And then…along came Finnegan. Sunday in Bird World

4 August 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

A year ago we were running a couple of blocks to feed Calico and any living kittens that we couldn’t see. We had ordered a GPS tracker then, and when we take our walks now, we are reminded of the worry and anxiety of those days. This is Calico and her only surviving kitten, Baby Hope, on 6 September 2023, two days after Baby Hope came to join us. Calico had come inside a week earlier. Hope came to the feral feeder…it was such a joyful day.

The woman who helped me told me to leave Baby Hope in the kennel, alone, for six days. I couldn’t. She needed to be with Mamma. They continue to be inseparable. The joy that kitten had when she saw her mother and dear Calico, too, – well, who says animals do not have emotions?

Double Calicos = Double Happiness.

November 2023.

March 2024.

And then there are the Crows. Such beautiful intelligent birds. The fledglings are getting braver. They are coming to the bird baths more often and they are eating at the big table feeder.

We cannot forget the baby Blue Jays. They are sooooooo adorable. This one reminds me of the littlest one last summer. The babies have their crests. The adults are molting and look ragged – an easy way to tell them apart. Every day I wake up and feel blessed by having these wonderful garden animals and ‘The Girls’ in my life.

Today is Owl Awareness Day! Many of you know how I feel about owls when they decide to have an osplet for lunch. Poisons should not be used – ever. Spread the word -DO NOT USE RODENTICIDES!

With the destruction of habitat and the dwindling number of small mammals, rats and mice become food. If they are poisoned, they move slowly and the raptors catch them. It can kill them or their chicks. So sad. We have seen this happen. I know you remember the nests! Of course they also kill domestic pets such as cats who also catch mice and rats.

Dr Green is in the hide on the lift taking photos of Iris and her family. He hasn’t done this since 2018.

There were concerns when Antali was trying to pass a pellet early Saturday, but all is OK. The chicks are eating well and getting huge crops. Thanks for the close-ups, cam op!

I cannot imagine waking up and not seeing Iris and her babies – and Finn, too, and that day is coming in 5 weeks or less.

Fledges Saturday at Island Beach State Park and Blackbush Old Tracerie.

There was also a fledge at nest 10 in Kielder Forest. It was the young male. He took off and did a quick return. Kielder cannot confirm this was his maiden flight but it probably is.

Oh, goodness, there’s a fledge at Osoyoos, too. I’m shedding tears over this one. Heidi will report it in full, but we have lifted off in a year when many feared we would lose all three chicks to extreme heat and not enough fish. In the end, it appears the nest will only lose one chick, Little. Congratulations, Soo and Olsen—you did it!

‘H’ reports:

8/3 Osoyoos osprey nest:  Great news:  At 57 days of age, Chick #1 fledged at 0533, and made a nice landing back on the nest less than two minutes later.  Chick 2’s head was on a swivel going round and round, as he stood in the nest and watched his sibling flying.  Chick 1 had performed some very high hovers yesterday, so the fledge was not unexpected.  Olsen delivered a small whole fish at 0620 and Chick 1 grabbed it and gobbled it down.  After his breakfast, Chick 1 took a few more short flights.  At 0753 Olsen dropped off a large partial fish, and Soo fed both osplets for 45 minutes.  There was still some fish left, but the chicks both walked away, so Soo was able to finish the fish herself.  Olsen also brought some nice-sized fish at 0927 and 1024, and Soo fed both siblings.  Then the cam went offline for 4.5 hours.  After the live stream resumed, we saw Olsen deliver a small fish, and Soo fed Chick 2.  Chick 1 didn’t even approach the chow line.  I did not see any more fish delivered today.  The high temp today was 101 F, and Olsen had done a great job fishing despite the heat.  Unless I have missed it at some point, I don’t believe Chick 2 has performed any hovering as yet.  Weather forecast for 8/4:  partly cloudy with smoky air, high temp 95F/35C, winds gusting to 17 mph.

