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A ‘Gremlin’ story
Key Pen falconer answers the call of the wild
By Colleen Slater
KP News
As a
child, Dean Johnson brought home injured animals and
birds needing care. One day as an adult, he was out
working and saw a red-tailed hawk with both feet
injured. He took the bird home to nurse it back to
health.

Dean Johnson shows
off Gremlin's red tail
feathers. Photo by Colleen Slater |
After
being released, she flew off, but returned to the area,
and Johnson with his wife, Kathy, often see her in the
surrounding trees. She apparently nests and raises her
young there. They identify her from one toe upraised,
“like she’s sipping tea,” says Kathy. That toe was
unable to be worked into the healing cast Johnson
applied.
Caring for
this hawk, Johnson learned about the Washington Falconry
Association, and decided to become an apprentice
falconer. This required obtaining state and federal
permits, building housing with an outside weathering
area, and learning more about falcon care. Johnson has
been an apprentice falconer for two years, and will
complete his apprenticeship next spring.
The
housing, 12 by 12 by 12 feet, with one window, is called
a mew. The weathering area is surrounded and covered
with a particular kind of wire. Johnson’s mew is
carpeted to keep the birds talons sharp.
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Dean Johnson shows
off Gremlin.
Photo by Colleen Slater |
Gremlin,
the red-tailed hawk Johnson currently has, was captured
in the wild, with a rodent in the trap. When trapped,
the young bird is placed in the mew, with the window
covered, and food pushed through a trap door. The
falconer steps into the mew to “get acquainted” and
gradually spends more time with the bird, until it is
used to his presence. This may take from a few days to
two weeks.
“Gremlin
calmed fast for a wild bird,” Kathy says.
The
Johnsons bring Gremlin inside their home to watch
television with them on a regular basis, but have to
cover the interior of the room with plastic. “She’s
pretty good,” notes Kathy. Gremlin even squats to “do
her business,” but some birds can send a stream of
droppings some distance.
Johnson
takes Gremlin hunting at least once a week to areas
where he knows there are rodents and rabbits. Gremlin
flies to a tree, and Johnson beats the brush to stir up
the small animals. The hawk will return to his arm at a
whistle command, as she’s been trained.
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Dean Johnson with
Gremlin.
Photo by Colleen Slater |
The
practice of capturing these birds and nurturing them to
maturity is done to increase the population, which seems
to rapidly diminish in the wild. The falconry program,
with active chapters in Port Orchard, Tacoma, and
Graham, has recorded increased numbers of red-tailed
hawks and other native birds of prey.
Johnson
raises rabbits and pigeons to feed the hawk, but buys
the rats used for food.
When the
time for release of the bird nears, it is kept in the
mew with darkened windows, and the falconer gradually
withdraws, throwing in the food. Johnson will release
Gremlin in the area where she was captured.
After the
forced captivity in the darkened mew, without human
contact, the birds readily fly to freedom. The falconer
feels the emotional break more than the bird, but he
will capture another young one soon, and spend a year
becoming attached to that one.
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