Keeping Peregrines Safe From Their Fan Club

Maine鈥檚 Acadia National Park hosts beautiful birds, and a ton of tourists. Here's how the two get along.

The first thing we see, gliding across the cliff face, is the shadow: two perfectly sharp wings; a long, fluted tail; the curved point of a beak. It shoots up the rock wall, heedless of gravity, and then we see, in flesh and feathers, what we came for鈥攐ne of Acadia鈥檚 three mating pairs of Peregrine Falcons.

鈥淚鈥檝e always had a thing for predators,鈥 says Thomas Guillebeau, Acadia National Park鈥檚 raptor intern. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what it is. God, these guys are about perfect at what they do.鈥

It鈥檚 Guillebeau鈥檚 job to make sure that these extra-special guests鈥攖he peregrines鈥攁re not disturbed by Acadia鈥檚 other visitors鈥攖he humans. Acadia, the country鈥檚 ninth-most-visited national park, provides excellent nesting habitat for peregrines, and it always had healthy numbers of them. Or at least it did until about 1956. That鈥檚 when the species鈥 population took a steep dive, thanks to DDT and hunting. In 1984, with DDT banned and hunting no longer a serious threat, Acadia hosted a hacking program to reestablish peregrines within the park. (Hacking is the controlled release of captive-bred birds from nest boxes.) It鈥檚 been quite successful, thanks in part to the features that had originally made Acadia an attractive nesting option: plenty of rocky cliff faces and lots of food.

Coincidentally, this rugged landscape is also why I鈥攁nd many of Acadia鈥檚 more than 2.5 million annual visitors鈥攈ave come to the park. This particular peregrine we鈥檙e watching has a nest right above the Precipice, Acadia鈥檚 most popular hiking trail.

鈥淚n a given day that trail can get 600 to 1,000 people,鈥 park wildlife biologist Bruce Connery tells me. When the birds arrive in March, all is quiet. 鈥淭hey get set up, they lay their eggs, and everything鈥檚 going along fine.鈥 But when school gets out in June, 鈥渆verything changes.鈥 It鈥檚 like a party arrived, but the falcons missed the invitation.

So the park tries to keep the visitors at bay. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about reducing stress,鈥 Connery explains. Since the first mating pair arrived in 1991, Acadia has closed down the trails that pass near the nests while the parents and chicks roost, hatch, and fledge. 鈥淚n the early 1990s you would have thought we were closing Maine down,鈥 Connery says, remembering the initial reaction to the park鈥檚 decision. 鈥淥kay, Maine鈥檚 closed, you can鈥檛 come anymore.鈥

But eventually people seemed to accept that staying away from the nests is good for birds鈥攁nd possibly good for people, too. Protective falcons can be downright dangerous on precarious trails. 鈥淭his one is steep and really difficult to climb anyway,鈥 Guillebeau says, gesturing above us to the Precipice Trail, Acadia鈥檚 most dangerous. In the past 30 years three hikers have died hiking it. 鈥淪o if you have adult birds dive on you, it鈥檚 not so much that they are going to hurt you, it鈥檚 that you鈥檙e going to get distracted and fall.鈥 Although none of those deaths can be laid at the feet of peregrines, the number may be lower thanks to the trail closures.

鈥淔or the most part people have adapted,鈥 Connery says. So has the park. While the trail is closed, its parking lot becomes home to the Peregrine Watch program. The Acadia raptor internship, which began about a decade ago, looks for candidates who can help visitors get the most out of the experience. During a Peregrine Watch, Guillebeau, along with other interpretive rangers, set up Swarovski spotting scopes (鈥淒on鈥檛 touch!鈥) and laminated pictures of hatchlings, peregrines in flight, and hack boxes to welcome the droves of curious passersby and amateur ornithologists. Guillebeau will interact with thousands of people before the summer is over. More than 250 people stopped by the Precipice parking lot one morning this past June鈥攂efore the park鈥檚 busy season had even begun.

鈥淚 became semi-obsessed five or six years ago,鈥 Guillebeau says of his work with birds of prey. He found an injured vulture on the side of a road in Georgia, his home state. 鈥淚 picked him up, and it took me about a week to get rid of him,鈥 he adds. (Although he eventually found a nice rehab center for the bird, the encounter sticks with him. He鈥檚 off-duty today in Acadia, and instead of the normal ranger uniform he鈥檚 wearing a vulture T-shirt that says 鈥淏ald is Beautiful.鈥)

鈥淚 took him to the Chattahoochee Nature Center in Roswell, Georgia, and I talked to them about volunteering.鈥 The center had a year-and-a-half-long waiting list for volunteers, but staffers, seeing Guillebeau鈥檚 interest in birds of prey, suggested he check out the Carolina Raptor Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. 鈥淚t was about a three-and-a-half-hour drive,鈥 he says, but 鈥淚 just fell head over heels in love with the place. I ended up driving back every single weekend for a couple of years. That鈥檚 where this whole fiasco started.鈥 Now, with several years of experience with raptors and environmental education under his belt, he鈥檚 traveled all the way to Acadia.

Some kind of aquatic bird flew by鈥攎aybe an eider鈥攁nd I ask Guillebeau if he knew what it was. He turned around but didn鈥檛 see it in time. 鈥淲as it flapping hard?鈥 he asks. It was probably waterfowl. 鈥淭hey always look like they鈥檙e having a hard time.鈥

Guillebeau says his work at Acadia is more about education than conservation鈥攖he peregrines do a good job of taking care of themselves. For now, in addition to the Peregrine Watch program, he runs a Junior Ranger station, where kids (and sometimes adults) can learn about and touch animal skins and bird skulls. Still, he has to stop the occasional overeager hiker from going up the Precipice Trail. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something you can get away with,鈥 he tells them鈥攖he extreme visibility of the cliff face means that anyone attempting the route would be hiking in plain sight. That, he says, 鈥渁nd we鈥檒l boot your car before you get back down.鈥

After the peregrines fledge in August, he鈥檒l head to the top of Cadillac Mountain, the park鈥檚 highest point, to start Acadia鈥檚 annual raptor migration count. 鈥淢y dad is an entomology professor and my mom is a sixth-grade science teacher,鈥 Guillebeau says. While he was in high school, 鈥淚鈥檇 take all the creepy crawlies in the house and bring them to my mom鈥檚 school,鈥 he says, explaining his early (and familial) interest in environmental education.  

For now Guillebeau seems content to stick with the falcons, even if he is doing it from a distance. 鈥淚 like songbirds,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut man, it鈥檚 hard to get excited about something that鈥檚 essentially a flying hamburger.鈥