8/3-8/4 Colonial Beach osprey nest:  This is a sad story.  The last time 41-day-old Cobey ate well was on Thursday.  There were no fish brought to the nest on Friday.  On Saturday, Betty left the nest at 0935, and she did not return.  David dropped off a medium-sized headless fish at 0957, and he left.  Cobey had not previously done any significant self-feeding, but he was ravenous and he tore into the fish.  He was doing a pretty good job of pulling off fish bits.  Cobey ate the fish off and on over the next several hours.  His efforts were tiring, and he would have to take breaks to rest.  It appeared as though Cobey managed to eat all but the tail of that fish.  There were no other fish brought to the nest for the rest of the day.  At 1915 David stopped at the nest for just a minute, and he did have a crop.  Poor lil Cobey was fish-begging, and David left.  We hoped that David would return with a fish…but he didn’t.  Cobey had been left alone for 9.5 hours on Friday, but Betty eventually did return.  The weather was warm on 8/3 (90 F), and there was a moderate breeze, but we had known Betty to have success fishing in much more adverse weather.  On 8/4, David arrived at the nest at 0724 with a headless fish.  After Cobey briefly chatted with his Dad, he started to eat. The fish seems to be tough, and Cobey is expending a lot of energy.  We are praying that Betty is safe, and we are praying for her to return to the nest.  Cobey needs a proper Mom-feeding at this point.  Weather forecast for 8/4:  partly cloudy, high temp 88, winds gusting to 14 mph.

The only surviving osplet out of four at McEuen Park is gaining wing strength flying from platform to platform.

Female osprey Goldie seems to be able to care for the three osplets despite her mate Kurt’s MIA and the heat in the area.

https://www.castanet.net/news/West-Kelowna/499647/West-Kelowna-woman-worried-for-osprey-couple-nicknamed-

Goldie-and-Kurt-

I wonder how many birds are electocuted each day because of hydro poles that have not been mitigated to protect them? This poor darling caught on fire and then, hitting dry grass, started a fire.

https://www.wavy.com/news/national/electrocuted-bird-falls-to-ground-sparks-brush-fire-in-colorado

The situation really needs to change if the Ospreys in the region of the Omega Menhaden trawling are to survive.

Please urge people to watch their speed. Their are so many fledglings and many get hit by cars. So sad.

Thunder and Akecheta were spending some time at home on Saturday – the West End nest of Catalina Island.

Geemeff’s Daily Summary for Loch Arkaig and The Woodland Trust:

Daily summary Saturday 3rd August 2024

No Ospreys seen on either Nest One or Nest Two today, but LizB pulled off a coup by getting clear footage of the resident female at Bunarkaig and yes, her video confirms what’s been suspected for some time – it’s Affric 152. Link to her video in the bonus section. Nest One had some little songbird visitors and Nest Two had bigger and less melodious visitors when some Hoodies arrived for a fruitless check for fish scraps. It was a dreich day with rain on and off throughout the day, and more rain expected tonight and tomorrow. 

Night cam switches on (day cam): Nest One 22.26.50 (04.24.39); Nest Two 22.25.18 (04.34.28)

Today’s videos:

https://youtu.be/6hztczD-J2o N2  A Hoodie lands on Dorcha’s perch, a second on the cam pole 07.11.53

https://youtu.be/bx54tIwLja4  N2 A Hoodie returns to the empty nest 10.39.41

https://youtu.be/tjBR3H8XuYg N2 A Coal Tit and a juvenile Great Tit flit around 19.22.06

Bonus video – Confirmation of Affric 152 as the Bunarkaig resident female (2 Aug 2024 – thanks LizB):

Watch the Loch Arkaig Osprey livestream 24/7 and join in the conversation here:

https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/osprey-cam

Top Flatt chick required a supplementary feeding today and the NZ DOC rangers were there to help.

Clark PUD fledgling back on the nest resting and waiting for fish.

Fledgling waiting at Cowlitz PUD, too. These images are important because our flying babies lived for another day!

The Only Bob at Minnesota Landscape Arboretum has the most beautiful wings. Flying soon.

Still showing up at Poole Harbour. Six fish arrived at the nest on Saturday. Mum helped deliver some, too.

