Wings for My Flight

Wings for My Flight: The Peregrine Falcons of Chimney Rock is a 1991 book by American wildlife biologist Marcy Cottrell Houle. After graduating from Colorado College in the 1970s, Houle was employed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife and assigned to Chimney Rock, a prominent rock formation where one of the last pairs of the then-endangered peregrine falcons had been discovered. Wings for My Flight documents Houle's observations of the Chimney Rock peregrine falcons, as well as the Chimney Rock community, in the summer of 1975. To protect the falcons, Houle had to halt a million-dollar project to turn ancient Anasazi ruins in the area into a tourist attraction and faced opposition and harassment by the Chimney Rock community as a result. The community eventually showed concern for Houle,

Wings for My Flight

Wings for My Flight: The Peregrine Falcons of Chimney Rock is a 1991 book by American wildlife biologist Marcy Cottrell Houle. After graduating from Colorado College in the 1970s, Houle was employed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife and assigned to Chimney Rock, a prominent rock formation where one of the last pairs of the then-endangered peregrine falcons had been discovered. Wings for My Flight documents Houle's observations of the Chimney Rock peregrine falcons, as well as the Chimney Rock community, in the summer of 1975. To protect the falcons, Houle had to halt a million-dollar project to turn ancient Anasazi ruins in the area into a tourist attraction and faced opposition and harassment by the Chimney Rock community as a result. The community eventually showed concern for Houle,