4 July 2024
Good Morning,
Happy 4th of July to all of those that are celebrating. I hope that you have a lovely non-fireworks non-balloon day full of fun and laughter with friends and family.
I want to start with a wonderful article about the work that Port Lincoln is doing to save the Osprey. Thanks so much from our friends in Tasmania, BLP, for sending this in. Today we need a good news story to brighten a little saddness.
There are several nests in trouble and we need to watch them closely. One does not have rewind and that is McEuan Park in Idaho. If this is a nest that you regularly watch, we would very much appreciate receiving information on the behaviour of the chicks towards Little Mini, the fourth hatch, who appears to have injuries on its neck today. If you could let us know what you see, we would appreciate it. Date, time, and description of what happened would be helpful along with a screen capture if you are able. Thank you so much.
Regarding McEuan: There is a good amount of food coming to the nest and one of the older siblings did a tremendous ‘ps’ while I was watching. I was lucky to catch this. The Big one picks on Little Mini as does Little. This nest feels very unstable.



Gosh, I wish I could send some of our cool weather and rain to so many of you! Another day. Another hot chocolate instead of an iced tea or lemonade. Birds are ravenous – to stay warm. We are feeding them now in the morning and again around 1630. The garden is full of birds from morning to night. They are Grackles, Starlings, Crows, Blue Jays, and about six different species of Sparrow along with some Finches. It is brilliant. You can hear them singing more than half a block away.
Late news on Wednesday comes from Cal Falcons where Nox has been rescued and taken to rehab. This is one of Annie and Archie’s chicks.
This is Nox loafing on the ledge of The Campanile a few days ago. What a cutie. We wish you a quick recovery, Nox.



The news coming from the rehabbers and rescue workers in the US is that the ospreys and eaglets they are helping are not getting enough food – they come into care emaciated! You will continue to hear me call for interventions to provide fish or other prey during distressing times such as what The Woodland Trust did at Loch Arkaig or Port Lincoln at the barge nest of Mum and Dad. It is time to come to terms with the overfishing of Menhaden in the NE US, warming waters and a heating planet that means the fish go deep. It is also time to stop the pesticides and harmful farming methods that cause us not to have the small mammals that so many raptors depend on for food. Ospreys fish off the surface, not lower than a metre. If the weather is too warm, the fish dive. The ospreys are hungry (so are the eagles). They need us to advocate for them.
Right now there are a number of nests that are struggling. ‘MP’ has just alerted me to another eagle nest with two chicks that have had little food for several days. They join others we are monitoring including the Golden Eaglets in Estonia, Cowlitz, Osoyoos, Steelscape – places where some or all are not getting enough calories in a day to survive and, of course, Ding and Darling at Captiva, where Jack and Edie have simply vanished. Kids are starving and fighting. Heidi will comment later. McEuan Park has now joined this list. ‘H’ noticed Mini with a red neck and submissive and because there is no rewind on the camera and it is difficult to sit and wait for a feeding with so many other nests, we are unclear but it appears that Big and Little are both pecking and bonking Mini. It might not be alive in a couple of days. Like all the other nests, we feel helpless because there is no secure route to provide food and assistance.

Everybody is wondering what will happen to the two chicks of Louis and Dorcha who are in the Spanish translocation project run by the Roy Dennis Foundation. Here are two videos (there is an ad in the middle so keep going) that show you what happened in Scotland and then what happens in Spain. This will be very similar to what the Loch Arkaig chicks will undergo for the 2024 translocation. Very educational!
Another TV interview about the removal of Louis and Dorcha’s chicks.
On Wednesday a rainbow appeared over the Loch Arkaig nest and it wasn’t long til Louis appeared working on the nest. What a wonderful feeling. I hope he is doing much better.


The Loch Arkaig lads made The Telegraph.

