4/30/11.

Good Friday In Washington Square

Bobby, the male Washington Square Red-tailed Hawk was hard to find for most of the evening.  He appeared briefly on the nest around 5:00 but then wasn’t seen until he returned to his favorite perch on the cross of Judson Memorial Church around sunset. He then made a brief stop on a Bobst Library ledge (one east of the nest), and then went off to roost in the NW corner of the park.

The New York Times City Room Blog posted a link to my site. I thought it would be helpful for the webcam viewers to have a chart of locations Bobby has been seen off the nest.  There’s a lot more than the 3 foot by 3 foot view the webcam shows!

1) Nest location on Bobst Library
2) Cross on Judson Memorial Church
3) Favorite Flag Pole
4) Failed 2010 One Fifth Avenue Nest
5) Various other perches

Note the two cameras, the higher one is the repositioned infrared night camera.
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Washington Square On Saturday

I arrived late in the afternoon, and realize I’m going to have to arrive earlier in the day to see some hunting.  The male spent most of his time perched on either a flag pole or on the cross. 

There was a brief bit of activity while he escorted a hawk from the western side of the park to the east which included a few stops along the way. 

While the nest is in a great location, the park really seems too small and too well used to raise fledglings in.  It will be interesting to see what happens this summer.

(This is my 1,000 blog post.  I never imagined making this many posts, when I started urbanhaws.com years ago.)

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Washington Square

After years of juvenile hawks, and last year’s pair of unsuccessful nesters, this year Washington Square finally has an active nest with three eggs.  The nest is on a window ledge of Dr. John Sexton’s office, President of the university, at N.Y.U.’s Bobst Library.  This location continues the pattern of hawks in Manhattan finding spectacular places to build nests.

The library is on the south east corner of Washington Square on West 4th Street.  The nest is on the side of the building that faces the park, on the top floor, the second window from the west.

The New York Times had a nice feature on the nest yesterday, and has set up a webcam to view the nest.  The streaming feed is on Livestream.com, which also provides applications for the iPhone and iPad.  If you use these applications, search for NYT Hawk Cam.

The mobile feed is exciting since it will allow hawk watchers to go to the park, and get a webcam view of the nest on their mobile devices, while simultaneously watching the other parent off the nest.

The ledge the nest sits on is fairly deep, so the brooding female is usually hidden from the street.  But if all goes well and the eggs hatch, the eyasses will be easy to see after three or four weeks. 

My video and photographs from the park perspective on Thursday evening are below.

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