Hatching to Fledging to Independence: Raising Greater Sandhill Crane Chicks

Cover Photo

Jul

29

1:00am

Hatching to Fledging to Independence: Raising Greater Sandhill Crane Chicks

By Bud Werner Memorial Library

Bud Werner Memorial Library in Steamboat Springs, Colorado and the Colorado Crane Conservation Coalition, Inc. invite you to spend an evening with Van Graham and Erin Gelling as they talk about raising Greater Sandhill Cranes.
Greater Sandhill Crane chicks hatch and almost immediately leave the nest with their parents. They spend the next 3 months growing almost an inch a day, learning what foods to eat, how to probe for food, how to fly, and growing in wing and body feathers. By the end of summer, crane chicks (now called colts) can fly and are feeding on their own. But they continue to stay with their parents for almost a year: migrating south, spending the winter, and returning in the spring before finally leaving their parents.
Learn what crane chicks eat, how they know what to eat, and when they learn to fly. Learn about sibling rivalry, family units, and how to distinguish colts from adults.

About the Speakers

Van Graham is a retired Colorado Parks and Wildlife Biologist who spent about 25 years studying Greater Sandhill Cranes in Northwestern Colorado and authored the original Greater Sandhill Crane Recovery Plan for Northwest Colorado.
Erin Gelling is the Program Director for CCCC and wildlife biologist with a strong background in avian wildlife biology and rangeland ecology.
Colorado Crane Conservation Coalition, Inc. (CCCC) works to conserve and protect Greater Sandhill Cranes and their habitat through science and education. This event is presented in partnership with Bud Werner Library, a proud presenter of the Yampa Valley Crane Festival since its inception.

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Bud Werner Memorial Library

Bud Werner Memorial Library

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