Personality and History Migration Training: #721 was smallest in her cohort—just a peanut in comparison to 724. She is an eager and happy-go-lucky little bird. She likes to jump around so much that she even broke her toe when she was tiny. She got really excited when the trainers put the ramp in the baby pen to let her go outside. She came to Wisconsin on July 3 in cohort 2, the group of 5 chicks between the oldest and the youngest. She keeps losing the splint on her broken toe. She has the most popular toe in the pen because the other chicks like to peck at the strange splint. At Necedah she was kept separate in the pen to keep her out of the water, but 722 was let in to keep her company. On July 9 when the wing was first added to the ultralight for cohort 2, she and pal #716 were so curious and brave that they bit at the struts and cords that support the plane's wing. They followed well as Brooke taxied around with the wing on and quickly learned it was nothing to be scared of. By July 24 these two females were catching a bit of air under their wings as they strongly flapped/ran behind the trike during training. By Juy 31 she could fly in ground effect for 100 yards or more. During August she practiced and made lots of progress as a good flyer. History
Spring 2008, First Journey North: Began migration from Florida March 26 in a group of five (716, 717, 721, 724, and 726). They ended up in Calhoun County, Georgia for the night, about 220 miles north of their starting location. The next day, after a fog rolled through, the cranes resumed migration to Coffee County, Tennessee. On March 31, these five birds left Coffee County and were in Daviess County, Indiana that evening. They continued migration to Jefferson County, Wisconsin on April 16. On April 19 at 11:30 they arrived in the vicinity of Necedah NWR and proceeded to circle over portions of Juneau, Adams, Monroe, and Wood Counties before they landed on farmland along the Yellow River. Migration complete! (They didn't stay on Necedah NWR until April 21.)
Fall
2008: Crane #721
successfully migrated with
male #307 but was found
dead on January 3, 2009, in
Putnam County, Florida. Trackers
estimated
that she probably
died sometime the previous
week, or late December of
2008. It appeared as though
she may have been predated
by an eagle. She had last
been observed alive on December
22 with male 30l7, with
whom she had
paired at Necedah
Last updated: 1/4/09
Back to "Meet the Flock 2007"
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