More Eagle eggs…tributes to Flaco…Sunday in Bird World

25 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone!

It is +7 C in Winnipeg and everyone seems to be outside, smiling, walking their dogs or cats. The squirrels and Black-capped Chickadees were out at The English Garden. It really was superb despite my angst over the fact that we need the snow, we need our normal winter.

I am smiling. 4.8 km. It was a good day for a walk. Limited ice, lots of sunshine!

At home, Missey and Hugo Yugo found the store room. Quilts piled high on storage bins in case they wanted to look out. It is awaiting spring cleaning, but these two did not care! Well, not quite true. Hugo Yugo raised her head. She did not want her nap disturbed by me.

Lewis and Missey spent hours at this window next to one another, watching the Chickadees that had a nest there. Life goes on. Hopefully Hugo Yugo will spend time there with Miss.

It has been a horrid week. Trees were cut down, Hugo Yugo was ill and is now well, and ‘The Boyfriend’ disappearing topped it all. He did return. And then he was gone again. Not like him! A few of us feared the worst, but then he showed up at 1620 Saturday for food, and as I am writing this, he is eating kibble from the dishes left by my neighbour. Turns out he was locked in her garage for a few days. So…please check to ensure no kitties are locked in yours if you leave for a few days. Things turned around. I cannot do anything about the trees, but plant more in my garden or move which I don’t wish to do — I really couldn’t leave the garden animals. So, forward!

First, there is a correction. I had originally posted that Stella and Talon had their first egg on the 21st. Then I heard that they had three and thought I was wrong. It appears that the second egg was laid yesterday -Saturday- at the Florida-Gainesville nest, so let’s rewind. If there is to be a third, it should be in the nest on the 27th.

Andor and Cruz have their first egg of the 2024 season at Fraser Point in the Channel Islands. You may recall that they are Lillibet and Victor’s parents. Victor was rescued and treated by the Ojai Raptor Centre before being rereleased to the wild in 2023.

The first egg for Dad and the new female at ND-LEEF (ND17’s nest) was laid Saturday evening.

The Centreport Eagles have egg number 2. It feels like the sky is raining eagle eggs as of late.

Jak and Audacity teach us the meaning of love and hope. It has been three years since they fledged a single eaglet. Will we dance for joy on 8 March – we certainly will – if this egg survives to hatch!

PB sent a great image of Meadow this morning. Unless something changes, it appears that we no longer have to worry about Meadow’s survival. Isn’t that fantastic?

They are both rather itchy at Eagle Country.

Beau and Gabby also teach us about love and endurance and accepting one another’s learning curves. The couple returned to their nest after abandoning their egg on Saturday working away. Maybe they will have eaglets next year, maybe not. For now, the two are keeping their territory out of the hands of intruders and living their lives.

Tiny bobbleheads at Superbeaks.

JBS20 has had nice crops all Saturday. The arrival to the nest of the second adult made for some happy moments. AE sent a screen capture of that happy reunion.

Are you holding on to the edge of your seats? Today is the 25th of February. We are four days away from pip/hatch watch for Jackie and Shadow. FOUR.

Shadow has been up to his old stick trick to try and get some incubation time – and when the exchange happens, we get to see three intact eggs.

At the Captiva Eagle nest of Connie and Clive, their surviving eaglet, Cal, is getting proficient at self-feeding!

Ron and Rose are having R6 feed himself most of the time, too.

Chase and Cholyn’s precious egg at Two Harbours.

A view of the two eggs at Duke Farms.

And two eggs at Decorah North!

Royal Cam chick watched over by parent LGK followed by some good feedings. It is always hard to see these little ones left while the adults are out foraging. I wonder what kind of a gardener this one will be?

Giliath is doing well. Making the rounds and catching Puffers, too.

Bonding taking place at Lake Murray Osprey Platform. Lucy lost all her chicks to the GHO last year as well as her mate. I am disappointed that the protective guards used at Cowlitz PUD successfully in 2023 were not tried at this nest.

It is touching that so many are grieving over the death of Flaco, the Eurasian Owl. Tributes poured in from everywhere – the major newspapers and stations as well as a myriad of FB groups.

People and news crews gathered to remember this remarkable owl. Poems were written, tears were shed.

The Guardian carried Flaco’s story.

The personal testimonials about how Flaco inspired them to change jobs or to even live are very touching in this New York Times article.

Could there have been other factors contributing to that collision?

My inbox has been full of the same question – how do I feel about Flaco’s death? The simple answer is I was both sad and conflicted when I heard about his death. I am glad that out of his fourteen years (13 in captivity), he could live one of them freely, being an owl, learning to hunt and flying freely. This will conflict with many people whose opinions I respect and who I contact for help if a raptor is in danger in their area. My thoughts come from seeing our local eagle, Majestic, sitting in a 10 x 10 ft cage – it is a cage, come on. She did this for years and years before an enclosure like the one Rita has was built. Majestic cannot fly and cannot live in the wild. There was nothing wrong with Flaco – he was, as all animals in small enclosures in a zoo are, nothing short of a display object. I cannot even imagine what it would be like for a healthy owl to be confined. So…I am so sad he has died, but I am so glad he was able to fly free.

I just received a message that the ospreys from West Africa are beginning to arrive in Spain! We are less than three weeks away from UK arrivals if they are as early as Maya was one year. Gosh, golly…..And remember. We are FOUR days away from pip/hatch at FOBBV with Jackie and Shadow.

Thank you for being with me today. If you want more images and discussion about Flaco, I urge you to check out Bruce Yolton’s blog. He is a photographer and has followed Flaco from the beginning. I know that he preferred that Flaco was safe in his enclosure, so we will agree to disagree. He is, however, talented and observant of all wildlife in the area. Take care everyone. There are too many Bald Eagle eggs, and the Ospreys are coming online. It is going to get busy. Take care. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, images, posts, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘AE, EJ, MP, PB’, IWS/Explore.org, Trudi Kron, ND-LEEF, Eagle Country, NEFL-AEF, Superbeaks, JB Sands Wetlands, FOBBV, Window to Wildlife, Duke Farms, Bald Eagles of Centerport Live Stream, tulsaducati, PLO, Laurie Spencer, Brendan Hall, Stella Hamilton, MandaPanda73, Pauline Ludwig, Janet Walker, Ian Ingle, The Guardian and The New York Times.

And his name is Archie and her name is Dixie…Wednesday in Bird World

21 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

The City put up the signs and cleared all the diseased Elm trees on my block. It is so sad to see these 122-year-old trees cut down, but…I understand they had to go. I wish there had been some foresight, and smaller trees were planted some time ago in anticipation that these might have to be cut down. The beautiful canopy that covered the streets in my neighbourhood once the leaves come in the spring is now gone for the most part. I feel like I live on a barren moonscape. Thankfully, my little plot has trees and shrubs that shelter the animals. There will be more planted this spring. I wonder what options the City will give us for species.

Congratulations to the New Guy who has a name – Archie Williams. Apparently it was a no brainer. We hope that you and Annie have a great season and a long life together.

He isn’t ‘Whatshisname’ anymore! And yes, he was lucky to be picked by Annie…his entire life changed. The ‘King’ of the Campanile.

So many books were written during the pandemic as people worldwide were required to stay ‘put’. So many of those books talk about nature’s glory right before us or the healing power of birds and trees. The book that I am just finishing, 12 Birds to Save Your Life by Charlie Corbett, is one of those. (Priced between $10-21.99 CDN.). No beautiful coloured images but a good solid read to make you look again at the life around you.

Corbett’s mother dies of cancer. He falls apart. The 12 birds in the book bring him back to life. One of those is the House Sparrow.

Long-time readers of my blog will know that I love House Sparrows. they will also know that I disdain people who set up bird feeders only to resort to everything possible so that they do not have to provide seeds for these little songbirds. How reckless. Why they are gone, and their numbers are declining significantly, we will not get them back. In my garden, it is the songs of the sparrows that can be heard halfway down the lane not those of the Blue Jays or the European Starling, the Woodpeckers, or the Pine Siskins. Sometimes it is the Crows, but it is always the sparrows. Here are some quotes from Corbett about his relationship with Sparrows.

“Male House Sparrow (Passer Domesticus)” by foxypar4 is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

“Not that long ago, the house sparrow- that most important, nay saucy, of characters, – provided the background music to the life of town and country dweller alike; the cheerful chirruping never ceased. But no more. They have vanished form our streets, and even from large tracts of the countryside, too. The silence is deafening….I wander the silent sparrow-free streets and lanes. Some people blame loss of habitat, while others blame overpredation from sparrow hawks and cats. Some people even blame unleaded petrol. Personally I think it is a mixture of the first two theories. Sparrows used to thrive in town and country because in the old days our houses were more tumbledown affairs, with gardens full of grass, flowers, and seed. Sparrows like to nest in cracks in the wall, under broken tiles or tucked into a loose brick, and they eat grasses, grains, and seeds. We no longer tolerate this sort of idiosyncrasy in our houses. Our gardens, more often than not, are lifeless low-maintenance lawns. Green deserts….We have left no room for nature. Put simply, there is nothing for them to eat. We’ve evicted them from our lifestyles without even realising that we’ve done it.”

