We looked up into the nest and found 4 faces looking back down at us. The unhatched 5th egg I mentioned in the last post would have made 5. One of them was standing tall and a little higher than the others. He had the least fuzz on his head so we figured he'd be the one we ended up taking.
We set up the ladder and up went our agile friend to retrieve. After the ladder climb he went up maybe another 8 feet and the eyas (baby raptor) that was standing decided he'd had enough and he bailed out of the nest and into a branch about 8 feet from the trunk. (None of the other birds jumped since we didn't approach the nest any further.) Our climber wiggled the branch a bit and he jumped again, this time a little closer and on a separate tree that was very narrow. This turned out great because he was able to grab the tree and bend it toward him and grab the limb the bird was on. He got him by one leg and then the bird got him by the hand. Good trade. :) He had gloves on but not leather. He finally got him off the branch, still gripping a 4 inch twig and the glove and we tried to put him into the carrier. He had to slip the glove off and let the bird keep it, along with his twig. We packed up and headed home, got anklets on him and fed him a quick meal to top off what he had in him.
The next day was the 4th of July and we packed the box in to Grandma's to hang out with us on the patio for BBQ and fireworks. What an introduction to people he had!
After a lot of headache trying to get him to eat food dropped into the box for him, my sponsor decided we should get jesses on him and feed him on the glove. I got jesses on him that night with the help of my patient wife and the next morning fed him on the glove. He wouldn't take food at his beak but when I tickled his toes with it he would bend down and rip at it and he finally got the idea and ate well. The next meal I gave him by dropping it into his box onto his perch and he ate it by himself. There have been no feeding issues since then. Now it's just making sure he has a good amount twice a day until his feathers grow out completely.
The jesses are attached to an extender and then to a short leash. The leash isn't tied to anything so he doesn't get too tangled but it's easy enough to grab the end of it when I go to pick him up. He's not the easiest bird to pick up because of the size of the box. I have to lean down into it and that makes him nervous. If he is calm enough I can put my hand down and try to back him on to it or he'll foot it (grab it with his foot to attack it) and since he has a hold of it I lift him up.
No name yet. I haven't given it a moment's thought. I may wait until he's at the stage where I am working with him more and see his personality and progress.



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