1 W. Kenneth Richmond, British Birds of Prey (London, 1959), p. ix.
2 Stephen Bodio, A Rage for Falcons (Boulder, CO, 1984), p. 9.
1 W. Kenneth Richmond, British Birds of Prey (London, 1959), p. 50.
2 Quoted in J. G. Cummins, The Hound and the Hawk: The Art of Medieval Hunting (London, 1988), p. 190.
3 Edmund Bert, An Approved Treatise of Hawkes and Hawking (London, 1619), p. 19.
1 Rosalie Edge, ‘The Falcon in the Park’, American Falconer (July 1942), pp. 7–8.
2 Charles Q. Turner, ‘The Revival of Falconry’, Outing (February 1898), p. 473.
3 Fable 164 from Thomas Blage, A schole of wise Conceytes (London, 1569), pp. 180–81.
4 Juliana Berners, The Book of Haukyng hunting and fysshyng [Book of St Albans] (London, 1566) [Eiv v–r].
5 Quoted in J. G. Cummins, The Hound and the Hawk: The Art of Medieval Hunting (London, 1988), p. 190.
6 Richard Meinertzhagen, Pirates and Predators: The Piratical and Predatory Habits of Birds (Edinburgh, 1959), p. 16.
7 Meinertzhagen, Pirates and Predators, p. 25.
8 Meinertzhagen, Pirates and Predators, p. 23.
9 History overview: http://www.atlantafalcons.com/history/001/051.
10 Dave Barry, ‘Sex-craving Falcons Can Teach Politicians about the Hat Trick’, Gazette Telegraph, Colorado Springs (14 July 1990), p. D3.
11 John Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry (Louth, 2003), p. 261.
12 Eugene Potapov, ‘The Saker Falcon’, unpublished manuscript, Chapter 1.
13 Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry, p. 144.
14 Three-dollar Bar Billy, speaking around 1901–2, quoted in A. L. Kroeber and E. W. Gifford, Karok Myths (Berkeley, CA, and London, 1980), p. 46.
15 Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry, p. 143.
16 Cummins, The Hound and the Hawk, p. 231.
17 J. G. Cummins, ‘Aqueste lance divino: San Juan’s Falconry Images’, in What’s Past is Prologue: A Collection of Essays in Honor of L. J. Woodward, ed. Salvador Bacarisse (Edinburgh, 1984), pp. 28–32.
18 Alonso Dámasco and J. M. Blecula, Antologia de poesia española: Poesia de tipo traditional (Madrid, 1956).
19 Quoted in Cummins, The Hound and the Hawk, p. 228.
20 William Bayer, Peregrine (New York, 1981).
21 Bayer, Peregrine, p. 249.
22 Ursula Le Guin, A Wizard of Earthsea (London, 1971), pp. 141–2.
23 Victor Canning, The Painted Tent (London, 1979), p. 56.
24 Canning, Painted Tent, p. 35.
25 T. H. White, The Sword in the Stone (London, 1939), p. 129.
26 White, Sword in the Stone, p. 126.
27 T. H. White, The Godstone and the Blackymor (London, 1959), p. 20.
28 J. Cleland, Institution of a Young Noble Man (Oxford, 1607), p. 223.
1 Hans J. Epstein, ‘The Origin and Earliest History of Falconry’, Isis, XXXIV, 1943, p. 497.
2 Gilbert Blaine, Falconry (London, 1936), p. 13.
3 Blaine, Falconry, p. 11.
4 Harold Webster, North American Falconry and Hunting Hawks (Denver, CO, 1964), p. 12.
5 Webster, North American Falconry, p. 12.
6 Jim Weaver ‘The Peregrine and Contemporary Falconry’, in Tom J. Cade et al., Peregrine Falcon Populations: Their Management and Recovery (Boise, ID, 1988), p. 822.
7 William Somerville, Field-Sports. A Poem. Humbly Address’d to His Royal Highness the Prince (London, 1742), p. 7.
8 Stephen Bodio, A Rage for Falcons (Boulder, CO, 1984), p. 7.
9 John Gerard, The Autobiography of a Hunted Priest, trans. Philip Caraman (New York, 1952), p. 15.
10 Richard Barker, trans. and intro., Bestiary [MS Bodley 167] (London, 1992), p. 156.
11 Lord Tweedsmuir, Always a Countryman (London, 1953), p. 128.
12 Robin Oggins, ‘Falconry and Medieval Social Status’, Mediaevalia, XII (1989), p. 43.
13 Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, ed. Holbrook Jackson (New York, 2001), II, p. 72.