He continues, “From these sparrows, I learned an incredibly important lesson: just to live. To take solace in the everyday. Even in the grey skies of an empty Tuesday afternoon – a prime time for endless thinking and creeping melancholy. But a sparrow doesn’t know it is Tuesday afternoon. They get on with what needs getting on with, oblivious to my inner struggles. As the philosopher Alan Watts once said: ‘The meaning of life is just to be alive. It is so plain and so obvious and so simple. And yet, everybody rushes around in a great panic as if it were necessary to achieve something beyond themselves.’ ” (173-75).

In North America, the population numbers of House Sparrows has, according to Cornell Bird Lab, declined by 84% since 1966. In Europe and the UK, the numbers are also declining dramatically. These declines are significant enough for me to beg you to feed them at your feeders. Don’t try fancy trips of aluminium foil or whatever, but embrace them for their lovely song and let’s see if we can help get their numbers up.

The House Sparrow is on the Red List of Birds in the UK. They are cited as being ‘Globally Threatened’. As my Great Bird Count suggests, the number of House Sparrows in my garden has dropped dramatically since last winter. Instead of counts in the hundreds, there were maybe 45 tops.

Egg collectors still threaten endangered species. Convicted for the third time what will they do with this man?

We had the first hatch at Superbeaks and the next egg is showing signs of an eaglet being here by the time I hit ‘publish’ tomorrow morning, the 21st. Superbeaks confused me. They kept saying they could hear the chick in egg #3. Well, egg three when you also 1 and 2? That was my thinking, but Superbeaks counts differently – thanks, ‘H’, for that. The third egg is the first egg of the second clutch. Egg one and egg two from the first clutch did not hatch. OK. I get it now.

Cheeping heard from egg 4 so it won’t be long. First chick of second clutch at Superbeaks has been named Dixie.

Meadow did alright on Tuesday after the rain at the weekend and Swampy having her nose out of joint. Thank goodness. So much food and super parents – it just didn’t seem possible we could lose an eaglet. Things seem to be on the mend.

Oh, the weather was quite nasty in Big Bear Valley when I checked on Jackie and Shadow earlier. I worry about them slipping on wet sticks and puncturing the eggs that are now 8 days away from pip.

And then the snow came. I really am on tender hooks as to what is going to happen at this nest. Note: “Tenters and tenterhooks were commonly used from the fourteenth century, both as an important part of the process of weaving woolen fabric. Starting sometime in the eighteenth century, the phrase “on tenterhooks” came to mean “in suspense,” the way a piece of cloth is suspended from tenterhooks on a tenter.” That suspense is going to turn into a full blown anxiety attack in a week if we don’t get some decent weather on this nest.

Still snowing.

Horrible wind and little pelts this morning on Jackie.

Jak and Audacity still have their one precious egg at Sauces Canyon. Fingers and toes crossed for them as well.

Is there a second egg for Pa and Missey at Berry College? Sure looked like Missey was in labour when I checked, but she wasn’t giving us any peeks so I cannot say for sure.

Yes, that egg did arrive, but not until later! Congratulations Pa and Missey on the 2nd egg of your second clutch!

The Royal Albatross chick was weighed on the 20th. It didn’t look like it was going to fit in that sack, but it did!

Royal Cam chick slept partially alone.

Two nice fish came to the Captiva nest. Adults appeared to eat one of them while Connie fed the other to Cal. Perhaps Clive or Connie will move Lusa’s remains off the nest soon.

Is there going to be a bonded couple on the Captiva Osprey platform, finally? Jack and LO7??

So grateful to Ildiko Pokk for getting those screen captures of two little osplets at Pelican Bay.

At SW Florida, it looks like M15 and F23 are keeping E23 well fed. That eaglet is huge! And yes, some mysterious meat appeared on the nest on Tuesday.

The American Eagle Foundation is reminding people that we may see Gabby and Beau only occasionally. They have now abandoned the egg and since they do not need “the nursery tree”, we will likely not see them much. They are still in the area and will not migrate til later. Gabby normally returns in September.

Ron and Rita seem to be enjoying every minute they can with R6. What a big eaglet! Goodness, when HE stands up, you can see those beautiful strong legs and that fat little bottom…love the colour combo of light greys and espresso brown/black with that pop of white on the top of the head! This is a guy with good taste! — And yes, R6 is a ‘guy’.

The JB Sands Wetlands eaglet is getting bigger too…It is so nice to be able to ‘see’ this little one as it develops. Thermal down now.

They are on egg watch at Pittsburgh-Hays. Nothing so far on Tuesday the 20th.

News from Ventana Wildlife Society after the big storm that hit – they got all that rain and wind, too.

Iris’s cam is lie at Hellgate Canyon in Missoula, Montana. We are not expecting her back for 5 weeks, but she could fool us.

For those that have concerned themselves with Flacon and his living in the wild to the point of being ill that something might happen to him in the Central Park/Manhattan area, this post should help you get some peace. Flaco is in less danger than many of the raptors in the area for some of the reasons listed – and is at the same level of danger as the hawks and others that eat mice/rats due to rodenticide.

There is a new study on these designer rodenticides that has come out. Each of us should create a web of individuals and businesses that will spread to other individuals and businesses to stop the use of these dangerous toxins.

Milda and H492 have been visiting their nest in Durbe County, Latvia. I am so looking forward to little White-tail eaglets this year.

Arthur visited the nest at Cornell – Big Red was there on Monday. We are not expecting eggs for at least another three and a half weeks.

The earliest that an Osprey on a streaming cam has arrived in the UK was Maya on the 12th of March at Rutland. That was early. Using that as a marker, we are 21 days from a possible arrival. Wow. I am getting Osprey fever! Thank goodness those eggs of Jackie and Shadow will have hatched by then!!!!!!

Thank you for being with me today. Take care all. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, screen captures, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: The City of Winnipeg, Cal Falcons, SK Hideaways, 12 Birds to Save Your Life, Openverse, The Guardian, Raptor Persecution UK, Superbeaks, Eagle Country, FOBBV, Gracie Shepherd, Cornell Bird Lab, Sharon Dunne, Window to Wildlife, Iloilo A Pork, NEFL-AEF, WRDC, Lloyd Brown, JB Sands Wetlands, PIX Cams, Ventana Wildlife Society, Lucille Powell, @urbanhawks, David Lei, Tufts Now, LDF, and Cornell RTH Cam.

Saturday in Bird World

17 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

It is never a good morning after we lose a raptor, and waking up on Friday and finding that Lusa had died during the night was incredibly sad. Indeed, all went to bed after seeing her/him eat feeling much more optimistic about the situation at Captiva.

At the same time I was reading a note about Lusa, Hugo Yugo was vomiting, had diarrhoea, and was lethargic. She was fine when she went to bed but, by morning, he was not playing and didn’t want any treats – sure signs that something was not right. We spent the afternoon at the vet. It is a long weekend in Canada, the vet clinics are packed, and we have to go to a different vet than we usually use. After tests for any poisons (they came back negative), she had an IV for hydration and an injection to calm her stomach and had the Flora-Flora powder to sprinkle on her food. If she does not improve, then we move to X-rays, etc. The diagnostic end of it all. For Hugo Yugo to not eat is unsettling, just like with Lusa. For her not to play is just not right. Again, the same goes for the eaglet. Our condolences go out to Lori Covert, the folks at Window to Wildlife, but most of all Clive, Connie, and Cal.

When Connie and Joe lost Hope and Peace to rodenticide poisoning in 2020-21, it was a real tragedy. The parents knew what had happened. They stood over the dead body of their second eaglet in quiet disbelief. The eaglets had consumed less than a whole rat, but it was a designer poison, and Lori has spent years trying to get people to stop using rodenticides on the island. Joe never returned to the nest after the mourning period. And I will say it clearly and loud – he felt guilty for bringing that rat to the nest that killed their kids. Ask Marc Bekoff, Professor of Avian Behaviour at the University of Colorado at Boulder – animals have feelings. They care. They are sentient like we are.

So far, Cal looks good. They cannot, for safety and legal reasons, remove the body of Lusa. The adults might try to shove the body off the nest, even carry it and drop it in the ocean, or Lusa might wind up as part of the nest. There is no fear of Cal eating its sibling (yes, I have had multiple questions about that). I would have concerns if Lusa had highly pathogenic avian influenza. But that seems highly unlikely because Cal is doing so well. We saw siblings die close together on other nests if it was HPAI.

Connor stated that getting on a nest after four weeks is hard because the other eaglet might get spooked and jump off. That is the last thing we want to happen to Cal. So keep sending positive energy to this nest – it would be grand if Connie and Clive fledged an eaglet this year. With Connick having issues and falling off the nest last year and now going to the Smithsonian, it has been a while since Mum Connie saw a baby fly free.

