Monday in Bird World

28 October 2024

Good Morning,

Oh, we had a fun time Saturday afternoon. For the past four years, CPAWS (Canada Parks and Wilderness Society) hosts a Halloween walk with games and treats at Bird’s Hill Provincial Park. We headed out to get our 2k exercise and check out the chickadees. Had they returned? And would they land on our hands for seed?

Decorations lined the paths, which were clearly marked. There was that peculiar smell of fall, the musky sweet aroma of the fallen leaves under our boots, so familiar that one never forgets it from year to year.

To the right of our dear witch are the golden leaves of the Oak trees, so plentiful in the park. There were conifers, aspens, and birch.

When we were in Nova Scotia, our remembrances of the trip were the Red Maple Leaves we collected and the pine cones. There were no Red Maples in the woods, but we did find pine cones to add to the bowl on our dining table. They are so tiny compared to the ones we brought home from the Annapolis Valley.

The Black-capped Chickadees were not shy. They would get their seed, fly quickly to a branch to crush and eat it, and then, just as quickly return for another. The energy they expend getting food is admirable. It is their familiar song – the chick-a-dee-dee – that filled the air on Saturday.

I had no idea how many calls these cute little birds had until I checked the information on the Cornell Bird Lab site.

‘A’ remarks on SE34’s fledge: “The rain had come over this morning shortly before SE34 fledged. It looked grey and overcast and as if it were raining or about to do so. It was not great fledging weather, but soon after SE34 fledged, the sun came out and things were looking a lot brighter. 

In the minute before fledging, SE34 had been struck by a swooping currawong on the nest (09:58:40). The currawong then flew to a branch right in front of SE34’s face, about a metre away, and the two vocalised at each other before the currawong flew off. SE34 hopped and flapped around the nest, making vocals indicating his displeasure. Just before 09:59 the currawong swooped again, this time met by SE34, who flapped and vocalised at the currawong. SE34 moved up the perch branch, and at 09:59:06, the currawong again swooped past him. SE34 hesitated for a second and then fledged, flying off in pursuit of the currawong, or so it appeared. 

We did not see either eaglet for the remainder of the day, so I am keenly awaiting the ranger report for this evening. “

In Port Lincoln, Wilko and Kasse have stopped the slight agro as they move out of the reptile phase. Totally grand. I have loved how Kasse tried to make herself bigger and looked Wilko straight in the eye. Would not be surprised if Wilko is a male and Kasse a female. But we will have to wait – and wait for a long time maybe. Everyone believed Calypso to be a female and she turned out to be a he with a mate this year. I often wonder at how Falkey and Bassa shot out of Port Lincoln like Zoe if they weren’t females….just weird thoughts on a Sunday morning sitting in the sun. Of course, Tiger Mozone told me in jest years ago not to question the person ringing the raptors. But, of course, I do because only DNA testing or seeing an egg is the absolute mark of gender. https://youtu.be/foDdB91SsI4? (more below)

I hope that eel that Lady kept from the ospreys is for the sea eaglets!

‘A’ comments on what I am worried about, too – have the sea eaglets been fed? “I’m concerned too. Here is yesterday’s ranger report, which doesn’t actually give much comfort:

October 27: SE34 slept on the front rail of the nest overnight – were the parents nearby? Early morning swoopers were about and swooping SE34 as he moved a little about the nest branches. SE34 moved up higher, then back to the nest again. A currawong came close, clipping/ SE34. The eaglet flew off then, strongly – flying out and up. So SE34 fledged today around 10am, at 81 days from hatching. Then, he was out of sight. The ground crew reported adults down on the river and SE33 possibly out of sight in the mangroves. At 1:20pm, no prey had been brought back to the now-empty nest. Around 1:30pm, one fledgling was seen flying over Ermington Bay, landing on the power tower. Then, when flushed, it took off over Wentworth Point and the residential areas – and away. The parents were circling overhead. Later, SE33 was seen flying back towards the general forest area again. As well, an eaglet was reported earlier on the ground in the area near the nest – SE34 – in the restricted access area. After 5pm, the adults were seen circling high overhead. There were several sightings of them, so SE33 seems to be moving about. We are unsure where SE34 is at the end of the day. Will the adults return to the nest area? Will either fledgling?

When SE34 fledged, he had just been struck by a currawong swooper, and it seemed to me, watching the footage of the five minutes or so leading up to the fledge, that SE34 took off after the currawong, chasing it. I was pleased to see that it was not the other way around! But SE34 definitely appeared to me to be chasing his tormentor. That attitude is a good one, at any rate. But the fact that it has been seen on the ground near the nest is not a great sign. Still, the parents are obviously aware of where the fledglings are, and are keeping an eye on them, though that’s not the same thing as feeding them. Obviously, I am waiting anxiously for tonight’s ranger report, which should be posted in about an hour, two hours at most. I’ll let you know as soon as there is word from the BOTG at WBSE. We are reliant now upon their reports, and it is a wonderful thing to know that they are out every day in that forest, watching and listening for the eaglets and their parents. It is a great comfort to have their daily updates on what the fledglings are doing and whether they are with their parents or getting fed. Things are a little unsettled at the moment, and I would give a lot to see those eaglets return to their nest. But whether they have the physical strength or the flying skills to do so at this stage is dubious. So obviously, we are hoping the parents will bring food to them wherever they are perched. SE33 has apparently at least stayed off the ground, which is more than can be said for SE34, who is in serious danger as long as he remains there, vulnerable to feral cats, foxes and even dogs, not to mention the swooping smaller birds. I am sick with worry about both of them and it makes us feel so helpless.”

If you missed it, SE34 fledged while being harrassed on the nest by Currawongs and then chased. S/he flew out of the forest in a path very similar to the adults. Wishing 33 and 34 long and productive lives with lots of eels. https://youtu.be/neBjn5AZJO4?

Just look at how much Bubba at Growing Home has grown!!!!!! https://youtu.be/A8PjiB8snC0?

Wilko and Kasse are doing so good at Port Lincoln! 22 and 19 days old now. Beautiful juvenile plumage coming in. They survived the dreaded reptile phase and now we can just breathe nicely. Of course, the fish fairies are always there should there be the need, which is another bonus for these two beauties.

These two at Port Lincoln are so adorable. I am absolutely smitten by Kasse.

The Majestics have returned to Denton Homes to rebuild their nest! https://youtu.be/gr5CQ3p5nKM?

Breakfast arrived as the golden rays of the sun kissed the scrape of Diamond and Xavier.

At 367 Collins Street, breakfast was served at the cooler end of the ledge. Goodness me those little chicks knew to run down there and stay where the sun would not beat down on them. One went and the other two followed. As far as I can remember, this is the earliest the chicks have moved down to the other end and used this scrape in the shade. Mum has a great perch to watch her triplets, too.

Beau and Gabby are dedicated to their nest in NE Florida near Palm Court.

Wings of Whimsy gives us a round up of what is happening at 17 Bald Eagle nests from the 21st to 24th of October. https://youtu.be/erEAiieAfj8?

One of the images from the video summary is from the John Bunker Sands Wetlands where Mum and Dad are busy at work fixing up that beautiful nest of theirs.

Stars and Stripes are back at Avon Lake. https://youtu.be/4JZzxe9Sxx8?

Research is giving new insights into bird migration.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/28/high-flying-life-of-australias-birds-revealed-in-new-detail-thanks-to-weather-radars?CMP=share_btn_url

This is the problem.

Calico’s Tip for the Day is don’t turn into a bear that hibernates. Get out and enjoy nature, make it part of your life regardless of clock changes and weather! It will make your life so much better.

From the article: “It’s easy to pass birds without really seeing them or to walk through a park without paying attention to the trees. We can become so caught up in our own thoughts and conversations that we miss the sensory gifts nature has to offer. By tuning in to the sights, sounds and sensations around us, by listening to the birds, we can transform passive wandering into an immersive experience. When we truly notice nature, something magical happens.”

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/oct/27/the-clocks-go-back-but-now-is-not-the-time-to-hibernate?CMP=share_btn_url

And last, please leave the leaves. Spread the news. It will save you time to do other things. If you must, just pile the leaves but do not put them in bags! or grind them up with a mulcher. Just let them sit. Read a good book.

