Two days after the Cooper鈥檚 hawk was rescued from the Library of Congress, she鈥檚 on her way to a full recovery. 鈥淪he鈥檚 in basic good condition, but well down in weight,鈥 says Kent Knowles, director of the , which is rehabilitating the bird. Low weight likely won鈥檛 be a problem for much longer. 鈥淪he鈥檚 eating like a horse,鈥 says Knowles. 鈥淪he鈥檚 eating absolutely everything we put in front of her.鈥
The hawk is being held in a flight cage at the RCV鈥檚 facility in Falls Church, Virginia. She鈥檚 being given a buffet of frozen farm-raised Japanese quail and warmed-up mice to choose from. 鈥淪he鈥檚 eating it all,鈥 says Knowles. 鈥淭ypically, half of a quail is a meal for one falcon, and she鈥檚 eating the whole thing.鈥
The juvenile female raptor spent a week trapped in the Library of Congress Main Reading Room. The best guess is that she followed a pigeon in through a small open window. Despite various attempts to trap her, it wasn鈥檛 until Wednesday that a three-person rescue team , luring her down from the dome with two starlings in a cage.
鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have gotten her out earlier,鈥 says Knowles. 鈥淔or a Coop to come down it has to be reasonably comfortable with the environment, and it has to be hungry. She came in full, she鈥檇 just eaten and probably had enough food for three, four, five days.鈥
On Wednesday the conditions were just right. The bird had on Sunday, but otherwise hadn鈥檛 eaten. And the Reading Room was fairly quiet at 8 am. 鈥淪he was hungry, in good condition, and she saw the motion of the lure and she came right down. It took about 25 minutes and it was done.鈥
Knowles isn鈥檛 surprised that it was a Cooper鈥檚 hawk that got stuck. 鈥淭hey are the most likely suspect when we have any building case,鈥 he says, explaining that in pursuit of prey鈥攁 mourning dove, starling, or most often pigeon鈥攖hey鈥檒l follow the fleeing creature right inside. 鈥淐oops are notoriously stupid about finding their way out again.鈥
Luckily for this one, she was captured in time. She came in weighing 425 grams and will have to top 500 grams before she鈥檚 set free. Once she鈥檚 put on enough weight, she鈥檒l be banded and released somewhere far from the Library of Congress. 鈥淎 successful releases take approximately three seconds,鈥 says Knowles. 鈥淭hey take flight immediately, and they don鈥檛 look back.鈥