Angel and Tom are both at their nest. The Blue Jays are apparently not bothering Tom but are aggravating Angel. If they continue to come to the nest, the camera will go live.

I have not done a lot of nest checking today so this post could be ‘slim’. I did head to Eagle Country to check on Swampy and Meadow. Indeed, all of the eaglets that have survived on the nests this year are a miracle. There were so many incidents of DNH…

Blaze was on the nest feeding his eaglets and did a splendid job of it. Both got lots and lots to eat! Gosh, Dad was very even-handed in that feeding. Those two are getting their thermal down. See how dark they are getting, and the soft, fluffy baby down is coming off., Darlings. Just little darlings.

A little bit of a mohawk coming.

E23 is looking good at SW Florida. Just keep all good wishes coming to every nest with babes – we never know what can happen. I am not saying this to worry you, but rather to appreciate those who are healthy and to stay vigilant should something be amiss.

It is very hard to see the eaglet at JB Sands Wetlands, but there are many watching and fingers crossed for this one to fledge. JBS20 certainly does take up more nest space than it did a few weeks ago! Only eaglets have the advantage of having all the food to themselves.

The only eaglet at WRDC continues to grow and thrive, but only after we had to hold our breath a few times. What a year it has been! We will not forget it soon, for all the wrong reasons. That said, the streaming cam is down, and, of course, right before that happened, R6 was fed another pigeon with bands on its legs. ‘H’ tells us, “The cams went down about 4.5 hours ago.  R6 ate another pigeon band this afternoon, and we are supposed to be on pellet-and-band watch!  Not only that, but the pigeon had a band on each leg, and we were also waiting to see which eagle would eat the other band!  Rose ate a pigeon band on 2/11.’

I don’t know about anyone else but seeing these healthy eaglets eat leg bands and nappies and possibly poisoned rats is getting to me. We have so few eaglets this year…ah. Each is precious.

We are a day away from hatch watch at Superbeaks. Pepe and Muhlady should be hearing their chicks inside the shell. Oh, let us hope these eggs are viable. They are such good parents and just got on with life and had a second clutch. Fingers crossed along with toes.

Jackie and Shadow are looking pretty confident. We are now 12 days away from the hatch at Big Bear. You best get the worry beads, the stomach upset medicine, or whatever works for you. This will either be the day we leap out of our roofs in happiness or sit and fill a bucket full of tears. I am thinking of eaglets this year…the champagne is ready.

A look at how Friday went for Jackie and Shadow.

You need to get your votes in! This is the news from Cal Falcons about naming The New Guy.

“After over 200 suggestions and hundreds of votes, we have our four finalists:

Archie, after Archie Williams
Galen, after John Galen Howard
Morgan, after Julia Morgan
and
Mulford, after Walter Mulford

Vote for the winner here before Monday at 5pm:

https://bit.ly/NewGuy2024

Here’s a little more about each of our candidates:

Archie Williams was a successful Cal athlete and engineer. He won gold in the 400m race at the 1936 Olympics, became a highly decorated pilot and instructor, and was an influential teacher in California High Schools. Archie Williams High School is named in his honor.

John Galen Howard was one of the most influential architects at UC Berkeley. He designed many of the most iconic buildings on campus, including the Campanile, where Annie and New Guy live! He also designed Sather Gate, California Memorial Stadium, and many other buildings.

Julia Morgan was the first woman to earn a degree in Civil Engineering at UC Berkeley. She became a prolific and celebrated architect. You can see her work on campus in the form of the Greek Theatre. However, her most well-known design is Hearst Castle.

Walter Mulford was a long-time forestry professor at UC Berkeley, serving as the first Dean of the School of Forestry (now a part of the College of Natural Resources). He encouraged students to gain hands on experience outdoors and founded the Forestry Field Camp in Plumas National Forest.”

Please go and vote. Thanks SP for all that great information!

Wow. Talk about a miracle. Have a look at what happened to this crushed falcon egg! We see these when there is high humidity…and we hold our breath. This gives hope.

When I get sad, I always head to the Royal Albatross Colony. Why? Because I know that the NZ DOC Rangers do everything in their power to ensure that these chicks fledge!

Look at this cutie.

The two osplets at Pelican Bay appear to be doing rather well.

Thunder and Akecheta taking turns incubating their three eggs. Oh, I so hope that this nest is full of little eaglets just like at Big Bear.

One egg at Sauces. Dr Sharpe will be conducting a survey of the nests on the Channel Islands on the 24th according to the moderator of chat. We should be able to find out more about the other nests that we cannot see on cam after that visit.

No egg at Two Harbours for Chase and Cholyn, yet.

Andor and Cruz were both working on the Fraser Point nest – between the camera going on and coming off.

I missed this great video shot with the Centreport Bald Eagle Mum a few days ago. Stunning footage!

At Redding, Liberty proudly stands above her egg delaying incubation and awaiting the arrival of the second egg.

Fireworks. Anyone reading my blog knows that fireworks are dangerous for wildlife as well as for domestic pets. Why we as a society continue to allow millions of dollars to literally go up in smoke is beyond me when there is so much to be done for the environment, wildlife, human health, education, and housing. So, the fact that there are plans for a firework display in a nature reserve in Spain is incomprehensible.

For a smile, a close up of that Puffer Fish that Bradley was eating on the ropes on the 16th at Port Lincoln.

Thank you so much for being with me today. Please send your good wishes to all the nests and, also, to little Hugo Yugo. She is just not herself yet. She ate a few bites of food and then wanted in her carrier to be alone and sleep. I do worry about her so much. After losing Lewis, I am perhaps a bit sensitive, but Hugo Yugo has had such a rough start in life and she is so tiny – well…I am concerned.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, screen captures, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, H, J, SP’, Window to Wildlife, Heidi McGrue, Jenna Lynn Dorsey, Eagle Country, SW Florida Eagle Cam, JBS Wetlands, WRDC, Superbeaks, FOBBV, SK Hideaways, Cal Falcons, Elite Falconry, Royal Cam Albatross/NZ DOC, Sharon Dunne, Ildiko A Polk, FORE, the IWS/Explore.org, PLO, and The Guardian.

Tuesday in Bird World

13 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Monday was warm on the Canadian Prairies. At 0 degrees C everything is melting. It is damp and icky. The beautiful white snow is gone and is now puddles of brown coloured muck – salt and sand mixed together. Oh, gosh, golly. I want winter back!

Dyson and the kits were at the feeders loading up on peanuts. There were some sparrows and the Starlings. I didn’t see the little Reds, but I wasn’t always looking. The peanuts were, however, cleared up in record time, so they must have been scurrying about! 

I spent the day taking apart and putting ‘back’ together an IKEA Billy Bookcase—a word of advice on these flatpack bookcases. If you do not intend to move them, get a bottle of wood glue, put glue in every hole and then attach it. Then, being careful, glue that back on as well. I hope never to have to do this again! The three will never be moved – not during my lifetime! As a result, the blog is a bit short today. At least you cannot hear me yelling! The ‘girls’ were very patient today—such little sweeties. 

Annie and the new male are getting rather chummy and bonding more in the scrape on Monday. Cal Falcons has decided to name him, too. Details under the image.

Flaco, the escapee Eurasian Owl, appears to be doing just fine. Remember. Flaco could die from eating a rodent that had ingested poison. All of the wildlife that feed on the rodents in Manhattan could! Including the Red-tail hawks in the area. Indeed, many of them have and it is very sad. It is time to end this practice and let the raptors take care of them!

Here is the link to the streaming cam at Mt Ibuki in Japan, home to a pair of Golden Eagles. ”According to current trends in census size and reproduction, the Japanese golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos japonica) is at risk of extinction this century, leading the Japanese government to recognize the subspecies as endangered. It is now the focus of national conservation efforts.” 

Last year the only surviving Golden eaglet sadly starved. It caused great concern particularly since the raptors are considered to be greatly endangered.

Jackie and Shadow continue to be ever so careful when they are getting on and off the eggs or doing the old switcheraroo for incubation duties.

I thought maybe they were not going to eat on the nest, but Jackie proved me wrong as she nibbled on that piece of fish.

We are now 16 days away from hatch watch for Jackie and Shadow and their three eggs at Big Bear.

Thanks Abby and Blaze! We really cannot see those darling eaglets now!

We are expecting the second egg for Sally and Harry at Moorings Park on Valentine’s Day. 

At first glance, I thought this was Ervie on the light, but it is Bradley. There are his beautiful leg tags. 

These are the reports for a day ago. Both fledglings are still coming to the barge for fish. But, read the report. It looks they are each trying to fish as well. Fantastic.

PLO posted some stats for Giliath. The posting below shows you how far he has travelled and the places around the nest. Well done, Giliath. You are doing fantastic.

This is the information for Gil’s older brother, Ervie:

“2024.02.13 – Port Lincoln Barge – Ervie – October 2023 to January 2024.