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, H, J’, Heidi McGrue, Cornell Bird Lab, Olympic Park Eagles, SK Hideaways, Rohan Geddes and Sydney Sea Eagle Cam, NestFlix Memories, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Trudi Kron, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, NEFL-AEF, Wings of Whimsy, The Guardian, Brian Collins – Menhaden, Little Fish, Big Deal, Pollinator Friendly Yards.

Saturday in Bird World

26 October 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

I want to once again thank SK Hideaways for putting together the Memorial video of dear little Nox. So many have reached out to say how sad they are at his passing and how much they enjoyed it. Nox (Equinox) was a very special little guy. One of those amazing birds that come into our lives that will never be forgotten.

It was a nippy albeit beautiful fall day on the Canadian Prairies. The only leaves remaining on my property are on the small Cranberry bushes and the lilacs. Everything else is bare and brown, and the grey-brown dismal, taupey days of early winter are heading our way.

The park looks pretty desolate.

There have been only two Blue Jays lately, Junior and the Mrs. Only two Crows. The Starlings continue to dominate the numbers at the feeders. Around the City there are still Canadian geese feeding on the grass and ducks in the ponds and at the river. It is time again to go and check the numbers and see how many are flying in and out at night.

Mr Crow enjoying a peanut.

One good thing that did happen today was an apparently successful mating between Gabby and Beau. Last year he just didn’t know which end was which! https://youtu.be/bAIeeFqm72Q?

That mating was on the nest! And Gabby didn’t seem to nip or be off putting. All good signs.

The pair to continue to work on their nest bringing in sticks and moss. Fingers crossed for a successful year for these two – can I say ‘finally’.

F23 and M15 continue to work on their nest in SW Florida while guarding their territory. https://youtu.be/bs2Dq24r01M?s

At the Sydney Olympic Park, SE34 is still on the nest after having its elder sibling SE33 fledge yesterday. SE33 was located on a low bush near the nest after spotters heard Magpie calls. It is unclear if any food is going to SE33 or if he can get out of its location.

SE34 might fly at any moment.

A nice whole fish came to the Port Lincoln barge for Mum, Wilko and Kasse at 0711. Wilko seems to be behaving his/her self better.

And more for Kasse.

Mum had some fish, too. Yeah!

‘A’ is monitoring our little osplets: “Meanwhile, at Port Lincoln, Dad brought in a large whole fish at 07:09 this morning and both osplets ate well. Dad retrieved his leftover fish at 07:34 and ate hungrily but returned the tail end about ten minutes later, so the kids had a second breakfast at 07:44. I saw no bonking and little Kasse is an eager eater, definitely not intimidated by its sibling, which is good to see. 

These two are deep in their oily teenager phase but will soon emerge from it as those gorgeous shades of bronze appear on their heads and necks.  Meanwhile, those round tummies and fat little bottoms are testament to their good health and always make me smile. These two are just SO cute. I don’t think Kasse quite understands bonking – he looks confused more than scared. “

In Melbourne, the triplets are moving up and down the gutter and have no trouble getting back into the scrape box.

Dad brings prey to the kiddos in Melbourne! https://youtu.be/L4V9bEG3w0A?

The kids choose the cooler other scrape with the cover and F23 follows her intelligent children! https://youtu.be/6Umglw1ZJp4?

Breakfast was early at Orange.

Diamond brings in a Galah for the kids. https://youtu.be/fRDIoRcJYTE?

‘A’ remarks: “All is well at Orange, where a pile of fluff slumbers in the corner while Diamond watches from her favourite position perched on the ledge. Here is the summary of this morning’s activity:

26 Oct FEED 05.55.22 leftover; 06.49.53 scrap; PREY 06.06.08 X feeds; 07.39.04 X feeds/07.42.43 stashed on MW ; 07.57.36 feeds; 09.04.30 feed; WATCH 07.46.10 Yira selfie

At Collins Street, the chicks have taken advantage of their newly found mobility to immediately change scrapes. When I tuned in this morning, the scrape was EMPTY and of course for a moment, I panicked, before I realised where they had to be. Sure enough, on the north facing camera, we can see two chicks sleeping in the sheltered scrape, with a parent perched on the comfortable spot that was added to the front of the sheltering structure, so the parents can comfortably use the perch rather than getting stiff perching on the edge of a board. They used some sort of car-tyre rubber, I believe, to create that perch and it is obviously very comfortable for the adults, who can get up and out of the melee to a good supervision spot. Perfect. A great addition. 

So this makes us happy because the shelter at that end is SO much better, giving mum a break from her mumbrella duties and also improving the safety of the chicks themselves. You know how much I wanted the scrape at the south end of the ledge actually removed altogether, forcing them to use the northern end, but the chicks have done that of their own accord as soon as they were able. TOO funny. I wonder whether they will stay at the north end, return to the south end, or split themselves between the two scrapes. It could get very awkward for feedings and confuse the parents no end. 

Anyway, that’s the big news in Australia’s falcon world this morning. “

Clive’s Ride made more news stations. Clive is possibly the most positive story to come out of Hurricane Milton.

There’s an eagle at Decorah North in Iowa!

Gracie Shepherd caught Mr North and DNF having a bath today! https://youtu.be/B-vDfnf0NvY?

I missed her on cam but the chat says that Hope was doing some nestorations early Friday at Port Tobacco.

I did catch the two darlings of the Big Bear Valley, Jackie and Shadow, perched looking out over their territory.

‘J’ sent a link to a video showing Jeffrey the Pinecone on Jackie and Shadow’s nest is bigger than Fiona! https://youtu.be/Oqy1JFa4r4o?

Liberty and Guardian were home working on their nest in Redding, California.

Sadly, today I added Nox and the little fourth hatch at the Coobowie Osprey Platform in South Australia to the Memorial Page.

How do war zones – and as I write this tonight there are many of them – impact our raptors, their lives, and their migration?

I have been concerned about the Black Storks that have migrated through Ukraine. Now I try to keep an eye on Waba whose last transmission was on the 18th of October when he was in Israel. I hope to goodness he is now out of Israel and well into Africa.

Cal Falcons gives us a favourite Nox moment. https://youtu.be/uzDzj0htaXQ?

As we continue to monitor the issues surrounding Osprey’s deaths in the Chesapeake Bay, Geemeff sends us to reports on the impact of commercial fishing of Menhaden on osprey deaths. Thank you, Geemeff.

https://www.cbf.org/news-media/newsroom/2024/all/as-osprey-populations-struggle-manager-continue-deliberations-on-chesapeake-bay-menhaden.html

and from William & Mary University:

Calico’s Tip for the Day could save your pet’s life: Do not use scented candles, air fresheners that plug in, or any time of air freshener spray. There are also essential oils that are extremely dangerous. You might be putting a few drops in water in one of the new plug in contemporary diffusers. Please check with your vet to find out which oils are safe! This is why.

‘The Girls’ wish you a fantastic day! And a lovely weekend. Remember to sit outside and listen for the birds! They sure would like to!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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

Thank you to the following for their posts, videos, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, Geemeff, J”, Nest Flix Memories, NEFL-AEF, Androcat, SWFlorida Eagle Cam, Olympic Park Eagles, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, SK Hideaways, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, Nesting Bird Life and More, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Falcon Cam Project, AccuWeather, Decorah North and Raptor Resource Project/Explore.org, Gracie Shepherd, Port Tobacco Eagle Cam, FOBBV, Nature Lover Bird Life Odyssey, FORE, Current Biology and British Trust for Ornithology, Cal Falcon Cam, cbf.org, William and Mary University.

SE33 fledges…Nox has died…late Thursday in Bird World

24 October 2024

Hello Everyone,

I have decided to send out Friday’s news late Thursday instead. There are two main news points: Nox has died and SE 33 fledged. By the time Friday morning arrives, it is possible that SE34 will have also fledged. I will resume my normal postings on Saturday morning.

It is with a very heavy heart that I write that cute little Nox, the fourth hatch of Annie and Archie in 2024, has died. Many of you will already know this sad news as it is the biggest story in Bird World. Nox was taken into care shortly after fledgling after being found grounded at the Marina and treated for a fracture. He was kept in rehabilitation and sent to a falconer for training. He was released into the wild on Monday the 21st of October 2024 amidst great applause and happiness. He was found grounded again, highly anemic, three days later. He was emaciated. A post-mortem is being undertaken to find the cause of his death.

