Through the 1990s, ospreys used to appear occasionally out at the Cornell Pond 
Unit 1 and forage in the lake area there. (Am betting they still do--I am not 
there to see)

  I remember standing in my waders,  taking out my video camera with its fully 
exposed 2 hrs of parental feeding at a redwing nest, only to have a hunting 
osprey swoop in. It was hunting clearly and gave me just time to wonder if I 
should (or could) rewind a short bit of tape and tape over whatever unknown 
feeding data there were.  I stood there with my dilemma, not doing anything and 
then, too late to act,  watched as it elegantly captured a quite large fish and 
flew off. 

Anne
 
On Apr 22, 2014, at 9:19 PM, Candace Cornell wrote:

> Thank you for reporting your osprey sightings—Has anyone been able to see the 
> nest they are building in the BTI area?
> 
> Geo said "Apparently the promise of "owning" Beebe Lake as a mostly private 
> fishing reserve outweighs the longish commute!" Ospreys are usually not 
> territorial about their fishing grounds because fish are a moving resource 
> that can't be easily defended. Their nests, however, are stationary and are 
> well-guarded by the adults as is the airspace around the nest.
> 
>  If there is a nest near BTI, it is not very far from Beebe Lake or Cayuga 
> Lake as the "osprey" flies. Ospreys prefer to live within 3.1 miles (3 km) of 
> abundant food sources, but will travel further if they must. As Marie pointed 
> out, in areas with limited resources, some ospreys will travel as far as 12 
> miles between their nests and food source. The limiting resource for ospreys 
> in our area is adequate nesting sites. Since sturdy large, dead trees or tall 
> live trees with open tops located out in the open and close to adequate food 
> resources are rare, ospreys must depend on people to build osprey 
> platforms.or take their chances nesting on utility poles and light fixtures.
> 
> Eyes to the skies!
> 
> Candace
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 8:12 PM, Marie P. Read <[email protected]> wrote:
> I think Osprey are prepared to go quite a distance from where they nest to 
> where they fish.
> At Mono Lake (which has no fish) they fly sometimes 10 miles one way to 
> freshwater lakes to find food, repeating this several times a day when they 
> are feeding young. There are 10 or so pairs that nest on Mono Lake's offshore 
> tufa towers, which provide nest sites safe from terrestrial predators. They 
> find nest material much closer though.
> 
> Marie
> 
> Marie Read Wildlife Photography
> 452 Ringwood Road
> Freeville NY  13068 USA
> 
> Phone  607-539-6608
> e-mail   [email protected]
> 
> http://www.marieread.com
> 
> Author of Sierra Wings: Birds of the Mono Lake Basin    A new book coming May 
> 2014
> http://marieread.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/BOOKS/G0000ccYTIzOzsYA/I0000bcMn4rPRp58
> ________________________________________
> From: [email protected] 
> [[email protected]] on behalf of Asher Hockett 
> [[email protected]]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2014 4:55 PM
> To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
> Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] East Hill osprey
> 
> I wonder more about the selection of a nest site distant from the fishing 
> grounds. Is this a common thing among them?
> 
> 
> On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 4:47 PM, Meena Madhav Haribal 
> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> Hi all,
> Today I saw at least three trips of osprey from behind BTI to Beebe lake and 
> back once with fish and once with stick.  It seems it is a quite some 
> distance to go fishing and nest material collecting.
> 
> 
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