The satellite tracking data for Ervie for the time October 2023 to January 2024. At a broad scale view, clearly the dense clusters of points shows his preference for fishing including the Port Lincoln Grain Terminal, grain silos, between Stenross boat facility to the Moreton Bay fig tree, Delamere and northern shore of Proper Bay (adjacent greyhound Road) and Boston Island. I have over layed same data from October 2022 to January 2023 and almost identical pattern of movements. Not surprising his avoidance of the Porter Bay Barge nest during the 2023 breeding season. Elevation data shows his movements and distance covered over the 4 months = 3,364km and an average height of 58 meters. This Osprey is also now in his third year and appears to be a most competent hunter.”

The new male at Dulles-Greenway replacing Martin is named Lewis! Oh, Lewis! (Fabulous name…you all know why.) Lewis has big talons to fill. Martin and Rosa had no trouble raising three eaglets. Let’s see what happens this year. We are on egg watch.

It is so lovely to see Mum at Duke Farms not buried under snow.

An eagle was at the ND-LEEF nest quite early.

Liberty and Guardian were both at their Redding nest working away. I have to admit I am really nervous when I see that high water below them.

Rose and Ron should be very proud. They have such a beautiful eaglet this year in R6.

The Little Miami Conservancy Bald Eagle Cam is live with Bette and Baker. This nest is near Miami, Ohio – not Florida. Both were on the nest Monday working away. 

Here is the link to their streaming cam:

Beau has learned to incubate and stay the course. 17 hours. He has also done some other long stints. My goodness how I wish he had done this earlier when there was a chance this egg was viable…good practice for net year.

We are all looking forward to Rosie’s return, but none more so than Richmond! Condolences, Richmond, on the loss in the Super Bowl. Maybe next year for the 49ers.

BirdGuides Review of the Week for Birds in the UK.

How can we protect the raptors if the sentences handed out mean nothing to those convicted? More on the pair that laundered the Peregrine Falcons and their lack of a custodial sentence. They make the rules protecting wildlife a joke – and they know it and continue to abuse the systems that offer meagre protection.

It is beautiful, and soon we hope that Aran and Elan will be there, right before our eyes, in the Glaslyn Valley.

Word has come that the camera for Jak and Audacity might get repaired.

I missed it. It was Otepoti’s Birthday and every Kakapo deserves to have their birthday celebrated! If you do not know about the Kakapo, I have included the Kakapo Recovery Brochure below this posting. 

A fantastic book also arrived in the post last week, waiting for my attention. Written in 2010 by Alison Ballance, Kakapo. Rescued from the Brink of Extinction, it includes everything you would want to know about these evasive flightless parrots. It did not include any further information about Otepoti, sadly, as he was born 5 years after its publication. Thanks, ‘J’ for the recommendation! 

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

Thank you to the following for their posts, articles, videos, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’J’, Cal Falcons, Kathy Robles, Conservation Science, Japan Golden Eagle Cam, FOBBV, Eagle Country, Moorings Park, Mike Wood, PLO, Bart M, Dulles-Greenway, Duke Farms, ND-LEEF, FORE, WRDC, Little Miami Conservancy, Jerinelle Wray, SF Bay Ospreys, BirdGuides, Raptor Persecution UK, Bywyd Gwylld Glaslyn, Gracie Shepherd, and Kakapo Recovery.

Thursday in Bird World

8 February 2024

Good Morning,

Don’t look at Hugo Yugo’s eyes. They need to be wiped. You must focus on poor Calico’s eyes. Wonder what she is thinking? She was having such a leisurely nap when, you know who decided they wanted on top of the smallest cat tree with her. 

Hugo Yugo is so proud of herself. Gracious.

Missey and Hope pulled off the table cloth and each of them took turns flipping it about the conservatory. Missey is as wooly as ever.

Once Hope noticed that Hugo Yugo was not around, she settled in nicely at the top of the large cat tree and enjoyed a very blissful time. 

I came home from several appointments to find the streets blocked off and the tree-cutting equipment and men working diligently. The 1902 trees are diseased, but they are also the homes of the squirrels and the woodpeckers who like dead trees. They are also where Mr Crow and his extended family build their nests. I am grateful that no trees were cut down during the nesting season, but I am slightly distraught at how many need to be cut down, and I am wondering where the garden animals will find shelter and nesting places now. We wait to see.

The girls and I are starting a new book. Will keep you posted — and, yes, they still love their story time. It adds to the rhythm of our day. Like the book we are going to read, the birds saved someone’s life – well, these girls and the garden animals certainly top up the quality of my life. I am very thankful for them.


There are a lot of people where I live that envy all that snow in Big Bear. Everyone wants to go skiing and we are having rain! (It is supposed to get colder – I am hoping!). We are 19 days away from pip watch.

Jackie broke the record for incubation. 62 straight hours until she was relieved by Shadow.

This is just too cute not to post. What are all the adjectives we could use? Adorable? Expressive? Not to mention a great attention to detail. That is an amazing sculpture of Jackie and Shadow! 

Jackie and Shadow have the most extensive Bald Eagle streaming cams fan base. Let us all hope that three weeks from now, we will be shouting so loud that if there were people on the moon, they could hear us. I have a tiny bottle of champagne waiting.

Shadow delivered prey. I understand it is still on the nest. He takes over incubation and Jackie enjoys her break. The forecast is for bad weather to return again on Thursday. They can’t get a break!

The Duck that almost didn’t make it for dinner at Eagle Country.

https://www.facebook.com/eaglecountryofficial/videos/25084720337779863

Swampy and Meadow both had a good fish feast on Wednesday. Relief.

Meadow finally gets some nice big bites – after Swampy.

There are fish absolutely everywhere and other remnants of prey at the Eagle Country nest. Surely no one could go hungry here! Meadow has been getting good feedings all day Wednesday.

Little Meadow gets some bites.

No egg at Moorings Park. Gosh, Sally and Harry have fooled everyone!

At Port Lincoln, Gil found some fish on the nest and had a wee bit of a snack before the day began in South Australia.

Checking in at Superbeaks. We are less than two weeks away from the pip watch for the second clutch. In fact, it is only 10 days for the first egg today! Fingers crossed for these two eagles dedicated to raising a family again this year!

There is something to be said about being an only eaglet. R6 (and E23) are robust!

Finally a look at the only surviving eaglet at JB Sands Wetlands in Texas.

Cal and Lusa are so big and their plumage has changed completely into that of a juvenile compared to the little one above at JB Sands.

The cam operator at SW Florida got up close and personal with E23’s feather development. Not long until E23 looks exactly like Cal and Lusa!

It is chilly at the Port Tobacco Eagle nest. Both eagles, Hope and Chan, have been on the nest working on Wednesday regardless – In fact, we must remember that eagles actually prefer cooler weather as opposed to hotter.

It was a beautiful day at Dulles-Greenway but no egg yet.

I sure wish I knew what the distance was from the nest to the water that is flooding around Redding. It looks like it continues to rise significantly.

‘J’ sends us one of Mike Dakar’s images of one of the Centreport Eagles sliding on the ice on Long Island.

Latest post on SE31 from Judy Harrington:

The first Osprey egg has been laid at the Venice Golf and Country Club. Yes!

Oh, I was right. Bonnie was laying her first egg of the GHO season on the nest on Farmer Derek’s land. Congratulations Bonnie and Clyde!

Goodness. That TF Royal Cam Chick is growing like a bad weed on those squid shakes.

Jean-marie Dupart is the energy behind the Osprey counts in Senegal. The fundraising for the binoculars was for his assistants. Read what he does in a day when he is counting. It makes me tired. Thank you for all the hard work, Jean-marie and team!

These beautiful birds in West Africa will begin thinking about migrating back to their spring and summer breeding grounds in the UK and Europe. It is a hazardous journey. Many do not make it. We need to appreciate what they endure. It will help us to celebrate the triumph of their return to the nests.

How do they make it over the open seas?

A beautiful story about Oriental Greenfinches from BirdLife International written by HIH Princess Takamado.

‘H’ and I will be adding Osprey nests, eggs, and hatches to our 2024 International Osprey Data Project. I am currently looking for specific information on when the eggs at Pelican Bay were laid and when they hatched. If you happen to know, please send me a comment or a note in an e-mail: maryannsteggles@icloud.com    Last year we monitored 344 eggs. The goal was to establish survival rates and causes of death. I specifically look for siblicide, but last year, weather/starvation and predation were the main causes of death after eggs not hatching. We appreciate information on any nests that are followed and, in particular, those in Europe. Thank you for any information at any time!

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, pictures, screen captures, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, H, J’, FOBBV, Cali Condor, Chelsea Sheehan, Eagle Country, Moorings Park, PLO, Superbeaks, WRDC, JB Sands Wetlands, Window to Wildlife, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Port Tobacco Eagle Cam, Dulles-Greenway, FORE, Mike Dakar, Judy Harrington, Diana Lambertson, Androcat, Sharon Dunne, Jean-marie Dupart, Osprey Tales, Avian Report, BirdLife International, and The Royal Society.