There are deaths in Bird World that impact us more than others. Nox was the cutest little chick who won all of our hearts. While we want all of the chicks to thrive, Nox was very, very special to so many and, thus, his death has impacted us deeply. Fly high little one. Soar in places you never dreamed possible!

A male Bald Eagle that won everyone’s hearts and caused us great concern during Hurricane Milton was Clive, the mate to Connie at the Captiva Nest in the Barrier Islands off the west coast of Florida. He rode out the hurricane protecting his nest and, now he is making the news and well, he should. I don’t believe anyone has seen this on a streaming cam before (please feel free to correct me on that!).

Weather.com! https://weather.com/…/florida-hurricane-bald-eagle…

Around many of the Bald Eagle nests there is some question about who is who and who is on what nest with what mate. We wait to see US Steel’s nest of Irvine and Claire and now Dulles-Greenway, the nest that formerly belonged to Martin and Rosa.

SW Florida is stable. M15 and F23 are busy, busy looking forward to their second breeding season together.

We hope that NE Florida will be stable and that Gabby and Beau will finally have a family!

At the WRDC nest, Ron came in, landed on the nest, took a selfie around 0655 Thursday morning and departed.

Thunder and Akecheta were both at their West End nest!

I did not see Andor and Cruz at Fraser Point nor did I see Jackie and Shadow at Big Bear on Thursday.

In Australia, Diamond is stuffing Yira and Gammatta to the top of their little heads!

At the Port Lincoln Osprey nest, Wilko is being aggressive towards Kasse. This is a food issue. As clearly demonstrated by the Poole Harbour nest of Blue 022 and CJ7, frequent fish deliveries can ensure that four osplets fledge without anxiety and beaking. Thankfully, Dad came in with half a fish (or that is how it appeared) Thursday morning around 0730. I thought that poor little Kasse was going to go off the rim of the nest trying to get away from the aggression.

It is impossible to see who is getting fed, but I suspect it is Wilko eating first. There is plenty for Kasse. I hope that the fish fairies will appear and bring supplementary fish to the nest to fill in the spaces when Dad is not bringing fish.

On Friday morning, the oldest sibling SE33 fledged from the nest around 0619. They stayed near the nest eventually flying out of the forest around 0643.

Caught on video: https://youtu.be/TnwLSAz05AU?

Where is Mum at Collins Street? The eyases are in the gutter and back up to the scrape but there has yet to be a prey delivery. It is 0820.

Thank you for being here this evening. Take care.

Thank you to the following for their posts, articles, news, images, videos, and streaming cams that helped me to write this post: Cal Falcons, weather.com, Dulles-Greenway Eagles, NE Florida-AEF, SW Florida Eagle Cam, IWS/Explore, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Olympic Park Eagles, Port Lincoln Ospreys.

Cute osplets and that cutie pie Nox was released and then back in care…Wednesday in Bird World

23 October 2024

Good Morning Everyone!

I had a lovely vacation, but it was so nice to be home and to wake up with Hugo Yugo cuddled under my chin Tuesday morning.

It is Wednesday morning now and Baby Hope is watching ‘The Boyfriend’ eat his breakfast. All is right with the world. It is 1 C.

Most of the leaves are gone on the trees at the back. The lilacs have some. The memorial tree to our cat Abigale is bare, and it feels like the end of fall with the temperatures plummeting at night. We have gathered up kindling and logs and will have some nice fires in the wood stove in the late afternoon. I might even bake some of that Nova Scotia Oatmeal Molasses bread this week. It looks like we are into comfort food weather!

When he is ready to leave, The Boyfriend always stops and looks in the house for about ten minutes before he leaves. We have put out the little container with straw, but I believe he sleeps under the deck of the house where Calico had her kittens.

Gosh, I really missed The Girls!

The biggest news that I read while I was away was that Nox was released into then wild….and then is back in care!

Nox has to be the cutest peregrine falcon in the world!

Garramma plays with the Starling! https://youtu.be/f0exX9lkdfc?

Yija and Garramatta are losing their baby down. Notice the fluff disappearing around the eyes.

The triplets at 367 Collins Street are growing and growing – Mum keeps them stuffed! https://youtu.be/1rsWUOf_LZ8?

And they also are playful and want to escape her attentions! This poor Mum she has her hands full with this bunch! https://youtu.be/Igt2Dndy74c?

If you haven’t watched this peregrine family, you should. They are hilarious and it is even going to get more exciting as these chicks lose their down.

Bubba at Growing Home is working its wings and walking around the nest. 38 days old. Oh, the joys of being the Only Bob. Eating and eating without any anxiety or strife.

Wilko and Kasse are well into the reptile stage. Poor things. So many pin feathers coming out. So far two fish have been brought in at the time I am writing this. It is early in the day; hopefully there will be more.

After eating some of it on the ropes, Dad brought in a super fish right around 1800. Wilko and Kasse had a great dinner along with Mum!

They are beautiful and their interactions are so cute. They could fly any day and yet they are still with us – thankfully. Many believe (or hope) that SE33 and SE34 will remain on the nest observing their parents ignoring the Currawong and when they fly will head to the river. I hope for the same!

At 1102, the pair had full crops. They are both restless.

Birds attacking the Sea Eaglet nest. https://youtu.be/8FBkKCDmneE?

Geemeff sent us some startling news!

“Shocking to hear these gamekeepers plotting to kill Hen Harriers, and actually shooting one, not knowing the RSPB investigations team were filming them.” https://youtu.be/l4dRN1L_X6Y

The slaughter of raptors in the UK…

I love Hen Harriers and this article in The Guardian builds on the reports from Raptor Persecution UK.

More hen harriers killed in UK during 2023 than in any other year, RSPB sayshttps://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/22/more-hen-harriers-killed-in-uk-during-2023-than-in-any-other-year-rspb-says?CMP=share_btn_url

One of my long time readers is really wanting people to understand ‘why’ people should not purchase budgies. I know that many of you could also talk about people not purchasing pure bred dogs or cats and, instead, taking rescues. I promised ‘J’ that I would alert all of you and I ask that if you know of anyone thinking about buying a budgie, please educate them! Share this information. Thank you.

‘J’ writes: Could you please put this in your blog and ask people to send it to anyone considering buying a budgie?

It’s a fantastic FREE ebook with everything a budgie caretaker should know and should read before taking a budgie into their home.

If only one person reads it before buying, it’s a win.

I found it through this very good post about why we shouldn’t breed/buy parrots and examples of everything we do wrong:

Had to check on Gabby and Beau. They have both been working on the nest

Hawk Mountain’s migration report. Those numbers for ospreys are truly troubling.

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘Geemeff, J’, UC Berkeley News, Cal Falcons, SK Hideaways, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam, Liznm, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Growing Home, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Olympic Park Eagles, Nesting Bird Life and More, Raptor Persecution UK, The Guardian, Pamela Clark, NEFL-AEF, Hawk Mountain Migration Chart.

Saturday in Bird World

19 October 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

We hope that this post finds you having a great weekend. Full of curiosities and birds! Maybe cats, too!!!!!!!!

Update: First gutter stomp at Collins Street! Gosh, wonder what Mum is going to do now? https://youtu.be/uUg0pXetEOo?

Friday was just another gorgeous fall day near the Minas Basin and Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia. We returned to the Grand Pre Memorial Site, the church and the land of the Acadians that were deported by the British Planters. We enjoyed our walks here in August, the discovery of the juvenile eagle, and re-learning the history of the French settlers, the Acadians. Today, the adults raising the juvenile were soaring above their nest near the Blacksmith Shop. They were so high above me that any iphone photos were positively inadequate. Today, circling and soaring they went til finally they stopped and headed north towards the farmer’s fields. They are two of the eagles that feed on the fields near where I am staying. It felt wonderful. Seven or eight Blue Jays flitted about and the gulls continued scavaging on the newly plowed fields, too.

There was hardly anyone on the grounds of the UNESCO Heritage site. Peaceful would be the best word to describe the morning. It was precisely what I needed.

Saturday will be lovely, too, and it is Homecoming weekend at Acadia University where I taught and chaired the Fine Arts Department eons ago. We fly home early, early Monday morning so we will take full advantage of the wonderful fall weather today – and the good food to be found in the small villages up the mountain.