Blue NC0 looks out over the Loch of the Lowes. Her life changed completely this year. Her dear Laddie LM12 was killed and her precious eggs were kicked out of the nest. The good thing – no chicks hatched, no chicks starved. Blue NC0 seems to have kept her nest and maybe she has a new mate. We will see next spring.

One chick left to fledge at Collins Marsh. The other two continue to return – as they should – for fish and rest.

The only surviving chick at Charlo Montana is getting antsy with those wings. I wonder which will fly first – Sut-eh or the chick at Charlo?

River with a full crop at Sandpoint!

Family portrait at the LDF Osprey nest in Kurzeme.

Hen Harriers are one of the most gorgeous raptors. Two more have been killed, and investigations are underway. Sadly, one of those is Susie. You might remember that I reported on her nest of chicks – five of them. An individual stomped on them til they died. It is worth reading about these amazing raptors that make their nests on the ground. I have mentioned Bowland Beth and A Hen Harrier’s Year. Both are excellent.

Little Taquito is getting feathers. Thanks, ‘J’ for the video capture.

The camera at Boundary Bay is frozen at 0901. On Saturday Blue had a remarkable ‘ps’.

At the Captiva Osprey nest, Jack was seen at least twice. Poor Dad. Easy to recognize. He still has the spike in his leg but he appears to be doing well.

Thank you so much for being with us today. Please take care! See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, comments, questions, videos, articles, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘Geemeff, H, J, MP, PB’, RATS, Hellgate Osprey, Montana Osprey Project, Kielder Forest, Osoyoos, Colonial Beach, Pam Breci, castanet.net, wavy.com, Menhaden – Little Fish, Big Deal FB, Red-tail Hawk Tales, IWS/Explore, Geemeff and The Woodland Trust, Lady Hawk, Clark PUD, Cowlitz PUD, MN-LA, BoPH, Scottish Wildlife Trust (LOTL), Collins Marsh, Charlo Montana, Sandpoint Ospreys, LDF, Raptor Persecution UK, BirdWatch Ireland, Wild West Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, and HWF BBCentral Forum.

2 Comments

  1. Linda Kontol says:

    Thank you Mary Ann for all the updates and photos today. Such a Blessing for Iris this season with Finn and their two beautiful chicks. ❤️❤️💕💕 we will really miss them when the leave. I wish all could leave together.
    The kittens pictures are so cute and the birds too. Thank you for sharing them with us.
    Best wishes to all the growing chicks that are due to fledge soon and to the ones who have already fledged too
    Have a Blessed Sunday evening Mary Ann and see you here again soon.
    Linda

  2. micpark9 says:

    All birds are precious. Not one is more important than the other. To one another and to us, there are some that show what shape we as humans are in, if we watch. When DDT was in our environment it affected birds first but we weren’t paying attention. It took a young scientist with a degree in organic chemistry who was working for the earliest manufacturers of DDT to come to the rescue, and after many years of battling the US legal system and dissecting birds himself found that DDT had caused the birds to lose control of their nerves and muscles. Many died after experiencing major convulsions. The other devastation caused by DDT is now known today, and we almost lost them all. How close did we come? I contend the same thing is happening today with the raptors and other bird species having gone through the first 10 years of climate change. They haven’t had time enough to adapt so finding food and acclimating to hot weather hasn’t happened. If they aren’t given a chance to adapt they will be lost. We are in the ocean rescuing/collecting coral and putting them in a safe environment waiting for the ocean’s environment to return to the norm or changing the coral to withstand the hostile enviroment that awaits them if necessary.

    It looks like it will take the same techniques used by Charles Wurster in warring with others in the DDT battle to change the laws surrounding the language in the Fish and Wildlife Services. Moving a conglomerate can be challenging even for attorneys but for scientists or lay people it can be more than a headache. If we expect change from people who believe in the law, no matter what, then it will have to be done lawfully, but this time correctly. I don’t understand people who see the wall falling but say we will have to get permission to stop the wall from falling first. In the mean time, the children under the wall can’t be approached either because the law says so. Oh, is that right, those aren’t children just pesky little birds?

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