Meadow gets a good meal…Tuesday in Bird World

6 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Another grey miserable day that chilled you to the bone regardless of the warm temperatures! It is time for rain jackets and puddle boots. Hard to believe. Wishing for snow.

It was another day of ‘Who is going to be the Queen of the Cat Tree’. It is all hard play and goes on from morning to night with the ‘top cat’ changing regularly. On Monday morning, Baby Hope was enjoying having a relaxing time on the top rung of the cat tree after breakfast. Then…she looks down, and who does she see? You guessed it! Hugo Yugo has arrived to disturb the peace. 

Ouch! Hugo Yugo is fearless and is fortunate that Baby Hope has a very sweet disposition. 

Baby Hope decides all she wants to do is get away or is she going to try to take over from another position on the cat tree?

The winner – for now,

While I was out, ‘L’ sent news that Meadow was being fed well today. Yahoo! Sometimes it is just those first few days for the oldest to set dominance and the beaking stops. This is fantastic. I was almost afraid to look.

Poor Jackie and Shadow. They cannot get a break from the horrific weather that is in California that is causing major flooding and mudslides. Pouring rain and now rain and snow mixed on Monday.

The deadly storm is slowly moving out of the area. 

It started off west at the nest of M15 and F23 in Fort Myers before the weather changed and little E23 could sun itself and dry out.

You can see the dramatic change in the plumage in the image below. Notice the quills holding the blood feathers for the tail and the few white dandelions left on the top of the head. The beak is becoming a shiny ebony, and the yellow legs, feet, and the mandible indicate this is a healthy little eaglet. 

E23 has attempted to do some self-feeding after finding some prey hidden in the nesting material.

M15 flew in with a big fish. ’J’ caught some screen captures of F23 feeding little E23 his lunch.

D Morningstar caught some good close ups of E23 – she was 36 days old on 5 February and is 37 today. Time passes so quickly. Look at the plumage and then look at those fuzzy babies at Eagle Country. What a difference a month makes.

The same weather system went through Captiva before hitting Fort Myers. Cal and Lusa are trying to stay warm and dry under Connie, but to no avail. They are way too big. What sweeties. After drying off, look at them both standing so tall and strong on those beautiful chrome yellow legs.

It was wet at the WRDC nest of Ron, Rose, and R6. Heidi Mc caught Ron being a ‘Dadbrella’. Way to go! Looks like there is still some coot left on the nest too, but catch R6’s crop! What a cutie.

At the Captiva Nest of Jack (and formerly of his mate Ruby who is MIA), it seems the male might have a new partner - just in time for breeding season we hope. She accepts his fish gift – that is a good start.

It looks like it could be just two eggs for Jack and Diane this season at Achieva. Fantastic!!!!

At JB Sands Wetlands it was sunny. I could not tell what was in the pantry but the little eaglet is being well taken care of. 

Did Ervie meet his brother Giliath when they were both out looking for fish?

More tracking for Ervie. Have to say it – Ervie is the ‘Rock Star’ of the Port Lincoln Osprey barge. Sorry, Gil and Brad.

I am getting so excited for Osprey season to begin that I can hardly think of anything else. Tiger Mozone posted an older video of Henry and EJ. It shows Henry returning from migration to discover EJ on eggs – not his! So what does Henry do? Watch.

Oh, don’t you just love Osprey behaviour!

Angel, the Leucistic Red-tail Hawk, is back at her nest! Window to Wildlife gives us the good news: “Angel is back! In late January Angel was seen on her nest while our team was out doing some routine maintenance and upgrades to the cameras for the upcoming season. The new upgrades will include better low-light viewing with infrared floodlights for a better viewing experience of Angel’s amazing nest!There is still some work to be done before the streams can go live, so stay tuned for more updates and an announcement of when that will be! We’re looking forward to another fantastic season and hope you’ll stop by the streams!”

Eagles at the ND-LEEF nest on Monday.

At the NE Florida nest of Gabby and Beau, Gabby had an unexpected visitor on Monday – A1. He even went into the nest bowl. Some worried that Beau had been injured in a fight with A1, but Beau did return later all talons in tact.

Bonnie has spent much of the day on the nest on Farmer Derek’s property in Kansas. We are expecting her to begin laying eggs in 2 or 3 days. Normally, Bonnie lays two eggs with successful hatches in past years, and both are fledging. They grow fast!

It sounded like thunder. The rain began in a gentle way and then really began coming down. I hope Monty and Hartley are safe and dry – and, I am wondering why they just don’t sit out the storm inside the scrape where it is dry. Any thoughts?

In Port Lincoln, Gil and Brad each had a fish on the 5th. Today they are both waiting, taking turns, to see who will be the lucky one on the nest when din-dins arrive.

Canada Geese are loud and the one who landed on the Decorah nest is no exception.

What does your City do during migration? Is it switching off the lights like a number of growing urban centres?

Why is switching lights off important? Let’s check.

Birdcast says: ”Light attracts and disorients migrating birds, confusing and exhausting them as well as making them vulnerable to collisions with buildings, not to mention other urban threats like cats and toxins.”

Popular Science gives us more information:

USFWS: 

Audubon has their own article on their Lights Out Programme – and there are hundreds more on the Internet. Educate yourself and your City! Save the birds.

When I adopted a Kakapo in 2022, I adopted Rangi. He is a very special Kakapo – at least 51 years old. His story is really worth a read – it unfolds in the posts below. Rangi is very special.

Here is the full text. It is very interesting. ”The known population at the time was just 90 ahead of another breeding season on Whenua Hou. Ranger Chris Birmingham was out checking the location of females when he heard booming from an unidentified male. As soon as he noticed the old metal leg tag, he knew this was an extra special find. Excitement passed through the team on the island and the bird was soon undergoing a full health check, sampling, and having a transmitted fitted. That night the team matched records to the tag number confirming it was Rangi, one of four males missing since their first release. Ranger Chris wrote a new database entry adding, “words cannot express the joy I feel at finding this guy!”

Genetic data shows Rangi fathered Wendy, Zephyr, Sarah, Adler, Merty and Ralph; making him a grandfather to 17 (including @Sirocco), and great-grandfather to nine. 

He hasn’t bred since 1981, but Rangi still booms in season and has been maintaining his bowl site recently. His exact age is unknown but he would be at least 51 now. He lives amongst dense supplejack vines making it tricky for rangers when it’s time for his annual health checks. Elusive yet crafty, he has been known to sneak quietly through the undergrowth to circle back behind rangers that are following him. Rangi is known as the artful dodger after all!”

Last but never least – we often hear the names of men who made a difference in the world of birds. But what about the women? This is a previously published article that is always good to visit again to remind ourselves that everyone can contribute! What a wonderful list of amazing women.

Thank you for being with us today. Please take care. We hope to see you soon!

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, screen captures, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog this morning: ’A, H, J, L’, Eagle Country, FOBBV, The Mercury News, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Visa, D Morningstar, Window to Wildlife, WRDC, Heidi Mc, Achieva Credit Union, JB Sands Wetlands, PLO, Tiger Mozone, BBC Report, ND-LEEF, Gracie Shepherd, Farmer Derek Owl Cam, All About Birds, San Jose City Hall, Bart M, Rosieanne B, National Audubon Society, BirdCast, Raptor Resource Project/Explore, USFWS, Audubon, and the Kakapo Recovery.

Waters continue to rise at Redding nest of Liberty and Guardian…Monday in Bird World

5 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

It was another warm not so nice day on the Canadian Prairies. Everything is shades of grey and brown. The snow is all dirty and the sky had no blue in it. Even the kittens just wanted to sleep! I felt the same way. A good book, a cup of ‘real’ hot chocolate (made with the best melted chocolate and hot milk) would have made the day perfect.

Missey was up and about and finally found the felted rock that Hope was playing in yesterday and used it as a pillow!

There were not a lot of birds in the garden. The European Starlings came around noon along with a few sparrows. The squirrels were about eating peanuts and a lone female Downy Woodpecker showed up at the suet.

The Eagle Country nest has bothered me. Perhaps I am a bit more sensitive after losing the baby at JB Sands or nearly losing R6. So of course, just take this as concern.

This is why I am worried about Meadow at Eagle Country. Swampy eats well and attacks Meadow who is calling for food. Abby does not feed Meadow. It is true that Meadow does not require as much food as Swampy. S/he is younger. It is the fear put into the little one not to eat that is the issue. Let’s keep an eye and send positive wishes.

It is not a gentle attack. Swampy twists Meadows neck and makes sure it doesn’t get up. 

A wee bit later, Meadow doesn’t even bother to raise its head.

It is impossible to tell – because of that deep cup – whether or not Meadow got any of the subsequent small feedings. Mostly I see only one head. If you have additional information, please send me a comment.

Checking in on Connick. Thanks, ‘H’ for finding us an update.