Ah, but moving on…We were here in August and I wrote about the Acadians. If you missed it, this is your brief refresher.

The Acadians began to settle the area just east of Wolfville, Nova Scotia in 1682. They worked very hard building dykes and taking advantage of the soil left by the tides. Their area became known as the ‘Breadbasket of Acadie’.

The Memorial Church: “The Memorial Church expresses the Acadian’s strong attachment to Grand-Pré National Historic Site of Canada. Built in 1922, with funds raised from Acadian communities throughout North America, the Memorial Church symbolizes the spirit of Acadian nationalism and the deep-seated desire to commemorate the tragedy of the Deportation. Architect René Fréchet of Moncton, New Brunswick, drew up the plans for the church, which reflect Normandy-style architecture of the 1700s. The design does not duplicate the original pre-Deportation church whose appearance is unknown. Archaeological excavations in 2001 suggest the Memorial Church was indeed built approximately where the original Grand-Pré parish church stood (Parks Canada)”.

Evangeline is the heroine of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem of the same name. She was not a real person, and you will not find her name on the list of deportees. Many believe, particularly those Acadians living in Louisiana, that she is Emmeline LaBiche, who reunited with her lover, Louis Arceneaux, in Saint Martinsville, Louisiana. The tragedy of this tale, unlike Longellow’s poem, where they never met again, is that Areneaux had wed someone else. It was too late for the couple.

Longfellow’s poem is symbolic of the breaking up of families and potential families caused by the British deportation of the Acadians. Many settled in Louisiana if they survived. The Treaty of Paris (1763) ended the Seven Years War and the hostilities between the French and British. It had a clause that allowed the Acadians to return to their land in Nova Scotia. Most never did.

The original well used by the Acadians and a piece of one of the original willow trees on the land.

The Deportation Cross. There are several deportation crosses – the one at the UNESCO site in Grand Pre (below), another at Hortonsville just 3.2 kms away that marks the site of the deportation of 1755 of more than 2000 Acadians, and at least one other in St Martinsville, Louisiana.

A view of the farming lands of the Acadians inside the dykes.

We had hoped the Memorial Church would be open as we did not go inside on our last visit. It wasn’t. You can walk through the grounds at your leisure, but the church and the interpretative centre are closed for the season. Everyone is preparing for winter and the falling leaves, now crunching beneath our feet, are a reminder that snow and much colder weather will be here sooner than we think.

Moving on to the birds…

F23 can get them back in the scrape and shelter them from whatever the Melbourne weather throws at that nest site! https://youtu.be/q9RZZgnuQv4?

At Port Lincoln, Wilko and Kasse had a nice early morning breakfast. Dad delivered fish, everyone ate and there was plenty left when Dad removed it so he could have some breakfast, too. Well done, Dad!

Oh, these two are changing right before our eyes. Look at all the down off that little head and the pin feathers coming in.

Later…Wilko and Kasse are wanting more fish, but nothing is arriving.

Wilko is such a reptile!

Two Sea eaglets still on the nest in the Olympic Forest.

Mum either headed out to get prey or went to the pantry. The triplets are sooooooo cute and they had a lovely breakfast while the sea eagles wait for theirs.

The chicks at Orange had their breakfast starting at 0811. It looks like it lasted 6 minutes before Diamond stopped feeding.

At the Growing Home Osprey platform, Bubba looks to have all of his/her juvenile plumage. Don’t you love how Dad spends so much time on the nest with Mum and Bubba? Except when he is fishing, of course!

Wondering about Gabby and Beau? Both were at the nest tree on Friday.

It was windy at Captiva – I only caught one eagle on cam, but that doesn’t mean that Connie and Clive were both not there! In fact, the mates are often on other branches and we can’t see them on the streaming cams and so we worry for nothing!

At SW Florida, F23 has brought in at least one pine cone to the nest along with lots of twigs. We are now past the middle of October. Eaglets are born in late December and early January with incubation being, on average, 35 days in Florida. Things will start to get serious in another month.

‘A’ sends us news of the recent Royal Albatross fledglings with trackers: “The leading two chicks from Taiaroa Head are more than halfway to Chile now. We have GPS data for five of the fledgees from this season and we can see their progress towards their summer fishing grounds off the coast of Chile. Meanwhile, previous seasons’ fledgees are returning to Taiaroa Head for their breeding season. We have lovely footage on the chat of a previous chick from the colony, now a nine-year-old male, returning to where he was born, presumably to find a mate. Let’s hope he is successful this season in finding Miss Right. These birds are exquisite and their wingspan is astounding. It never ceases to amaze me that they live for so long without setting foot on dry land and that after all those thousands of kilometres, they return to within 50 metres of the nest from which they fledged. Is that not just awesome? Nothing we as humans can do compares with the feats of some of the birds and animals we observe. How do we not have the utmost respect for these creatures instead of treating them as somehow inferior to us, fatally flawed humans? The outrageous arrogance of it never ceases to astound me. We should be breathless with wonder. Seriously.” 

Geemeff sends us the 2024 season highlights from Loch Arkaig: https://youtu.be/pgLrWvnETSY?

In the UK there is growing concern over laws to make it legal to carry chickens by their legs (don’t even get me started on animal cruelty) and by bird flu which seems to be reappearing in articles about various species from shorebirds to pheasants.

Culling controversy in Denmark!

Do you live in Pennsylvania? If so, you might be interested in visiting the nocturnal animals! Here is the info for Zoo America. Thanks, ‘RP’.

Zoo America allows guests to meet nocturnal animals after hours at Creatures Of The Night

The program allows guests to learn about the Zoo’s nocturnal animals

HERSHEY, Pa. — For the next two weekends, you can explore ZooAmerica in Hersheypark after the sun goes down to meet their “Creatures Of The Night.”

The program allows guests to learn about the Zoo’s nocturnal animals, like owls, gray wolves and even skunks. This is the only time of the year the zoo is open after-hours.u

Organizers say it’s a fun way to get into the Halloween spirit and educate people on the animals’ nighttime habitats.

“It’s nice to learn about the animals we have in our environment,” Alicia Snyder, education specialist at ZooAmerica, said. “So since we’re ZooAmerica, we only have animals from North America. You might see them around your house. So usually if people see a skunk, they’re not gonna get close to it, which is good, but we should know that we should still take care of their environment.”

Creatures Of The Night also features Halloween crafts, a magic potion scavenger hunt, animal enrichment activities and special educational displays.

It runs Friday – Sunday over the next two weekends (Oct. 18 – 20 and Oct. 25 – 27) from 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets can be purchased online.


Thank you so much for being with us today. Please take care. We look forward to having you with us again soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A,Geemeff, J, RP’, Sharon Pollock, SK Hideaways, Port Lincoln Ospreys, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, Olympic Park Eagles, Growing Home Osprey Cam, Window to Wildlife, NEFL-AEF, SW Florida Eagle Cam, The Guardian,BirdGuides, Zoo America.

Thursday in Bird World

17 October 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

It started out really windy and then the rain came. Now there are big clouds and the sun is out, but the phone tells me that more rain is expected in 17 minutes. It rained so hard at Hall’s Harbour that the side of the hill turned into a waterfall and tore out the road, a huge shock to everyone who lives and works there. They are expecting 43 feet tides on Saturday, something that is unprecedented No one knows what to expect. Will there be floods? The Hunter’s Full Moon is today, October 17. Full moons impact the tides being higher.

The long unpainted board above the little tug to the left marks a 41 foot tide. The tide is set to be 39 feet tonight which is slightly above the dark water mark on the boards.

While this is fascinating to someone living on the Prairies, this is not a curiosity to those that live in the area who have faced the mudslides and rising water.

We are not staying at Hall’s Harbour. Decades ago, before the fancy new restaurant, it was a favourite haunt of ours.

Our little cottage is on an appropriately named little lane near Grand Pre!

There were four Bald Eagles hunting on the dykelands this morning along with Crows and Gulls. They sit so still, just like hawks waiting for the small mammals to surface from the big clumps of soil that have been recently plowed. No doubt those fields are full of tasty voles.

Merlin identifies this gull as an Iceland Gull, a sub-species, a non-breeding Thayer’s Gull.

Our ride to Hall’s Harbour revealed fields of pumpkins, small stands of delicious apples for sale, and gorgeous foliage.