14 Richard Pace, De fructu qui ex doctrina percipitur (Basel, 1517), quoted in Nicholas Orme, English Schools in the Middle Ages (London, 1973), p. 34.
15 John Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry (Louth, 2003), p. 215.
16 Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry, p. 267.
17 The Art of Falconry, being the ‘Arte Venandi cum Avibus’ of Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, trans. and ed. C. A. Wood and F. M. Fyfe (Stanford, CA, 1943), p. 3.
18 Marco Polo, The Travels of Marco Polo, ed. and trans. Ronald Latham (London, 1958), p. 144.
19 Sir John Chardin, Travels in Persia, 1673–1677 (New York, 1988), p. 181.
20 Christian Antoine de Chamerlat, Falconry and Art (London, 1987), p. 171.
21 W. Coffin, ‘Hawking with the Adwan Arabs’, Harper’s Weekly, 57 (15 March 1913), p. 12.
22 E. Delmé-Radcliffe, Notes on the Falconidae used in India in Falconry (Frampton-on-Severn, 1971), p. 11.
23 Delmé-Radcliffe, Notes on the Falconidae, p. 1.
24 Lt Col. E. H. Cobb, ‘Hawking in the Hindu Kush’, The Falconer, 11/5 (1952), p. 12.
25 Cobb, ‘Hawking in the Hindu Kush’, p. 9.
26 John Buchan, Island of Sheep (London, 1936), p. 26.
27 Webster, North American Falconry, p. 11.
28 Letter from Sig Sigwald, Collection Archives of American Falconry.
29 T. H. White, The Goshawk (London, 1951), p. 27.
30 White, The Goshawk, pp. 17–18.
31 J. Wentworth Day, Sporting Adventure (London, 1937), p. 205.
32 Bodio, A Rage for Falcons, p. 131.
33 Bodio, A Rage for Falcons, p. 130.
34 Aldo Leopold, ‘A Man’s Leisure Time’, in Round River: From the Journals of Aldo Leopard, ed. Luna B. Leopold (New York, 1953), p. 7.
35 Nick Fox, Understanding the Bird of Prey (Blaine, WA, 1995), p. 345.
1 ‘Peregrine Chicks Hatch in London’, BBC News UK edition, 8 June 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3788409.stm.
2 Dr P. C. Hatch, Notes on the Birds of Minnesota (Minneapolis, MN, 1892), p. 200.
3 Maarten Bijleveld, Birds of Prey in Europe (London, 1974), p. 5.
4 James Edmund Harting, The Ornithology of Shakespeare (London, 1871), p. 82.
5 Dugald Macintyre, Memories of a Highland Gamekeeper (London, 1954), p. 67.
6 Henry Williamson, The Peregrine’s Saga and other Wild Tales (London, 1923), p. 222.
7 Williamson, The Peregrine’s Saga, p. 210.
8 Ellsworth Lumley, Save Our Hawks: We Need Them, Emergency Conservation Committee reprint (New York, 1930s).
9 Junius Henderson, The Practical Value of Birds (New York, 1934), p. 198.
10 Joseph A. Hagar, quoted in Tom Cade and William Burnham, eds, Return of the Peregrine: A North American Story of Tenacity and Teamwork (Boise, ID, 2003), p. 4.
11 Thomas Dunlap, Nature’s Diaspora (Cambridge, 1999), p. 255.
12 Arthur A. Allen, ‘The Audubon Societies School Department: The Peregrine’, Bird Lore, XXXV/1 (1933), pp. 60–69.
13 Frank Craighead and John Craighead, Hawks in the Hand: Adventures in Photography and Falconry (New York, 1939), p. 47.