Report of an Osprey in South Africa – and Geemeff notes this is just as far as you can go in the country. ”This bird was sighted at Langebaan, which is very near Cape Town, about as far south as you can get in Africa! Not ringed. Female, judging by the necklace, and is that juvenile plumage? Difficult to tell in that light.” 

The Langebaan Lagoon is a large salt water lagoon, regarded as a wetland of international importance, protected by the West Coast National Park (formerly called the Langebaan National Park), 100 km north of Cape Town.Langebaan is 16 km long and no wider than 3 km at any point. All that lies between it and the Atlantic Ocean is the Langebaan Peninsula, 15 km long and 2 km wide, peppered by large granite outcrops known as Vlaeberg and Konstabelkop. All of the literature says that it is a birdwatching paradise.

Langebaan lagoon, West Coast National Park” by Winfried Bruenken (Amrum) is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5.

The students at the University of Florida-Gainesville have their osprey cam back up and running after the light stand was changed out last year. There was a big fundraising campaign and it all came together well. We can once again watch Talon and Stella raise their chicks. 

Here is the latest news form the website: ”Watch the osprey family raise another family! The nest is located on a light pole behind the SW Rec Center on UF Campus. Thanks to HdonTap for streaming the live feed, UF’s SW Rec center for allowing the camera to go back up, and a host of people from UF’s IT and Facility Services that helped to install the new camera and get things working. It truly took a village to get this up and running (again)! Special shout out to Wally Sanchez from IT that helped to troubleshoot the camera! A generous gift from Wild Goose Farms in Umatilla, FL provided the needed funding for the equipment. We continue to accept gifts of support for ongoing maintenance and management of the camera, and we are grateful for the support from our generous donors!To date, I have seen Talon (the male) and Stella (the female) on the nest as of January 30th. In fact, Stella just arrived January 30th – much to the delight of Talon! Talon (the father) and Stella (the mother) built a new nest in the same location (in 2023) after the bank of lights were switched out for more efficient LEDs. Professor Mark Hostetler, who is an urban wildlife ecologist in the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation at the University of Florida, has been watching with earnest to see if they would rebuild. He helped direct a few structures on the new lights to entice them to rebuild the nest (nicknamed The Cheap Seats or Home Plate). In 2022, we had over 70,000 viewers from around the world (see https://wec.ifas.ufl.edu/extension/ospreycam/). We really got to see the osprey family daily (and nightly) activities. Your contributions were much appreciated.”

It looks like Sunday will be a much nicer day for Jackie and Shadow. You can still hear a lot of wind and branches cracking in the distance.

For the only eaglet at JB Sands Wetlands, life looks good.

So far only two lovely Osprey eggs at Achieva! 

No egg at Moorings Park. They have surprised everyone.

Flaco is fine and exploring and moving into the beginning of his second year of freedom in The Big Apple.

Cal and Lusa are enjoying a huge amount of fish on Sunday along with another feathered water bird. Sometimes it is interesting to try and identify the prey if you do not know what it is.

E23 is such a sweetie. Little squees…M15 and F23 could not be prouder. 

R6 continues to grow and change plumage with what appears to be no ill effects from ‘the event’.

There was a bit of excitement at the WRDC nest a little later…

It makes me really sad. Gabby and Beau are still incubating the very unviable egg. He is getting lots of practice and if they survive for another year, let us hope that they return and raise some chicks in late 2024.

Pa and Missey are back working on the nest at Berry College. Will there be a chance of a second clutch?

‘H’ found some lovely photos of Annie and her new mate at The Campanile on moon_rabbit_rising. You can see them here: 

https://www.instagram.com/moon_rabbit_rising/?fbclid=IwAR3EYeEjI6Pio3aySb3TeNiUd0A8YcM9TZBVdyUu1VuU540OlHynlXRSSKo

The Peregrine Falcons have returned to their scrape in Harrison, PA. 

The Kakapo Recovery are celebrating!

I find the albatross and the nests that they build to be so fascinating. Are these up high to protect if there is any flooding? 

“The Chatham albatross nests only on The Pyramid in the Chatham Islands. Using aerial photography, in 1998, scientists estimated that there were between 3,200 and 4,200 pairs nesting.” Let’s see if we can find out what their numbers are today.

PROTECTION / THREATS / STATUS:  
The Chatham Island Albatross suffers harsh weather conditions during the breeding season. Severe storms can kill adults and chicks. Outside this period, storms may destroy the vegetation on the breeding grounds and remove the soil necessary for nest-building. In addition, they have very restricted breeding range. 
When at sea after the breeding season, they are threatened by longline fisheries off the west coasts of South America, and oil pollution throughout the winter range.
Translocation of chicks to a protected area in the SW corner of the Chatham Islands is underway between 2014 and 2016, in order to enlarge the breeding range of this species. 

The Chatham Island Albatross is listed as Vulnerable. The global population is estimated at 11,000 mature individuals, equating to about 16,000 individuals in total (counts 2008 – 2011).”

At the Midway Atoll, Wisdom was seen dancing and attempting to find a mate. The USFWS has not seen her since and has determined that she is not breeding this year and has returned to sea. There is news about other Laysan Albatross here along with the story about Wisdom.

The White-tail Eagles are arriving home in Kemeri National Forest in Latvia. Akacis was there on the 30th of January.

In Finland, a gorgeous White-tail eagle visited the Osprey nest at Seal.

Milda has been visiting her nest in Durbe County with a new male (?). I must check and find out what has happened to Voldis!

There is now some exciting news coming in from the ND-LEEF streaming cam in St Patrick’s Park, South Bend, Indiana. 

At Port Lincoln, Bradley got the first fish that came in – a gift from Mum at 1303. It took 100 minutes for Bradley to finish that fish!!!!!!!!!!!

Calypso has visited the TulKa nest – let us hope that he gets a new mate for the coming year after losing his mate to electrocution.

The weather remains problematic at the Redding nest of Liberty and Guardian. The water appears to be rising. How will the heavy rain, winds, and flooding impact the nest? (it is believed to be in a dead tree) The water has risen significantly since yesterday. Sending positive wishes to Liberty and Guardian.

Newcastle is installing homes for the Kittiwake on their new Tyne Bridge. Maybe other countries and cities should consider this for all birds that need homes. Think Swift Bricks, too!

What are the pollutants that are currently causing much harm to our birds. A current article in the BTO news gives us some clear insights into the problems.

Thank you so much for being with me today! Take care of yourself. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, videos, photos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’Geemeff, H, J, J, R’, Eagle Country, Audubon Centre for Birds of Prey, @derfonteinfenie, Openverse, UF-Gainsville, FOBBV, JB Sands Wetlands, Achieva Credit Union, Moorings Park, Paul Briber, Window to Wildlife, International Crane Foundation, SW Florida Eagle Cam, WRDC, Chao-Hwa Chen, NEFL-AEF, Mary Louise Ripley, Biruta Lapa, Dept of Environmental Protection for PA, PLO, Bart M, moon_rabbit_rising, Kakapo Recovery, Gill Winter, Friends of Midway Atoll, Arlene Beech, Finnish Osprey Foundation, Carol Mandis-Beadle, FORE, BirdGuides International, and BTO.

Sunday in Bird World

4 February 2023

Hello Everyone,

It was a real workday around the house – the girls helped. Of course, they helped! Hugo Yugo, Missey, and Hope were climbing all over everything. Meanwhile, Calico found a toy and decided it was much more fun. In the process, we found a couple of hand-felted ‘cat rocks’ that had belonged to previous cats. Baby Hope was very interested in this one.

Oh, I do adore this beautiful girl, the only surviving baby of Calico. She loves to relax on the wicker and she will pose. It is her eyes that always ‘get me’.

The Black Oil Seed shells have gotten out of hand. They were too frozen to be shovelled today. If the forecast holds, it will be +5 next week and they can be cleared up. It is the worst part of feeding the birds in winter. Today, Little Red and Dyson called a truce with Little Red on the feeder and Dyson eating peanuts below.

We listened to Ferris Akel and his tour and were delighted that he saw Arthur while hunting for probably his last meal of the day. I remember everyone being shocked when Big Red picked Arthur – he didn’t have his red tail yet – to be her mate and replace Ezra. Well, Big Red picked a good one! 

Big Red was spotted on Saturday, too! 

There have been a lot of tributes to various feathered personalities this week, and the New York Times even covered Flaco.

In California, Jackie continues to carefully incubate the three eggs. Just watch Shadow and Jackie change turns and you will see how very careful these two are. Even when rolling the eggs, they are so delicate. They are determined to have an eaglet this year…let’s send them all the love and positive wishes we can.

I was concerned about Jackie and not seeing her eat. She had a big meal! Thank goodness.

Jackie and Shadow make the CBS news.

The bowl is deep at the West End nest of Thunder and Akecheta. There should be two eggs in there now. Dr Sharpe and his team at the IWS got that camera back up and working!