They have been harvesting pumpkins and squash from these vast fields for weeks.

There are stands everywhere where the honour system is in place. Pick your produce and put your money in the tin! It is that simple.

‘PB’ alerted me to the cameras at Captiva – both osprey and eagle cams are up and running! Thank you.

Connie and Clive working on their nest.

Ranger Judy’s report for the Olympic Sea Eagles:

Trudi Kron caught Mum and Dad at the John Bunker Sands Wetlands eagle nest. https://youtu.be/8xL1AHVdd2Y?

Beau and Gabby have been working on their nest. Both were there on Wednesday. There is a fish dinner, too!

They slept on the same branch together!

Guardian, 11, and Liberty, 26, at Redding. https://youtu.be/xhZ0jG0qEqo?

The little cuties went to bed with a full tummy at the Port Lincoln osprey barge on Wednesday. This was a great feeding. Wilko and Kasse are doing so well.

‘A’ remarks: “Unfortunately, we saw some aggression from Wilco yesterday morning as it decided to enforce pecking order on the nest. Kasse was completely bewildered, not having encountered this until now, and didn’t really know how to handle it. At one stage, he literally headed for the hills, but Wilco grabbed him by the back and dragged him down again. Certainly, Kasse’s major response was confusion, and I don’t think it is going to result in its being intimidated. We will wait and see. When the fish delivery arrived a little later, the pair were exemplary in their table manners and all was well. 

Both of yesterday’s fish were magpie perch – large, striped and very much alive in the first case at least. Flopping around and bonking the babies. It took some time to come under control but luckily the littles are not quite as fragile at this age. Even so, they were a little taken aback to be attacked by breakfast. (Another magpie perch was brought in at 07:55 this morning – 17 October.)” 

Breakfast at 367 Collins Street! Everyone is always full. What a great family.

It is very foggy at Orange. Diamond, Yira and Garramma are waiting for Xavier to be able to catch breakfast prey.

The sea eaglets are learning how to defend themselves against the Currawong attacks on the nest! https://youtu.be/dDhYLRxO-5M?

Wingers and a duet, too. https://youtu.be/bneEk8fYRho?

H5N1 found in the UK. Our dear birds seem unable to escape this deadly disease.

Botulism kills nearly 100,000 birds in California. https://youtu.be/bneEk8fYRho?

Why are Honeyeaters singing a different tune? https://youtu.be/bneEk8fYRho?

Thank you for being with me today. Please take care. See you soon!

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, J, PB’, Window to Wildlife, Judy Harrington and Sydney Sea Eagle Cam, Trudi Kron and JBS Sands Wetlands, NEFL-AEF, Gary’s Videos, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Raptor Persecution UK, SK Hideaways, The Guardian.

Sunday in Bird World

13 October 2024

Hello Everyone,

We hope that the weekend has been good to all of you.

Many Canadians are celebrating Thanksgiving today with family and friends. The official day is Monday. Lots of good food to celebrate the harvest and to just look around and be thankful for all that we have. It has been a very challenging year for my family and I am so grateful to my children, my friends, to my husband and to his amazing doctor. Because of them, life has been good, full of laughter and ‘living’. I am also grateful to all of you. The wonderful letters, the photos you share with me – of you, your family, and your adorable pets. You are the best! Thank you for being there.

Just listen. ‘MI’ sent me this video taken in Niverville, Manitoba of geese, honking geese. Oh, I am going to miss them so much.

It is late Saturday afternoon and the promised rains have arrived on the Canadian Prairies. I treasure these rains. They clean off the roof of the conservatory from leaves and dust that have accumulated, but, most of all, they help the trees and shrubs prepare for winter. The birds and squirrels are still flitting about finding seed and much to the horror of our guest this afternoon, the Crows had a veritable buffet! I am clearing out the fridge and little odds and ends. Things like grapes wind up on their tray and they do love them.

Not all bird seed is alike and apparently the quality of peanuts from one retailer to the other is different – according to Junior and his Missus Saturday morning. They pecked all about those nuts searching for the heaviest!

Isn’t Junior handsome? Look at that beautiful profile. Junior will stay with us for the winter. Our job is to keep the peanuts coming!!!!!!

Selections finally made.

Inside, ‘The Girls’ are starting to notice that supplies are being left out. Suitcases will get filled tomorrow so that the girls’ anxiety level doesn’t peak too soon.

Hugo Yugo is now getting her teeth brushed twice daily to try and avoid any issues with gingivitis. She is an angel and loves the chicken flavoured toothpaste. I feel blessed. She is sooooooooo tiny. Her tail is bigger than she is. She did grow some, but goodness, she is so very little.

Missey is the ‘best’ behaved of the four. I can trim her nails every day, brush her, clean her teeth and then use dental wipes and she just lets me hold her without wiggling so I can get on with it. Calico is rather different! She is just darn difficult. She doesn’t want any part of it. Well, that is too bad, so sad. Calico will eventually settle, but, for now, it is going to happen regardless of whether she likes it or not. Hope is another story since she continues to be a little wild.

Now getting on with these words…

This is the way industry should work with wildlife! Take notice, Omega!!!!

Mum and Dad will be grandparents if Calypso and his mate’s eggs hatch! Isn’t this wonderful…oh, and Ervie and all his brothers will be uncles.

The new female at Collins Street is working so hard to shade and keep her brood cool! Let’s hope those wings can spread big and wide as it is going to get hot up there. https://youtu.be/SYliGHlf3a0?

Sunday breakfast in the CBD. ‘A’ comments: “Little Dad at Collins Street is just the sweetest. He has been working hard at his hunting and the prey he brings is sometimes a challenge for him. He’s so cute struggling down the ledge with a prey item that’s at least half his size. But he manages. I do wonder how on earth he manages to fly with it, and get it up so high too. He must be a very strong little falcon indeed. I am so impressed by what he and Xavier at Orange can carry. When Xavier brings in a monster pigeon as he did recently or a duckling, it dwarfs him, making me wonder the power to weight ratio of these small male falcons. They must be incredibly strong.”

Thanks to our Australian sleuth ‘A’, we have more news from Collins Street: “And yet more food at Collins Street. When mum brought in food at around 19:08, the chicks were all fast asleep, but they soon roused themselves at the prospect of food, and mum fed them all yet again. Those crops have been full for most of the day, and no-one is going to sleep hungry at this scrape. Mum also has a large crop and dad hasn’t missed out today either. So it seems the pigeon population of the Melbourne CBD has returned, at least in sufficient numbers to make things relatively easy for our falcon family when it comes to finding food. Certainly, this trio of eyases is being stuffed to the brim several times a day. They are adorable. Very very noisy and full of beans. So energetic in ensuring that they get fed. Mum works hard and she does a good job with the clamouring hordes. The youngest does very well indeed, both through its own efforts to get fed (it is very pushy and often grabs at food from its siblings’ beaks and is very good at positioning itself in the front row at feedings) and because mum makes the effort to feed all three beaks. Basically, as long as they are still there and still open, she will keep feeding. 

At this meal, the chicks have moved into their tripod feeding arrangements, with the youngest nearest to mum. As you know, I am very keen on this particular positioning, as it makes it easy for mum to reach all three beaks, which are grouped together in the centre of the tripod, and it also provides some support for the chciks, so that early on when they are not as steady, they tend not to face-plant. Thoise crops are bulging!!! Isn’t it lovely to see? And that was a nice parrot at Orange today. I am not prepared to hazard a guess as to what sort of parrot it was but there is discussion on the chat about the colours that were evident on the plumage. Diamond loves a nice parrot almost as much as she likes a plump pigeon, though perhaps a nice duckling might be her favourite. I wonder what the other watchers at Orange think on that subject. I’d love their opinions. 

Mum continues to coax the chicks at Collins Street, trying to get them to eat even more, as if they did not already have absolutely mammoth crops. She is e-chupping and continuing to offer bites and the chicks are trying hard to do what she asks. The youngest spends several minutes trying to deal with a bite that seemed to be ‘stuck’, but eventually it managed to swallow the food. OH MY GOODNESS!!! Just LOOK at those crops at 19:20!!!! Yes, I know they don’t burst, but I have to believe they are VERY uncomfortable. Surely. That is just outrageous. Crops the size of their heads, literally. I swear that is not an exaggeration. Again, as with the osplets, I predict a growth spurt in the morning. “

The cams at NE Florida nest of Gabby and Beau went live late Saturday afternoon. Neither eagle has been seen on cam at the time I am writing (4pm on Saturday) but the AEF says they have no reason to believe they are not safe and sound!