14 Craighead and Craighead, Hawks in the Hand, p. 35.
15 H. N. Southern, ‘Birds of Prey in Britain’, Geographical Magazine, XXVII/1 (1954), pp. 39–43.
16 Southern, ‘Birds of Prey in Britain’, p. 43.
17 David Zimmerman, ‘Death Comes to the Peregrine Falcon’, New York Times Magazine (9 August 1970), section 6, pp. 8–9, 43.
18 Joseph J. Hickey, ‘Some Recollections about Eastern North America’s Peregrine Falcon Population Crash’, in Tom J. Cade et al., Peregrine Falcon Populations: Their Management and Recovery (Boise, ID, 1988), p. 9.
19 Delphine Haley, ‘Peregrine’s Progress’, Defenders of Wildlife, 51 (1976), p. 308.
20 Roy E. Disney, ‘The Making of Varda, the Peregrine Falcon’, in Return of the Peregrine: A North American Story of Tenacity and Teamwork, ed. Tom Cade and William Burnham (Boise, ID, 2003), p. 20.
21 Faith McNulty, ‘The Falcons of Morro Rock’, New Yorker, 23 (1972), p. 67.
22 Tom Cade, quoted in Haley, ‘Peregrine’s Progress’, p. 308.
23 David Zimmerman, To Save a Bird in Peril (New York, 1975), p. 19.
24 Cade and Burnham, Return of the Peregrine, p. 73.
25 John Loft, D’Arcussia’s Falconry (Louth, 2003), p. 207.
26 Tom Maechtle, quoted in New York Times Magazine, 22 June 1980.
27 A. Shoumantoff, ‘Science Takes up Medieval Sport to Help Peregrines’, Smithsonian (December 1978), p. 64.
28 Tom Cade, Peregrine Fund Newsletter, 7 (1979), p. 1.
29 A. Gore, ‘Statement by Vice President Al Gore’, press release (19 August 1999), The White House, office of the Vice President.
1 ‘Discussion questions’ Birds – animal lesson plan (grades 9–12), http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/birdsofprey.
2 G. P. Dementiev, The Gyrfalcon (Moscow, 1960).
3 Philip Glasier, Falconry and Hawking (London, 1978), p. 163.
4 Karl von Clausewitz, On War, trans. O. J. Matthijs Jollis (Washington, DC, 1953), p. 5.
5 Master Sgt Patrick E. Clarke, ‘Bye-bye Birdies: March Looking at Adding Falcons to its Arsenal of Bird Strike Weapons’, Citizen Airman Magazine (1996), http://www.afrc.af.mil/HQ/citamn/Dec98/falcons.htm.
6 Clarke, ‘Bye-bye Birdies’.
7 Morgan Berthrong, oral history interview with S. Kent Carnie, 1990, Transcript Archives of American Falconry, p. 22.
8 Ronald Stevens, ‘How Trained Hawks Were Used in the War’, The Falconer, II/1 (1948), pp. 6–9.
9 Associated Press report, Archives of American Falconry file 86-2 (correspondence, R. Stabler, n.d.).
10 Stevens, ‘How Trained Hawks Were Used in the War’, p. 9.
11 Frank Illingworth, Falcons and Falconry (London, 1949), pp. 23–4.
12 American Weekly, Archives of American Falconry (n.d., c. 1941).
13 John E. Bierck, ‘“Dive-Bombing” Falcons to Play War Role under Army Program’, New York Herald Tribune (1941), Archives of American Falconry.
14 ‘Falcons on Duty’, New Yorker (30 August 1941), p. 9.
15 Letter from George Goodwin to Robert Stabler (30 August 1941), Archives of American Falconry.
16 Letter from Robert Stabler to Mr Frederick C. Lincoln, Chief, FWS, Dept of the Interior, Washington, DC (26 August 1941), Archives of American Falconry.
17 Interview with Robert M. Stabler by J. K. Cleaver, dated 4 March 1983, Archives of American Falconry, p. 22.
18 ‘A Bird in Hand’, The Monitor, XLVI/2 (March 1956), p. 16.
19 United States Air Force Fact Sheet: ‘The Falcon’, http://www.usafa.af.mil/pa/factsheets/falcon.htm.
20 ‘The Hammer and the Feather’, Apollo 15 Lunar Surface Journal, http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a15/a15.clsout3.html.
