Blakeman's views on the spikes and a PS from Marie
Soon-to-be-fledglings look down at the "spikes"
photo courtesy of PaleMale.com-- taken on July 4, 2011
In regard to the spikes on the Fifth Avenue nest [see post of 7/3/11], Mai Stewart posed the question to John Blakeman on July 3:
John --
It occurs to me that some people may be concerned that the eyasses, now in their pre-fledge, hop-flapping stage, might lose their footing and inadvertently fall with disastrous results onto the pigeon spikes on the 12th floor balcony below -- or even when they fledge. The letter posted recently on Marie's site voiced the fear that they could be harmed by the spikes -- do you think this is a possibility and cause for concern?
Many thanks,
On Jul 4, 2011, John Blakeman responded unequivocally:
Mai,Just why this pigeon spike issue has such urgency is beyond me.No red-tail is ever going to get injured landing on such a spike. The bird will simply stay off the spikes, just as they stay off the equally sharp spines of honeylocust trees.This is an issue with only imagined harms to the hawks. They aren't dumb. They simply will not get themselves injured on the pigeon spikes. They will simply fly off to some ledge or perch without them, probably on another building.No big deal. This is an imaginary problem of no significance whatsoever. A pursuit of a "solution" will only create other problems, mostly social ones among humans.The entire topic should be simply dropped. The hawks are smart enough to figure it all out, which might require them to land on other surfaces without the spikes.Again, no big deal.--John Blakeman
PS from Marie I'm glad to hear this is a non-issue!
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