View of Redding nest of Liberty and Guardian on Saturday.

Achieva. Look at this nest and then remember what you read about the brand new super designed osprey nest that was built by the fishing company at the top to replace an old one they had to remove. I wish someone cared.

There is an eagle at the Trempealeau Eagle nest.

Ah, I was waiting. Someone asked me why I am not mentioning Pepe and Muhlady. First, they are wonderful eagle parents who have raised some impressive chicks. The owner of the property that has the nest and who runs the camera has indicated that he will prosecute anyone who uses images in any way from his site. I will not mention SuperBeaks again.

Nesting Bird Life and More caught a feeding at Port Lincoln. Yes, they are the cutest. Racing stripes and all! https://youtu.be/DSIq8tPB8fA?

I have a soft spot for Ospreys that knows no bounds. Just look at those two little fish eaters. Don’t you just want to pick them up, wrap them in a tiny blankie, and hold them?

It is now early Sunday morning. Dad has a fish he is eating on the ropes and Mum is anxiously anticipating that he will get some of it to her, Wilko and Kasse!

Dad did not disappoint. He left Mum a huge piece of fish for the family! They are just starting to dig in.

‘A’ remarks: “When I turned to the Port Lincoln tab to check the littles, I thought one of the osplets was dead, but when I rewound, it was just in a food coma from eating too much fish at breakfast (which was served in three sittings, the first when dad arrived with the large floppy fish at 07:23, the second at 08:32 and the third at around 08:53). Good heavens. By 09:30 they are eating yet again. It was a very large fish this morning. The sound is back up and the little chirps mum gives the osplets to encourage them to open their beaks are SO cute – different from those of an eagle or a falcon. The loveliest full-throated chirrups. No wonder I feared we had lost another osplet. It’s out for the count. Awwww. They are just adorable with their little bandit masks and racing stripes. (I had to explain to Jonathan how these chicks were different from all the other little fluffy bobbleheads I had insisted he see and that description interested him enough that he came and peered at my laptop to check them out. And yes, they are different, he said. I do love their livery. They really are cute as a button (unless they’re a Zoe, of course, at which point one becomes somewhat distracted by their behaviour. But these two are getting along fine, and even yesterday’s long wait for food did not provoke any dominating behaviour. What a relief. ” And more…”PLO has confirmed what we knew already – that the Fish Fairy (aka Janet) is ready for duty if she is needed. Thus far, dad has been doing an excellent job. But it is very nice to know that there won’t be any chicks starving on this nest this season. There is no aggression between Wilco and Kasse and I’m hopeful there won’t be. The long wait for food yesterday was a good indicator of how well they are getting along. “

Oh, my goodness. It is going to be a great year for ospreys in South Australia. More babies.

Poor Xavier. Diamond is away. He comes into the scrape with the morning’s Starling breakfast in the hope of feeding his chicks — and then, oops…here she comes and thwarts that idea!

There are times that I wish the Sea Eagles would have eaten every Pied Currawong in the Olympic Forest! SE33 and SE34 are branching and looking out to the wider world. Will they be able to get down to the river with Dad and Lady without being chased out of the area by those Curras?

Ranger Judy gives the summary of the day’s events at the Olympic Park Eagle nest:

Both Claire and Irv at the US Steel Plant Bald Eagle nest. https://youtu.be/RRAh2Ye5PiI?

Mamma Kestrel is totally busy with this lot!!!!!!! https://youtu.be/RRAh2Ye5PiI?

Bonnie and Clyde, the GHOs at Farmer Derek’s in Kansas, are ready to entertain all of us. https://youtu.be/JebgeGEm7iY?

When the love of birds and the understanding of their need comes first. A lovely little article.

Country diary: ‘Your need greater than mine,’ I murmur to the dotterels | Jim Perrinhttps://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/12/country-diary-your-need-greater-than-mine-i-murmur?CMP=share_btn_url

Banded dotterel” by Andrej Chudy is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

What challenges do Dotterels face? In New Zealand they are fighting to save them! https://youtu.be/n6Et813R3Ug?

Good descriptions from the British Trust for Ornithology. Dotterels are on the Red List in the UK.

Gracie Shepherd reported on FB that Jak and Audacity were working on their nest in the Channel Islands on Saturday. I went to have a look. They are forever hopeful like we are for them. Just look at them working so hard.

We can always use a smile and these Merlin chicks are providing it today.

Hugo Yugo wishes you the very best of days! Missey is giving her a good ole’ wash.

Thank you for being with us today! Take care everyone. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, J’, Fran Solly and Friends of Sth Aus, SK Hideaways, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, NEFL-AEF, FORE, Achieva Credit Union, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, Olympic Park Sea Eagles, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Trempealeau Bald Eagle Cam, Nesting Bird Life and More, PIX Cams, Charter Group of Wildlife Ecology, The Guardian, Androcat, OpenVerse, NZ DOC, BTO, IWS/Explore, Woodlands Wildlife Sanctuary.

2nd hatch, Comet, at PLO dies while 3rd egg hatches, Milton heading for Florida nests…Wednesday in Bird World

9 October 2024

Good Morning,

The view from Captiva. You can compare with the image from yesterday below. Keep everyone in your thoughts.

Update: Third egg hatches at Port Lincoln. .https://youtu.be/iIkeg8_3l98?

Wilko loves his fish and the third hatch had a swipe of fish at 1124.

Later, the third hatch ate well after Wilko was full and passed out in a food coma. Thanks, ‘H’ for that great clip!

It is just past noon on Tuesday as I begin writing this. We are listening to the news coming out of Florida as they prepare to be hit by Hurricane Milton either today or on Thursday. In the garden, here on the Canadian Prairies, it is a different story. Three Blue Jays are getting peanuts. Three. That means our resident family is safe. They will not migrate, but rather, stay with us for the winter. The Starlings are busy having baths and if this system will allow it, I will post a video of them really enjoying the water. The Crows have not been around, but we can hear them. All squirrels present and accounted for and The Boyfriend has had his breakfast.

Growing concern for the second hatch at Port Lincoln. Both Heidi and I have been anxious since it hatched. Osprey chicks love their fish and when they are not up screaming for fish within a few hours, I am always worried.

At 0616, my concern for the second hatch grows. I don’t think this little one has survived. What we need is one strong chick at this nest! So, let’s keep that in mind and wish this family well.

Chick 2 has died.

Rather sad. Outwardly that second hatch with its fat little bottom looks healthy. Thankfully, the little darling looks peaceful in death. Meanwhile, Wilko is screaming for fish.

The explanation for the choice of names for hatch 1 at Port Lincoln:

Hawk Mountain’s latest migration count:

Shockingly calm at Captiva Osprey platform Tuesday afternoon as Milton is set to hit the area in the next 18 hours at the time I am writing.

Late Monday evening and the winds are picking up with a bit of a howl on the streaming cams at both the Captiva Osprey and Bald Eagle nest.

You can see that the ground is heavily saturated at Fort Myers after Helene at the nest of M15 and F23.

If Milton stays to the trajectory forecast Monday, NE Florida might not get much more than a lot of heavy rain. Gabby was working on the nest on Tuesday.

There are still cars around the St Petersburgh streets and it appears to be the ‘calm before the storm’ at the Achieva Credit Union osprey nest. It is possible, according to predictions, that if the hurricane is a bit south, this area could be hit hard.

‘PB’ sent this posting from Window to Wildlife:

CROW has successfully evacuated from its premises on Sanibel with all its patients as of Tuesday afternoon. Fantastic effort.

These kestrel chicks are so cute and Mum is doing an amazing job feeding all of them. It sounds like peregrine falcons being fed, but quieter! https://youtu.be/PeTqhh3SwtE?

Those CBD Melbourne chicks are well fed, too!!!!!! https://youtu.be/MEiouJqyTUA?

Xavier is providing plenty of prey for his family, too!

