Come to think of it, I saw an adult Bald Eagle later Sunday afternoon on the 
dead tree in the lake near the white lighthouse. That could explain the dead 
goose and perhaps the relative paucity of birds on the ice.
—Dave Nutter
> On Jan 12, 2016, at 9:37 AM, Dave Nutter <nutter.d...@me.com> wrote:
> 
> For what it’s worth, there was a dead Canada Goose in the middle of the 
> Stewart Park ice shelf on Sunday afternoon. I don’t know what killed it, but 
> a Peregrine today on that or another goose carcass does not necessarily mean 
> that the Peregrine killed it. Maybe the goose carcass is simply an easier 
> source of food at the moment. I’ve seen a video of a falconer’s Gyrfalcon 
> killing a Canada Goose, and it was a long difficult project for that more 
> powerful predator to take down, subdue, and kill such a big prey. It was also 
> a long process for a Peregrine to kill a Willet (ultimately by drowning as I 
> recall), which SFO witnessed in NJ a few years back. Ducks and gulls are more 
> likely items than a goose for a Peregrine to kill, which I’ve also seen a 
> Peregrine upon at Stewart Park in the past. Although I did not witness the 
> actual duck kill, I saw from a distance the Peregrine stoop. Then again, 
> there’s a lot of geese, and perhaps one was too slow or complacent.
> 
> By the way, Stuart Krasnoff & I had great looks at an adult Peregrine Falcon 
> at Myers Point on Sunday afternoon. 
> —Dave Nutter
> 
> 
>> On Jan 12, 2016, at 8:57 AM, Jay McGowan <jw...@cornell.edu 
>> <mailto:jw...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
>> 
>> An adult PEREGRINE FALCON is currently sitting on a goose carcass in the 
>> middle of the ice shelf off Stewart Park.
>> 
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