The Hamilton Spectator

After downtown misadventu­re, Sheraton falcon chick is in rehab

- JEREMY KEMENY Jeremy Kemeny is a Hamilton-based web editor at The Spectator. Reach him via email: jkemeny@thespec.com

Hamilton falcon watchers were in a flap last week after a misadventu­re sent one of the chicks to rehab.

Fledgling peregrines Griffin and Whitehern both took flight for the first time — Griffin on June 9 and Whitehern on June 12 — under the watchful eye of their parents, Lily and Ossie.

But hours after his sister took off, Griffin found himself in some trouble on King Street West and had to be rescued by

Hamilton Community Peregrine Project co-ordinators and volunteers.

Falcon watch monitor Patricia Baker said it’s standard, if a bird is potentiall­y injured, to take them to a rehabilita­tion centre, in this case The Owl Foundation in Niagara Region.

Before his stint in rehab, the peregrine project reported Griffin “flying strongly” and “playing hide-and-seek” with volunteers June 10.

With Whitehern still on the Sheraton Hamilton Hotel ledge nest, Griffin was being adventurou­s, finding shelter on nearby buildings. The adult falcons brought him food and tried to tempt him back to the nest.

On June 12 Whitehern took her leap, with falcon watch cameras recording at 8:16 a.m. Since then, she has taken successful flights — and had a possible unwanted encounter with some bald eagles, the peregrine project website said.

Later that day, Griffin was seen falling from the Standard Life Building on to King Street

West. The young peregrine took flight again, “flopping around weirdly,” and unfortunat­ely flew into the Thomson Building. Luckily, the young raptor didn’t break any bones, Baker said, but was bruised from the fall.

At the rehab centre, Griffin’s perching and flying is being monitored. An update is expected Wednesday.

Baker is thankful to Sheraton manager Colin Watson and staff at Jackson Square and the Ellen Fairclough Building for allowing falcon watchers entry and giving them tips on bird sightings.

Back in Hamilton, Whitehern, Lily and Ossie, live “very much in the moment,” the falcon watch website says. Unlike human family members, they won’t be “missing” Griffin.

When the youngster returns, he’ll be fed and life will move on as if nothing happened.

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