‘A’ reports on Diamond and Xavier: “Darling Xavier arrived with fresh prey at around 15:05 to find no Diamond and two hungry chicks. He spent some time preparing the food and seems a bit unsure, as if waiting for Diamond to arrive. At 15:08, he decided to feed the chicks. The first two bites were too big or had feathers on them or were somehow unsuitable so Xavier ate them himself. But shortly after 15:08:30, he finds a small beak with a bite of food. He makes sure that the next bite goes to the younger chick. Very nicely done, Xavier. Oh he is SUCH a sweetie. He works hard to get food to the younger chick, leaning down and carefully trying to put food into its beak, with success. He made very sure that he was giving bites to both chicks. He feeds carefully, as if not wanting to make a mistake and get into trouble with Diamond, perhaps. Sorry, honey, I choked a chick. No, I’m with Xavier. It doesn’t sound good!

What is good though is watching Xavier get some quality chick time. I love watching him get that rare chance to feed his chicks, especially when Diamond is being lazy with the younger hatch (she is not doing that to any major degree this year, but when she is, Xavier is always a welcome sight). He is so deliberate and yet eager at the same time. He does love being a dad. So many of these raptor dads do. They are a delight to watch enjoying their parenting duties. “

WBSE 33 and 34 will be branching soon. Look at them. So tall, so steady on their feet, beautiful juvenile plumage.

‘A’ sends the latest report from the Sea Eagle nest to us: “October 9: After an early duet with the eaglets joining in too, the eaglets both self-fed on the remains of a small bird that Dad brought in at 19:29 yesterday – a late delivery last night. SE33 was seen then expelling a pellet, standing on the front rim. Then both stood or rested on the nest all morning – waiting. After 12, SE33 flapped to the base of PB, and later was standing there. SE34 was flapping well in the bowl as well . A currawong swooper was still about. Around 4:30pm, SE33 was very close to branching – flapped across to the base of PB. At 16:37, one of the eagles at River Roost was seen heading off. Prey? Eaglets are still waiting for prey at 5pm. Lady finally delivered a gull chick at 17:22 and fed them both. Then more flapping across the nest.”

Mum falls with prey into the nest. https://youtu.be/yTjchajxGbk?

The long version of the film about the importance of the Menhaden. https://vimeo.com/952527402?autoplay=1&muted=1…

Thank you so much for being with us today. Please send positive wishes to all those in the eye of the hurricane. Take care. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, announcements, images, videos, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, H, PB’, Heidi McGrue and the Joy of Ospreys, Port Lincoln Ospreys, Hawk Mountain, Window to Wildlife, SW Florida Eagle Cam, NEFL-AEF, Achieva Credit Union, Chartered Group, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam, Olympic Sea Eagle Cam, Menhaden – Little Fish, Big Deal and Vimeo, Nesting Bird Life and More.

2nd hatch at PLO, Cute Australian Bobbleheads…Monday in Bird World

7 October 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Sunday was a bit nippy. 9 C. The 40 kph winds were whipping the trees about with the leaves falling at an alarming rate. It is now 1100 and everyone is in the garden. Three Crows eating peanuts and suet. Three Blue Jays doing the same. Then there are the 18 or so European Starlings trying to grab some mealworms in between the Jays and the Crows. At least in our garden, they are not bullies. Everyone seems to wait their turn like planes lined up on a runway. Since the spring we have not been able to see the little birds very well as they have been hidden in the lilac bushes with their thick leaves. Soon all of those lilacs will be bare.

The bird feeder workshop was quite fun. The young woman leading the few of us that dared to show we lacked some essential skills was wonderful. She discussed every aspect feeding birds from seeds to feeders and for me, how to breed my own meal worms. Yes, we will call it Hugo Yugo’s Meal Work Farm!!!!! I don’t think Calico would want anything to do with bugs and worms! You need a transparent plastic bin (ugh, plastic), some paper towels, bran, and some starter meal worms. This tub has apparently been going at Oak Hammock Marsh for fifteen years. There are hundreds and hundreds of meal worms. I will keep you posted – I have everything but the breeding stock of worms.

Then we had a tray that showed us what to feed birds, different seeds for different species. Two things she noted should not be fed: bacon grease and peanut butter. Both of them will stick to the feathers of the birds and prevent them from flying. The bacon grease melts at a lower temperature than suet which should only be used in the winter. So don’t be tempted to use it. Popcorn – do not salt or butter – and best not on strings. Just air pop it and put it on your tray feeder! Some seeds can only be purchased at specialty bird shops while others can be bought at your local feed and seed stores. Calico says to always check prices -. We get some seed from a local farmer and others at the feed and seed. Our specialty bird feed store is at least twice as expensive. With the number of birds we feed, we need to find good quality food at reasonable prices.

And like magic…another feeder for the garden!

In the fields adjacent to the marsh, the geese were feeding. There were all four species that come to this area of the Canadian Prairies present – Ross’s Geese, Snow Geese, White-front Geese, and Canada Geese.

Florida hasn’t cleaned up after Hurricane Helene and already Milton is on its way to hit Fort Myers. Again, we can only be thankful that the raptors do not have any eggs or chicks in those nests. This will be the largest evacuation of Florida sine 2017 as Milton prepares for landfall. Milton appears to have the potential to impact all of the nests in Florida from Miami to Jacksonville. Stay safe everyone.

A different view of the Olympic Park Sea Eagles from cam 4. Lady is hunting for lunch! https://youtu.be/UIO6-eJBsGA?

Lady worked hard for prey.

Xavier tried to feed his chicks! Poor Guy. He is such a sweetie. Diamond is one protective falcon female!!!!!!!!!! https://youtu.be/rSGA_ATc7IE?

‘A’ reports that it is time to name the chicks at Orange! “Thought you would want this info in your blog as soon as it dropped. Here is the link for voting. They will choose the top two names from the voting (and the third egg, if it hatches, will get the third most popular name). 

Here is the link to the home page (they want people to go through the home page to vote, not just go straight to the voting page, so that’s the link I’m including): https://science-health.csu.edu.au/falconcam and select the News section (if you want to go straight to the voting page, which they prefer you not to do, it’s https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeSVVrghyPtbulRzJAR8GxNyv-kK66jKHowKKqg4OdXxfO0JQ/viewform?pli=1

The name choices are: 

Bidhi (big)

Birrang (high, faraway, blue sky)

Birrgun (swift)

Bumbi (smoke)

Garrama (hunter)

Ghuda (shiny)

Gindhay (playful)

Magarra (pretty or bright)

Marrung (cunning)

Nanan (fast)

Yira (sharp)”

So did Mum tell Dad to go and get a fish or put in a phone call to the fish fairies? He flew out right after a little chat. 🙂

OMG. Ervie’s little brother or sister is so cute…and Mum had such a time getting it back under her after its feeding!

Heidi reports: “The second hatch at Port Lincoln occurred prior to 15:19 on 10/7.  The second baby was first seen out of the shell for a split second in a very fuzzy cam view at 15:19 (screenshot).”

The triplets are eating well in Melbourne!

Heidi got that morning feed by Mum on video! https://youtu.be/M-AMx425fZc?

Beautiful eaglets.

Lukin is the name of the little White-tail eaglet at Port Lincoln. He is 50 days old today and is standing and walking on the crane nest quite steadily.

Beau was on the LOP and Gabby was there, too. They are in the area of Milton. Send them good wishes – like I know you will to everyone.

It is raining in Fort Myers. The ground is absolutely saturated.

The nest is really a beauty. F23 and M15 have been working particularly hard and those cot rails are getting perfect. I wonder what it will look like after this hurricane? https://youtu.be/mOMRW5Ff8yw?

Brown Pelican caught on the Captiva Osprey cam where it is also raining and winds are gusting. Milton is not set to make landfall til Tuesday.

Sleeping kestrel chicks – six of them! https://youtu.be/aP6eWWocNcM?

The Black Storks are making progress on their way to Africa. Some have arrived. You can follow their journeys on the interactive BirdMap.

Calico’s Tip for the Day: Go for a walk! Or, if you can’t, sit outside in the sunshine. It will do you more good than you can imagine!