There is plenty of food at Eagle Country. The oldest is doing fantastic and can stretch its neck out and get food from Abby. So why am I so worried about the second chick?

I wish that nest bowl was not so deep! Is Meadow getting fed?

Frustration has set in. There are a lot of feedings at this nest and Abby is experienced, but is Meadow getting any of that prey?

Lucky R6 doesn’t have any worries. S/he is growing and getting their thermal down – changing before our eyes. The top picture with its leg stuck out just reminds me of the legs of the prey they have been munching on all day. 

R6 is going to be able to use that crop for a pillow Saturday night.

Across the state, E23 likes his Lapin for dinner.

Cal and Lusa are both self-feeding at Captiva. Lusa is doing better than Cal so far. Will Connie come in and save the day?

Yes!

No egg yet at Dulles-Greenway.

Food gifts coming into Pittsburgh-Hayes.

They may be thinking about eggs but not one is on the nest at Moorings Park – yet.

Diane has been incubating two eggs. Will she lay a third Saturday night? We wait – and I hope not~. The third chick does not fare well here. Best no egg.

The only surviving Eaglet at J B Sands Wetlands is doing fine.

Gosh, the water looks high at the Redding Eagle nest. Is it an illusion? or is the area really flooding that much due to the Atmospheric River that hit the area?

‘A’ sends us the report for WBSE 31 at the Parramatta River in Sydney: 

“February 3: Early in the morning, no eagles were seen by the river or at Goat Island. Then around 9am, SE31 was seen hidden in the mangroves near River Roost. Later, just after midday, she was seen in flight checking the river west of River Roost and on the western side of the wetlands. Then she was lost to sight, up very high over the prison. She flushed waterbirds from the wetlands as she flew over. No further reports at the end of the day – maybe update in the morning.”

At Farmer Derek’s, Bonnie was in the nest bowl most of the day. Rain came late and it looks like there is no egg. Owl up on branch. Nest empty. Look hard. She is there!

The owlets at SW Florida are cute. I just wish their parents weren’t so protective and would leave M15 and F23 and their chicks alone…Knock on wood.

At The Campanile, Annie was in the scrape calling the new male. Is he shy?

Someone was home at Monty and Hartley’s new scrape at the San Jose City Hall.

It is always a pleasure to see either Diamond and Xavier and a real gem to see both together after fledging. Diamond looks out over the landscape in the early morning light. I understand that Marri is still seen in the area chasing the parents for food. Fabulous.

At Taiaroa Head, the TF Royal Cam chick is adorable. The parents come and go and have not gone far to forage. The chick’s weight is good.

These gentle giants of the Southern Ocean need us to protect the fish that they depend on for their lives and to muster the world to make the long line fishing factories responsible – by using safe measures to bait their hooks so that no albatross is beheaded!

Do you eat canned tuna? Here is an article to make certain that you are selecting sustainably caught fish. Please note that ‘Dolphin Safe’ does not mean that the fish were sustainable caught!!!!!!!

It is not just albatross that get caught in these long lines – in fact, maybe long line fishing should just be banned. This article is a few years old, but it is well-written and really can open your eyes to the threat those huge boats have on the mammals and birds that depend on the sea for their lives.

It is a topic that really rubs me the wrong way. To save the albatross is an easy fix (which many refuse to do!) but what about the other animals?

Did you know that parrots use their beaks to swing like monkeys?

Urgent conservation is needed if Hen Harriers are not to go extinct in Ireland.

One of our favourite eagle dads, Murphy! He sure looks happy in that bath.

Apparently New York and Verizon do not want Ospreys nesting on their cell towers. 

Still watching Diane at Achieva and hoping that she will only have two eggs, but is she laying another?

Thank you so much for being with me today. I do hope that you find something worthwhile in my blog! Take care. We hope to see you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, tours, videos, photographs, tweets, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, Geemeff, J, R’, Ferris Akel Tours, @Cornell Hawks, The New York Times, FOBBV, Cali Condor, @CBS, IWS/Explore, Eagle Country, WRDC, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Window to Wildlife, Dulles-Greenway, PIX Cams, Moorings Park, Achieva Credit Union, JB Sands Wetlands, FORE, Eagle Cam, Farmer Derek Owl Cam, Cal Falcons, San Jose City Hall, Charles Sturt Falcon Cam, NZ DOC, Sharon Dunne, Seafood Watch, The Guardian, Raptor Persecution UK, WIVBTV, Trudi Kron, and Achieva Credit Union.

First egg at Achieva, Second egg at Big Bear, Second hatch at JB…Monday in Bird World

29 January 2024

Oh, good morning. Sunday was a marvellous day. Sunny and warm at 0 degrees C. It was the perfect day to get outside – and most of the people in the City where I live agreed. 

I had been waiting to go and visit the chickadees, and it was ‘almost’ the perfect day. The parks department decided to trim all the trails at the Chickadee Walk at Bird’s Hill Provincial Park for the cross-country skiers. As a result, the hundreds of Chickadees were right up by the entrance at the parking lot waiting for seed. They are so tame that the birds land on your hands, arms, and heads! There were also Red-breasted Nuthatches, and a quick drive through the country meant seeing some soaring hawks and owls. 

Close by is a place that I have visited since I returned to Manitoba more than two decades ago. Pineridge Hollow as built on the site of an old quarry. It was originally a small restaurant serving a locally sourced menu and a small gift shop with a petting zoo. It has grown over the years to become a destination about half an hour’s drive outside of my city. There is now a ‘village’ – a dozen or more shops full of marvellous things, including an old-fashioned grocery. 

To expand their operation, they built the Village – parallel shops selling local produce, a bakery, a coffee shop, and clothing. I was surprised at how busy everything was, but we longed to get out in the winter, and today was the perfect day. The roads were good; there was no snow or wind, and our hands didn’t freeze if we didn’t wear gloves.

Many families and couples were milling around the property, visiting the goats and chickens, tasting the cheese and meats, and sipping hot chocolate by the numerous outdoor fire pits. It was fantastic. What a nice boost.

The cats have been fantastic. Hugo Yugo sees the vet on Wednesday, and I think Dr Green will be in for a shock. E23 has nothing on this darling ginger cat in terms of growing overnight. It is shocking. I can’t wait to see how much Hugo Yugo weighs.

Once I got home, all the bird news was good except for the egg at NEFL. We can’t complain, and Gabby and Beau will move forward. Hopefully, next year will be a success for them.

The first egg of the osprey season has landed on the Achieva Credit Union nest in St Petersburg. Diane looked like she was ‘thinking about something’ since Saturday morning and that egg arrived 1421:57. 

I am so excited. Little ones are arriving the first week in March!!!!!!

While we dream of ospreys at Achieva, Gil is 105 days old and Brad is 103 days old at Port Lincoln today. They could disperse anytime OR maybe, because they are male, they will hang around Port Lincoln like Ervie.

Gil was on the nest when Dad flew in with the first fish of the day at 0816. Brad was hot on his tail!

I don’t think that Gil is going to save anything for Brad.

No fear. Dad flew in at 1241 with another fish and this time Brad was on the nest and got it! Don’t you love how they do a toe dance like Mum when they see that fishy dinner arriving?

PLO has posted some tracking data.

This is Giliath who is following adults to their favourite fishing spots.

“Ervie continues to do laps of the Bay. He forages at Point Boston quite a bit and seems to return to the wharf to roost.” (PLO)

‘MP’ sends news that the second chick has hatched at the John Bunker Sands Wetlands on Sunday. Congratulations Mum and Dad. Oh, let us all hope that things go well and we have two fledglings this year from the nest. That would be splendid. It was a dual feeding before bedtime for the duo.

Lady Deeagle has the two getting a feeding! I understand the need for the deep nest. Just look where it is located but, a camera looking down would be helpful!

Great capture at the nest by ‘AE’. Thank you! Were they celebrating the arrival of Dad with that magnificent fish? or alerting to an intruder? or both?

Jackie and Shadow have their second egg of the season. Congratulations. We are into hard incubation with an eaglet expected the same time as the osplets at Achieva.

There were constant intruders at the SW Florida nest of F23 and M15 as caught on video by SK Hideaways. Just listen to that alarming.

E23 is sleeping and eating and growing. Just in case those sub-adults come back and threaten her little one, F23 is in the nest tonight with her baby. M15 got himself an amazing mate!

All seems to be well at Captiva. ’A’ writes: “CE10 and CE11 spent the day eating and eating and eating. There were TEN feedings during the day. Seriously. Ten. These are not hatchlings. They are growing up so fast, and with ten feedings a day, they are going to be massive fledglings! Connie and Clive continue to astonish me. They are amazing parents. Absolutely amazing. Right up there with M15 and F23. Connie in particular has been the most devoted of mums, while Clive provides so well for his family.”

Poor Gabby. She wants to be a Mum. And there were two sub-adult intruders today – they were gorgeous. Jasper and Rocket?

The new couple at Anna and Louis’s nest (KNF-E1) appear to be serious. They are bringing in nesting materials.

