Ed Deal reports:
The intrepid San Juan volunteers spent the last two days in the islands.
Sunday 10 JuneBud Anderson, Ed Deal and rookie Matt
Fogarty surveyed the following sites:
"
Coyote" – at least two young peregrines ready to band.
"
Mossy Cliff" – adult in tree on top of the cliff. No activity seen on traditional nest ledge or elsewhere on the cliff. With similar findings on 5/25 and 6/3 we are concluding they have failed. May want to do one last check in 2 - 3 weeks.
"
Orca" – No birds present
"
Salmon" – Adult incubating on ledge
"
Golden" – No birds present.
"
Ginger" – No birds present. Ed dropped into the ledge and found an empty scrape and nothing else. No sign of incubation. Turkey Vultures flying along cliff without protest from falcons, so our conclusion is that they failed.
"
Sea Lion" – Brief stop, no birds present.
"
Cormorant" – brief stop, no birds present.
Monday 11 JuneMartin Muller, Ed Deal, Russ Beardsley and rookie Nic Dupree banded two sites.
"
Coyote" – Russ and Ed banded 4 feisty 24 day old youngsters.


Top image: Nic adjusts the ropes as Russ and Ed start their descent to the nest on "Coyote."
Lower image: Russ holding the first chick he's ever banded.
All VID bands placed on the left leg and correct side up.
1. Vertical 18 over Vertical Z - 1387-39629 (band size 7B)
2. Vertical 39 over Vertical U - 2206-33520 (band size 6)
3. Vertical 20 over Vertical Z - 1687-02404 (band size 7A)
4. Vertical 02 over Vertical S - 1687-02405 (band size 7A)
So we banded 1 male, 1 female and 2 uncertain as to sex. The adult male was double banded but took a powder when I showed up with my scope. We read his band last year and, if he is the same bird, was banded as a nestling at the "Fox" eyrie in 2003.

From left to right: Russ, Nic, and Ed, ready for pick-up after successful banding at "Coyote."
"Cormorant" – The male came off the cliff on a hunt but failed to catch prey. He returned to a high perch. He made a few "e-chup" vocalizations and flew south, perching high again. If they are nesting here, they are using a small hidden ledge in the trees.
"Fox" –Russ and Ed banded one healthy chick (about 21-22 days of age).
1. Vertical 93 over Vertical Z - 1687-02406 (band size 7A)
The adult female at this site is double-banded (i.e. a USFWS aluminum band on one leg and a black VID on the other) but we were unable to read her band.
In addition, we had two disturbing findings at this site. First, an unknown person has set up an observation blind on the adjacent cliff. It is located within 30' of the active ledge. We suspect it was built by a wildlife photographer.
Second, we also got an unwanted band return. Russ found the articulated skeleton of a 4 week-old peregrine chick with our bands on at the bottom of the cliff (VID 39 P). It was one of four chicks banded on the ledge by Mark Proster and Ed Deal last year on 3 June. We assume that something frightened this eyass into a premature flight off the ledge. Since we have observed Red Fox at this site in the past, we hypothesize that one may have entered the nest and attempted to eat the nestling.
Russ also found a second and younger skeletalized, unbanded dead chick among the rocks. We don't know the year of origin of this bird.

Russ and Ed on the ledge at "Fox." Left of the ledge, next to the tree, the photo blind set up by person(s) unknown is visible.
"Carolina" – Both adults were present, the male with VID on left leg. They both disappeared into an overhang low and right (south) on the cliff in an area obscured by a cluster of tall conifers. No activity or mutes on the traditional ledge.
"Guillemot" – 45 minute visit. No birds seen.
End of report by Ed Deal.