Wednesday Evening with the Herons
When I arrived the hatchlings were alone on the nest. A parent arrived after about twenty minutes, feed the chicks, and then tucked them in for the night.
When I arrived the hatchlings were alone on the nest. A parent arrived after about twenty minutes, feed the chicks, and then tucked them in for the night.
For those who have been worried that the upcoming summer and fall construction projects in Central Park will interfere with the Green Heron nest, I wanted to pass along some good news. The Parks Department is fully aware of the Green Heron’s nest and construction/gardening project timetables have been revised to minimize the impact on the area around the nest.
As birders and photographers, we also need to do our part. Those of us who know where the nest is located need to keep our distance and minimize our impact on herons. Although my pictures may look like I was close to the nest, I was about 150 feet away from the nest to minimize impact on the herons. Please stay a safe distance from the nest and keep the noise levels down when observing them.
Sunday, I went up to Morningside Park for about an hour around 7 p.m. I found Robert Schmunk, who blogs at bloomingdalevillage.blogspot.com with one of the fledglings at the base of the stairs that go up to 113th and Morningside Drive. The fledgling was only about 20 feet off the ground.
I must say that the little heron chicks have me hooked. The first two pictures are from Saturday and the rest are from Sunday.
Please be careful not to disturb the herons if you visit the nest. A group of birders at around 3:30 p.m. on Sunday made a great deal of noise and two of them walked down off the western path to within 15 feet of the nest. One of the parents, who had been feeding the young, puffed up to a large size, raised its crown and flew off the nest for 15 minutes. The parent didn’t return to the nest and resume feeding until the birders left the area.
On Thursday evening, one of the Green Heron parents was still sitting on the nest, so I suspect the last chick hatched sometime on late Thursday evening/Friday morning. These pictures are from Saturday morning.
The parents have stopped sitting on the nest, so I think four is going to be our final hatchling count.
Early Friday evening, after a fruitless search for the fledglings, I got to see a Double-crested Cormorant catch a small catfish.
Just as I was about to give up and walk out of the park, I ran into a fledgling eating a pigeon just above the low west path that goes from 110th and Morningside Drive by the ball fields towards the pond.