Once upon a time I had a similar situation at home . I had a common nighthawk 
sitting on the peak of my garage roof. Thinking it was injured I climbed up to 
help. It finally flew after I got within inches. I suspect it was tired from 
migration and would have preferred to rest some more. 

Larry S
Cottage Grove, MN (Washington Co)



From: linda whyte 
Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2013 4:59 AM
To: mou-net@lists.umn.edu ; mnb...@lists.mnbird.net 
Subject: [mnbird] C. Nighthawk, St. Paul

A call late yesterday afternoon for raptor-rescue turned out to be--at least I 
hope--a happy false alarm. The bird in question had been perched, seemingly 
immobile, on the railing of a third-floor deck all day, with no inclination to 
move at the homeowners' approach. As many people do, they decided it was a 
raptor, and asked The Raptor Center for a rescue.  

The bird was a C. Nighthawk, with no apparent injuries. It was flattened out 
prone on the railing, facing into the sun, looking like every other Nighthawk 
I've ever seen lying at rest in day-time on broad branches---which is a grand 
total of two, since most of the time I've only seen them on the wing, hunting. 

This one was indeed reluctant to move when approached, but it took note of me 
and actually gave a hissy alarm call. Then it got up on its short legs and 
began inching away from me, raising wings a bit in the process. There seemed 
nothing wrong with the way it held or moved its wings, so unless it has 
something like a coracoid(sp?) fracture, it appeared able to fly. Plumage 
seemed intact, save a bit of downy molt around the under-tail. It was decided 
this bird might be better off given time for the natural, stress-free recovery 
of a sunny nap, before any trip to the Wildlife Rehab Center. I hope it was the 
right call.

I wondered if this one might have had a window collision. There were full glass 
doors opening onto that deck, but they were still screened. Since the third 
floor was clearly living-space, perhaps lighting attracts insects--and hungry 
Nighthawks, especially later, tired young migrants. In any case, if it's still 
there this morning, the concerned homeowners now know it should be taken to the 
Wildlife Rehab Center.

Linda Whyte



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