Hyannis Mets - Proud Members of the CCBL since 1976

 
If you've ever been to McKeon Park or to this very web site between 2000 and 2003, then you've probably noticed the Mets Osprey logo. For more than ten years at McKeon Park, the adopted mascots of the Hyannis Mets were the family of ospreys who made their home atop the park's right-center field light tower. But even though the towers were removed from the park prior to the 2003 season, the Osprey remains one of the Mets' most recognizable trademarks throughout the Cape League.

Ospreys are perhaps the most common fish hawks found living near human development. An overuse of DDT nearly caused their extinction in the 1960s, but they are returning in greater numbers than ever. Our light tower acted as a summer home for the birds, who migrate to Latin America for the winter months. It was an optimal site for an osprey's home; the birds-of-prey resided only a few hundred feet from Hyannis Harbor, their primary food source. In addition, the 90-foot pole was the highest structure in the immediate area, another prime concern that ospreys tend to discuss with their realtors.

The Osprey came to the field under great concern. At the time, the McKeon Park lighting system was still operational, and the primary fear was that the nest of dry twigs constructed atop the pole in right-center field would catch fire if the lights were activated. No such problem occurred in the first year of the family's occupancy, but the concern remained. Worried that maintenance of the lighting system would prove impossible in the coming years, the electric company built an alternate nesting site on the opposite side of the complex. This new pole was ignored by the birds, who seemed to prefer the tower that was not only higher, but closer to the harbor and to the baseball games.

Sadly, accurate records about the arrival of the first osprey at McKeon Park were not kept. The first mention of the birds in Mets literature can be found in the team's 1995 yearbook, which lists the first sighting of an osprey as taking place before the 1992 season. An excerpt from that year's guide, which was the first of four in the following years to recognize The Osprey on the front cover:

"As it turned out, the lights didn't phase them. We even dare to speculate that the warmth helped incubate their young. And they seemed to enjoy the baseball games from their skybox. Some fans swear they come to attention for the national anthem."

When the light towers were removed from McKeon Park in 2003, The Osprey built a new summer home right down the street. In fact, the nest atop the communications tower at Barnstable Town Hall can be seen from the park. Many fans of the team suggest that the new nest was intentionally built within sight of the field. And with the new construction of a lighting system in Hyannis in 2007, a platform will be built on the site of the former nest in the hopes that The Osprey will return to McKeon Park to become the team's most distinguished fan!