So what is happening at the WRDC? Well, it looks like all of the fish that was provided when the nest was cleaned and that huge fish that Rose brought in, is now gone. ’H’ reports that it is windy and that the fishing might be very difficult again. ”Now, it seems that they may be having trouble fishing again.  It was quite windy on Sunday, and neither parent brought prey to the nest.  Yesterday, Ron was hungry and ate some of the ladyfish and tilapia, but he did provide two very nice long meals of the fish for R6.  R6 was fed 7 times, but two of those meals consisted of fish scraps.” ’H’ provides a photo of the pellet that R6 cast Monday morning. 

And then when everyone was worrying, three big fish came to the nest! The times were: 7:06:51 Rose; 7:10:16 Ron; 8.52.14 Ron.

Tears of joy all around for this lovely eagle family that was so hungry.

At Decorah North, DNF is really finishing off that nest. Are they ready for eggs?

There is no egg at Moorings Park yet. Perhaps next week!

SE31 appears to have set off on their life journey. Lady and Dad have visited the nest to give it a good check – maybe before they head to Goat Island for a vacation.

LGK has returned home – quickly – to feed the Royal Cam chick! What a turnaround…it is hard to stay away once the little one arrives. How sweet.

Been wondering about what Challenger is doing today? Don’t know who Challenger is? For both, check out this video.

On the Cornell Campus, Big Red and Arthur were both spotted.

‘SP’ sent me the news of Marri being seen at Orange. She has not left! How wonderful.

Kielder Forest is excited. One of their fledglings from 2020 has been sighted by Jean-marie Dupart in Senegal!

We love our birds and we participate in bird counts. Is there anything else we can do to help alleviate the threats to their existence? More than 600 million birds are estimated to have been lost in the UK in the last four decades. That is shocking. I wonder what it is in North America. So what is causing this? And believe me, the farming practices in the UK are not dissimilar to those in NA and other parts of Europe.

“Nor is it hard to trace the main cause of this loss of birdlife. As the RSPB has made clear, intensive farming practices, particularly the increased use of pesticides and fertilisers, have been the main drivers of most bird population declines in the UK since the end of the Second World War. The fact that farming could affect all birds, even those in inner cities and suburbia, may seem unlikely.

However, almost three-quarters of the UK is made up of farmland. What happens there affects birds in all habitats. In effect, our urban and suburban avian populations are overspills from the countryside. It would therefore be tempting to blame farmers for this unsettling state of affairs and press for quick measures to cut farm yields. Biodiversity loss would be slowed and carbon emissions cut. However, such rapid impositions would be risky.”

Thank you so much for being with me for a quick run around some of the nests to see what is happening. Take care. See you soon!

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, photos, chat rolls, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, Geemeff, H, J, MP, SP’, Bird’s Hill Provincial Park Songbirds, Pineridge Hollow and The Village, Achieva Credit Union, PLO, John Bunker Sands Wetlands Eagle Cam, Lady Deeagle, FOBBV, SK Hideaways, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Window to Wildlife, NEFL-AEF, WRDC, Raptor Resource Project/Explore, Moorings Park, Se McGregor, AEF, Lady Hawk, @CornellHawks, Kielder Ospreys, The Guardian, and Charles Sturt University Falcon Cam Chat.

Sunday in Bird World

28 January 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

I hope that your Saturday was a good one. In Winnipeg, it was the day to pick up cupcakes. They are a fundraiser for the Winnipeg Kitten Adoption and were made and donated by Bee’s Cakes. Missey gives them a thumb’s up! The owner loved our thank you so much that she is going to put Missey’s image on her website. How sweet. Missey is as sweet as that vanilla buttercream icing with sprinkles – so sweet that she let me trim her nails without a single flinch today. Now, let us see how Calico does tomorrow!

There were some worries at the John Bunker Wetlands Eagle nest that Mum was not feeding the newly hatched eaglet. (Remember that they can live for 24 hours on the food from the egg when they hatch.) The wind has really been blowing at the nest site and it sounded like hail, but I am told that is the rain hitting certain parts of the metal. Mum did feed that baby. A nice fish came in.

Feedings on Sunday morning. Hard to see because of the girders and the deep nest cup but a feeding is taking place!

Diane and Jack are making that Achieva Credit Union nest in St Petersburg pretty comfy. Eggs expected within the next fortnight. The way Diane is acting, we could have the first egg today or Monday.

At the nest with a Starling Sunday morning in St Petersburg.

No egg as of Saturday might at Moorings Park.

It can be argued that we always need more osprey platforms. Yes, sometimes they do not get used. Sometimes old ones are abandoned for new for various reasons including intruders and lack of fish. In Bellingham, Washington, USA, an Osprey couple wants to make a nest on an operational crane. The Port is hoping they will decide to use the new platform they are erecting. 

This happened in Manitoba and under the agreement with the five tribal councils involved in the Kesay Dam Project in our far north, the raptors got to keep their nest on the big forklift! It was deemed illegal to disturb the nest. Sometimes that part of the Migratory Bird Act is good.

Eaglet or not. Gabby and Beau are a beautiful bonded couple and if a miracle could be found, I would hope that egg would hatch! I get the feeling that if it doesn’t, there will not be a second clutch, but, hey, surprise me Gabby.

What a relief to see that R6 is OK. Well, I say OK. R6 did consume enough of that nappy to worry onlookers. The PSs have been plentiful and have looked good, and let us hope that all that marvellous engineering of the crop and acid stomach switches on and relieves this 14-day-old eaglet of any ills that might have come its way because of human garbage.

R6 went to sleep with a really nice crop and with more fish on the nest for the morning breakfast! Relief. Relief.

E23 is really growing at the SW Florida nest. I love watching her grab the food from the parents when they are feeding. As you will have noted, the number of feedings has been greatly reduced, but the amount of intake is probably more now. This is one healthy eaglet losing its mohawk slowly, gaining clown feet and getting its juvenile feathers. Don’t you love the constant squeeing…

Every wonder about the GHOs that share the property with M15, F23, and E23?

And here is that video:

Cal and Lusa are doing just fine. Cal is standing and Clive might want to reinforce those rails! Meanwhile, Lusa likes to sit like a Buddha.

Liberty and Guardian look beautiful. They were at their nest in Redding, California Saturday.

Dr Sharpe has the West End streaming cam up and working. Thunder was at the nest this morning! They are still playing highlights at Two Harbours and Fraser Point.

I sure wish Jackie and Shadow had that nice soft nest of Jak and Audacity. Their camera is working fine.

It has rained at Cornell. Arthur was in earlier making a dash with a stick. Otherwise, life at the nest was quiet on Saturday.

No one was to be seen by the time Ferris Akel’s tour got to the Cornell Campus at Ithaca. Earlier in the tour, there were geese- some Canada Geese, some Tundra Swans, and some Snow Geese. There were also hundreds and hundreds of Redheads, a few male Scaup, and some Mallards at the south end of Cayuga Lake.

The male Scaup have the white along their wing. You can see five in the image below.

Ducks everywhere..my goodness. 

Snow Geese. You can identify them immediately by their black wing tips.

There were hundreds and hundreds of them – if not a thousand, flying in or already feeding.

Eagles, Red-headed Woodpeckers…it was a good day except for the heat shimmer.

And some Common Mergansers.

Precious egg at Big Bear. Every ounce of positivity you have – please send it to Jackie and Shadow so that their precious, precious egg/s will survive to hatch. These two deserve this and so do Jak and Audacity. It would be a great year – a year where we all jump up and down and scream – if either or both nests have a chick. 

Both eagles came to the ND-LEEF nest at South Bend – crisp temperatures of 36 F.

At Port Lincoln, Mum brought in the first fish of the day at 1337. Bradley took it.

It appears that both Marri and SE31 have left their nesting territories. I have seen no recent news of their presence. Please tell me if you have seen otherwise – thank you!

The Osprey Leadership Foundation is funding and teaching young people in West Africa about Ospreys. This is the first step in conservation. Thank you, OLF! 

Let’s get everyone to participate and overwhelm them with art bringing attention and supporting Albatrosses! I know that you can do it – seriously, you can or someone you know might. 

The joy – the sheer wonder – of looking close at your own garden or the nearest green space to where you live, the place you are most familiar.

Thank you so much for being with me today and for your lovely ‘get to feeling better’ wishes. I am still under the weather but it is a head cold and a runny nose. Is it an allergy? I will find out on the 8th. Take care of yourself. Stay safe, stay warm or cool, depending on where you are. We hope to see you soon!

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, articles, videos, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, Geemeff, MP’, NEFL-AEF, Bee’s Cakes, JB Wetlands, Achieva Credit Union, Moorings Park, The Bellingham Herald, WRDC, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Saunders Photography, Window to Wildlife, FORE, IWS/Explore, Cornell RTH Cam, @CornellHawks, Ferris Akel Tours, FOBBV, ND-LEEF, PLO, Gunjur Project, Holly Parsons, and The Guardian.