As most of you are aware, my husband has Lewy Body Dementia. Getting out in nature is essential not only to HIS mental health, but also mine. Taking part in simple activities, like building a bird feeder, is also key to one’s well being. It was not rocket science. Pre-drilled holes, but it helped with confidence. So if you know of someone who needs a boost, see what is happening at your local wildlife centre and take them! Sign up for a morning bird walk, build a bird house, learn to identify raptors. Life is truly beautiful – live it! Our dance card is full – every day there is something even if it is a trip to the local farmer’s market for their final event. The local honey is divine. Fantastic in tea or on toast.

Thank you so much for being with us today. Send warm wishes to everyone in the path of Milton as Florida prepares to get hit again.

Bird World is so exciting with all the new babies. Watch the cams, check them out, rewind to see the wonderful feedings. Watching falcons is so much different than ospreys. Now that we know that the fish fairies will visit Port Lincoln, we can relax. See you soon!

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, H’, Oak Hammock Marsh, CNN Weather, Olympic Park Eagle Cam 4, SK Hideaways, Falcon Cam Project, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Heidi McGrue, Olympic Park Eagle Cam, NEFL-AEF, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Window to Wildlife, Charter Group of Wildlife Ecology, BirdMap, and The Guardian.

Falcon chicks everywhere…Friday in Bird World

4 October 2024

Hello Everyone,

‘A’ writes: “At 14:27 mum gets up a little and allows us to see the third egg shell completely cracked in half. There is a very damp chick still squashed inside the eggshell as mum tucks the hatching chick underneath her. So the official hatch time will be very shortly afterwards. By 14:30:30, the shell is completely separated and we can see two distinctly separate halves. So I would probably put the official hatch time at around 14:30 on 4 October. And then there were three on the ledge. “

Heidi caught their feeding! https://youtu.be/RAg7mEspJzo?

‘A’ sent this video – very short – when there were two! https://youtu.be/DWdRwiDYyPU?

Several of you are traveling on some great adventures right now. My family and I wish you wonderful times and a safe return to your home.

Thursday was a bright sunny day but it was decidedly fall with the nip in the air. It is a time for apple galette, pumpkin loaf, robust stews – comfort food. The birds in the garden seem to be eating more as the days get colder. Certainly the solid suet is not sitting too long til it needs to be replaced! ‘The Boyfriend’ stares at me while he waits for his dish to be filled!!!!!!

Missey didn’t care. She just wanted lots of brushes on Thursday and some chicken and rice.

One of the most exciting sightings in Manitoba is that of a family of Red-headed Woodpeckers. Seen last year for the first time and again this fall- it is quite the rarity. They must be breeding up north somewhere. No one is saying the precise location for their protection.

Red-headed Woodpecker” by Greg Schechter is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

All About Birds describes the Red-headed Woodpecker: “The gorgeous Red-headed Woodpecker is so boldly patterned it’s been called a “flying checkerboard,” with an entirely crimson head, a snow-white body, and half white, half inky black wings. These birds don’t act quite like most other woodpeckers: they’re adept at catching insects in the air, and they eat lots of acorns and beech nuts, often hiding away extra food in tree crevices for later. This magnificent species has declined severely in the past half-century because of habitat loss and changes to its food supply.”

Their territory is here. I notice that the breeding grounds are in the Southern part of our province. So the woodpecker family is locating itself north. That is interesting. I need to find out more!

Here are some Cool Facts from All About Birds:

  • Cool Facts
    • The Red-headed Woodpecker is one of only four North American woodpeckers known to store food, and it is the only one known to cover the stored food with wood or bark. It hides insects and seeds in cracks in wood, under bark, in fenceposts, and under roof shingles. Grasshoppers are regularly stored alive, but wedged into crevices so tightly that they cannot escape.
    • Red-headed Woodpeckers are fierce defenders of their territory. They may remove the eggs of other species from nests and nest boxes, destroy other birds’ nests, and even enter duck nest boxes and puncture the duck eggs.
    • The Red-headed Woodpecker benefited from the chestnut blight and Dutch elm disease outbreaks of the twentieth century. Though these diseases devastated trees they provided many nest sites and foraging opportunities for the woodpeckers.
    • The striking Red-headed Woodpecker has earned a place in human culture. Cherokee Indians used the species as a war symbol, and it makes an appearance in Longfellow’s epic poem The Song of Hiawatha, telling how a grateful Hiawatha gave the bird its red head in thanks for its service.
    • The Red-headed Woodpecker has many nicknames, including half-a-shirt, shirt-tail bird, jellycoat, flag bird, and the flying checker-board.
    • Pleistocene-age fossils of Red-headed Woodpeckers—up to 2 million years old—have been unearthed in Florida, Virginia, and Illinois.
    • The Red-headed Woodpecker was the “spark bird” (the bird that starts a person’s interest in birds) of legendary ornithologist Alexander Wilson in the 1700s.
    • The oldest Red-headed Woodpecker on record was banded in 1926 in Michigan and lived to be at least 9 years, 11 months old.

We have hatches in Australia and some new excitement on the screens.

If you missed it, the hatch for Diamond and Xavier. Such a cutie pie with its little pink beak open for some food. https://youtu.be/hh-GWZg5z00?

Breakfast for Diamond and Xavier’s wee one.

Xavier ready with more prey!

Pigeon dinner at 367 Collins Street.

M15 and F23 are working hard on that nest. Reliable. Not drama. Or let us hope not. https://youtu.be/juoU94qAxA8?

With the return of Beau, work on the nest at NE Florida seems to be stalling. Let’s hope that changes. The chat moderator notes: “Beau returned on 8/24 and Gabrielle on 9/1. Last year’s “visitor” 24E1, showed up mid-Sept and Beau disappeared for just over 2 weeks. Beau reappeared yesterday, a bit scuffed up but lookng good.”

Gabby followed Beau to the nest Thursday evening. Looks like they are settled for the evening.

It is raining at Port Lincoln. Mum is really wiggling around in that nest. We should have a hatch anytime. Gosh – we are going to be busy. Hatches at Melbourne, Orange, and then Port Lincoln with the sea eaglets getting their legs and wing flapping.

There was a hint of a hole in one egg but nothing confirmed.

Heidi has been monitoring PLO and writes. “All night on 10/4 we were observing for a possible pip.  There was a dark spot showing up on one of the eggs in IR lighting.  But, the spot never changed in size or shape, there was no cracking around it, or edges of shell seen.  So, it may just have been a spot of dirt.  No pip could be confirmed during the daylight hours of 10/4.  They are now in darkness w/IR lighting in the evening 10/4.  I’m going to continue to monitor throughout their nighttime hours 10/5.”

Heidi and I both agree that it is not looking good for egg 1 and that could be the case for egg 2 as well according to the historical hatch of 34-36 days. Here are the dates of the eggs:

Egg 1 laid 8/26, 0357.   10/5 = 40 days.

Egg 2 laid 8/29, 0547.   10/5 = 37 days.

Egg 3 laid 9/1,  0529.    10/5 = 34 days.

Just look at how big the Growing Home osplet is today!

I hope that all of the albatross chicks on the headland have fledged. There was at least one still there a couple of days ago. Please keep everyone in this area of New Zealand in your warm thoughts.

What does it feel like to see the last few birds before they head off on an epic migration?

Oh, my goodness, what fun. Feeding time at a wildlife rehabilitation centre in Toronto. You can sign up and watch all the action! https://youtu.be/rPUrZascFnE?

Do you know what a Loon’s foot waggle is all about?

Weather is causing some havoc as the winds are blowing at such a speed the migrants cannot cross The Straits into Africa.

Calico’s Tip for the Day: Make Halloween Safe for Everyone. A lot of children have allergies. Many have weight problems. Calico suggests that instead of giving out candies that you check out options like stickers, glow sticks, fancy erasers, funny pencils and cute things that you find or collect over the year.

Calico also reminds everyone against decorating with the fake spider webs. Birds get caught in them as do other wildlife. Please ask your friends and neighbours to be kind to our feathered friends during this time of fun. Thank you!

Thank you so much for being with us today. Take care all. See you soon.

Thank you so much to the following for their notes, posts, videos, announcements, articles, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, J’, Heidi McGrue, Guardian Australia, Openverse, All About Birds, SK Hideaways, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam and Cilla Kinross, 367 Collins Street by Mirvac, Androcat, SW Florida Eagle Cam, NEFL-AEF, Port Lincoln Ospreys, The Royal Albatross Centre, The Guardian, Toronto Wildlife Centre, Loon Preservation Society, SOS Tesla.