
2 March 2022
Hello Everyone,
It was +5 degrees on Friday. The day was so beautiful at the nature centre. The ice was melting on the smaller ponds. It was a good day for a very long walk. The thought of more snow and being inside instead of out in the fresh air was inspirational to getting that 5 km completed. It really is one foot in front of the other and before you know it you have accomplished something you didn’t think you could do! I still remember the first walk at the nature centre and thinking about how far 2 km was. It was daunting…and now, it feels like nothing. When my mother broke her hip, the doctor told her – because she didn’t want to walk because of the pain – that if she “didn’t use it, she would lose it”. It has motivated me beyond belief – that single thing that doctor said.
Our weather alert reads: “A strong winter storm is poised to affect southern Manitoba this weekend. This system will likely bring snow, rain, freezing rain and even a few rumbles of thunder. Snow will begin in southern Manitoba Saturday evening…snow may change to freezing rain before switching back to snow Sunday night. Strong winds gusting up to 60 km/h Saturday night and Sunday may produce reduced visibilities.” Remember. I did wish for winter. Be careful what you wish for!
That forecast has now changed to gusts up to 70 km/h for the Montana Low that is moving in with 2-5cm of snow.

There were five young deer near the hide. They did not notice me.

Hugo Yugo is just cute. An order has been placed for a kitten onesie from Amazon. Let’s hope it works! Thanks Auntie ‘J’.

Missey often looks for high places to take a nap, far away from Hugo Yugo and Baby Hope when they wake up and tear through the house.

Before I left for the nature centre, 27,235 people were watching Big Bear Eagles Jackie and Shadow incubate their eggs. Is there some Guinness World Record for the number of people watching a Bald Eagle streaming cam? Surely, this must be the winner. Its 1020 nest time.


The eggs before sunset at Big Bear. Good night, Jackie and Shadow.

It is a miserable morning in Big Bear.

The big news of the morning is that E23 has officially branched. S/he made it look easy! There was no question of those two feet being solidly on that branch and whether or not the eaglet flew to the branch. Lovely milestone for M15 and F23’s first eaglet together.
While we wait….it is day 29 for Jak and Audacity’s egg at Sauces. We are a week away from pip and hatch watch if this egg is viable.

One of the three eggs at Fraser Point has broken.

It is difficult to imagine that we once worried that Meadow was going to starve to death at the beak of Swampy. These two are huge – like so many of the other eaglets this year.




Meadow was trying to hork a possum tale. It is caught in this video. The sequence begins at 10:38 if you want to fast forward.
Another look at what fishing line can do to our beloved raptors. Just look at the feet and talons of this poor hawk. It makes me ache.

Geemeff spotted the little Duke Farms eaglet moving at 0859 Friday morning. That one is now looking good and the other is pipping fast.

Ondabebe got the little one on video.
Bella and Scout now have two eggs. Scout is very attentive when he watches Bella rolling those precious little white ‘things’.


Sylvia caught Scout figuring out incubation – he is a good observer!
Oh, my goodness, they’ve grown. They are so cute. Dixie is 11 days old and Mason is 9. They are all over the nest. Did I blink? What is it about time that it seems to go by so quickly? Pepe and Muhlady are going a fantastic job.



Meanwhile, at the WRDC nest, R6 would have loved to have been fed a nice fish meal by Rose or Ron. They seemed to leave fish on the nest to see if he would go for it. He tried. “Needs more practice”, says the adults.






The eaglet, JBS20, at John Bunker Sands Wetlands is huge. That nest doesn’t give this little one much room to move about. Thanks, ‘MP’ for this great capture!

First egg at Fort St. Vrain in Colorado!

Claire and Irwin have their first egg at the US Steel Plant nest. Friday night.

You might have followed the Lover’s Trio of Starr, Valour I and Valour II, whose nest was along the Mississippi Flyway near Fulton, Illinois. Dennis Becht found her, and Starr is currently on eggs. (I must catch up and find out who her current mate is – not either of the Valour’s that I am aware of).

Ospreys are beginning to return to their nests for the upcoming breeding season in the UK and Europe.

Thinking of Iris. In case you have been wondering how old she might be.

Frederick has arrived at the Outer Banks Osprey nest in North Carolina (Carova Beach) on Friday afternoon around 13:13. Welcome home. Betsy will be back soon!


The streaming cam at Loch of the Lowes has gone live. We await the return of Laddie LM12 and we will see if Blue NC0 does return. Did she leave for migration early in 2023? or did something more sinister happen?
Rutland Water, Manton Bay, has remained live. The lid and bricks are to thwart the Egyptian Geese from making a nest before Maya and Blue 33 arrive. We could be less than two weeks away from arrival.
In Latvia, female White-tailed Eagle, Rasene, and her mate Akacis, are preparing their nest in the Kemeri National Park. They will join four other couples this year raising eaglets. You can easily see why they are called ‘White tailed’ eagles.

Acacias is helping prepare the nest when he arrives at the end of January. He has been working for a month.
Another beautiful Latvian raptor streaming cam to follow:

As spring approaches each year, I see posts telling people to save their dryer lint or pet hair and put it outside for the little songbirds. Please do NOT do this, and please DO tell anyone you know why. Laundry soap and dryer sheets have toxins in them. Pet hair. The cat or dog might have been treated for fleas or ticks. This is also toxic to little birds.


We should all want a Bald Eagle as a neighbour. But why? I hope you have a read.
If you missed the Condor Chat on the 29th, here is the archived zoom chat.
Tim Mackrill talks about his new book, The Osprey. (My copy is on the way from the UK and I will compare it to his earlier version for the RSPB in April).
Thank you for being with me today. We still have our eyes glued to the Big Bear nest of Jackie and Shadow as we move towards the more realistic dates for a first hatch based on the nest’s history. Take care everyone. See you soon.
Thank you to everyone that sent me news, ‘AE, Geemef, H, J, MP’, and those that posted on FB, wrote articles, made videos, or ran streaming cams that helped me to write my post this morning. They include: FOBBV, Gracie Shepherd, D MorningStar, Eagle Country, Joseph Trotter, WINORR, Ondabebe, Sylvia, Superbeaks, WRDC, JB Sands Wetlands, Lisa Levesque, PIX Cams, Dennis Becht, Jane Dell, Lin Lawson, Carova Beach Ospreys, Toni Hoover, LOTL, LRWT, LDF Forum, Sassa Bird, For Fox Sake Rescue, Raptor Resource Project, the Ventana Wildlife Society, and the Osprey Leadership Foundation.
Hello and thank you Mary Ann! What a great newsletter this is! The kittens look good and I can’t wait to see little Hugo in her onesies!❤️
Congratulations to the new hatches and also the ones pipping!
Jackie and Shadow have been on our local and National news a few times lately. They are very well watched and loved all k we the world. Good luck and best season for them ❤️❤️🦅🦅
Thanks for the links and all the pictures today Mary Ann! Looking forward to the Ospreys too!
See you soon!
Linda