21 United States Air Force Cadet Peterson, quoted in Sam West, ‘Falconry: Power, Grace and Mutual Trust’, Air Force Football Magazine (2 October 1965), pp. 4–5, 39.
22 ‘Hints at Goering Aim in Visiting Greenland: Ex-Air Corps Pilot Suspects a Purpose Beyond Falconry’, New York Times (14 April 1940), p. 41.
23 Paul Virilio, A Landscape of Events, trans. Julie Rose (Cambridge, MA, 2000), p. 28.
24 Joint Vision 2020, available at: http://www.dtic.mil/jointvision.
25 Motto of United States Air Force 5th Reconnaissance Squadron.
26 Rocky Barker, ‘BSU Scientists Use Transmitters to Track Falcons’, Idaho Statesman, reprinted in Center for Conservation Research & Technology (CCRT) Recent Media Coverage of Field Research Efforts.
27 Barker, ‘BSU Scientists Use Transmitters to Track Falcons’.
28 Robert Lee Hotz, ‘Spying on Falcons from Space’, Los Angeles Times (14 October 1997).
29 US Department of Defense and US Fish and Wildlife Service, Protecting Endangered Species on Military Lands (2002), http://endangered.fws.gov/dod/ES%20on%20military%20lands.pdf.
1 Tom Cade, Peregrine Fund Newsletter (1980), p. 11.
2 Roger Tory Peterson, Birds over America (New York, 1948), p. 135.
3 Akira Lippit, Electric Animal: Toward a Rhetoric of Wildlife (Minneapolis, MN, 2000), p. 21.
4 Henry Williamson, The Peregrine’s Saga and other Wild Tales (London, 1923), p. 198.
5 Williamson, The Peregrine’s Saga, p. 211.
6 Williamson, The Peregrine’s Saga, p. 217.
7 Joseph Hickey, ‘Eastern Populations of the Duck Hawk’, Auk, 59 (April 1942), p. 193.
8 Letter from Joseph Hickey to Walter Spofford (9 June 1940), Archives of American Falconry.
9 Hickey, ‘Eastern Populations of the Duck Hawk’, p. 179.
10 David E. Nye, American Technological Sublime (Cambridge, MA, 1994), pp. 96–7.
11 ‘St Regis Ejects Baby Hawks from 16th Floor Balcony Nest’, Pennsylvania Game News (August 1943), p. 26.
12 Robert M. Stabler, interviewed by James K. Cleaver (1983), transcript, Archives of American Falconry, p. 33.
13 Lippit, Electric Animal, p. 25.
14 Steve Hinchcliffe and Sarah Whatmore, ‘Living Cities: Towards a Politics of Conviviality’, Science as Culture, XV/2, special issue on technonatures (2006).
15 Tom Cade and William Burnham, eds, Return of the Peregrine: A North American Story of Tenacity and Teamwork (Boise, ID, 2003), p. 99.
16 Cade and Burnham, Return of the Peregrine, p. 99.
17 University of California Santa Cruz press release (19 January 2005).
18 ‘Visiting the Falcon’s Neighborhood’, http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=38/492/2017/2037/2063&pq-locale=en_us.
19 Karen Gus, Kodak Birdcam discussion board, 07:57am 18 July 2003 EST (#17821 of 17889).
20 Hootie, Kodak Birdcam discussion board, 09:14pm 17 July 2003 EST (#17763 of 17889).
21 P. Virilio, ‘The Visual Crash’, in Rhetorics of Surveillance from Bentham to Big Brother, ed. T. Y. Levin, U. Frohne and P. Weibel (Karlsruhe, 2002), p. 109.
22 Quoted in Doreen Leggett, ‘Peregrine Falcons’, Cape Codder (28 January 2005), http://ww2.townonline.com/brewster/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=174563.
23 Legget, ‘Peregrine Falcons’.
24 D. Bird, D. Varland and J. Negro, eds, Raptors in Human Landscapes (London, 1996), p. xvii.
25 Bird, Varland and Negro, Raptors in Human Landscapes, p. xviii.
26 Melissa Sanford, ‘For Falcons as for People, Life in the Big City has its Risks as Well as its Rewards’, New York Times (28 June 2004), section A, p. 12, col. 1.