Geemeff’s daily summary for Loch Arkaig for The Woodland Trust:
Daily summary Wednesday 3rd July 2024
Today was much calmer than yesterday in terms of bird behaviour – Garry LV0 paid an early morning visit to Nest One, chattering away to himself, but didn’t come over to Nest Two, so Dorcha and Louis didn’t have to do much alarm calling. The Hoodies were in evidence again, but not when the big birds were on the nest. Dorcha arrived on the nest in time to meet Louis bringing a good sized headless fish – she left with it and he stayed to do some housekeeping including moving quite a big branch – hopes rise cautiously that he is on the mend. With WTS George taking a well-earned break, WTS Jill stepped in and gave a great interview on Sky TV about the translocation of the chicks. The weather was very unsettled, even the excellent camera lens coating couldn’t keep up and there were ‘camera diamonds’ on screen fairly often. However, the weather also gave us a beautiful rainbow over Nest Two, tonight’s forecast is for light rain showers and a gentle breeze, with a slight chance of sun and perhaps a little rain tomorrow, so we might see more rainbows.
Night cam switches on (day cam): Nest One 23.56.32 (03.31.18); Nest Two 23.47.16 (03.41.23)
Today’s videos:
https://youtu.be/vpUK8HVFXCo N1 Garry LV0 chatters away to himself during an early morning visit 05.56.22
https://youtu.be/LLCSoyakFkU N2 Dyson and Henry Hoodie visit the empty nest 06.03.55
https://youtu.be/mj01V9rxF-w N2 Osprey flies from left to right under the nest 07:33:45 (slo-mo zoom)
https://youtu.be/5Pd8r2nronw N1 A little songbird visits for a few seconds 07.46.40
https://youtu.be/2V3SGgPo6Sw N2 Rainbow over the nest 10.48.14 (time lapse)
https://youtu.be/nkSCLuDYS2A N2 Louis brings a fish for Dorcha then does housework 12.49.01
https://youtu.be/uD0cwQ6ddHs N2 Louis arrives and stands quietly for a moment before departing 17.24.23
https://youtu.be/8SVETWUeZOQ Sky TV interview with WTS Jill Donnachie about the translocation 20.40
Watch the Loch Arkaig Osprey livestream 24/7 and join in the conversation here:
https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/osprey-cam
I could show you still captures but its the kid’s first flight. 1R0 from Rutland took off on the 2nd of July. Brilliant. Congratulations Maya and Blue 33.

Flying is hard work and Blue 1R0 returned to the nest for rest and to have a good fish feed with Mum Maya.


Another good news story from Geemeff. I doubt you have ever heard of this happening – an island taking out a runway to help birds. Oh, I wish that empathetic and generous spirited nature would spread to our next story. about two little starving eaglets.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/island-airport-tears-runway-help-113721922.html
Beaumont continues to bring in really nice fish to the Newfoundland Power nest at Snow Lane. The two chicks appear well.

The second baby at Hellgate Canyon still has an eye problem. Even so, Iris and Finnegan are taking great care of both of their babies and we hope that the little one’s eye becomes as clear as its big sibling. The little one has been able to open its eye for a bit and then close it and open again. This feels like good news.



‘A’ reports: “Today, I think Little’s left eye may be a bit better – it is still not normal, but it does appear to be open a little more than it was yesterday, when it was either closed entirely or open like a slit. His right eye is normal – large and piercing like it should be – but that left eye is a significant worry. I am not certain how long this situation has existed – I have been worried about his eyesight for a while, based primarily on his efforts to grab at food unsuccessfully, grabbing to the right of the bite being offered and often face-planting instead. I am so pleased to see what appears to be some improvement in the eye today – I will continue to monitor it, as it is literally a potentially life-threatening injury if it prevents Little from being able to triangulate and fish. Such a dear little osplet. He has been so feisty and confident and not once has he cringed or flinched at his sibling. He is brave, and heads straight to mum’s beak, with no qualms whatsoever about pushing in front of Big Bob, while Big Bob is quite happy to wait his turn, even if it takes five minutes for Iris to stop stuffing Little Bob and start feeding Big.
I cannot stress enough how happy this nest makes me. To see two osplets with such a huge size difference and five days between the hatches get along so brilliantly well from first day to now is a very rare thing. I don’t believe I have ever seen it on an osprey nest, though presumably the year there were three boys at Port Lincoln was a relatively peaceful one on that nest. I am not sure though that even that nest got away with having no bonking at all. The fraternal spirit on this nest is as just as magical as Iris’s romance with Finnegan. This nest is quite obviously blessed. “
Can you pick out the Little Mini at Field Farm in the following image?

All is well at MN Landscape Arboretum.

The three osplets at Collins Marsh are doing very well. They are beginning to self-feed.


‘H’ reports:
7/3 Osoyoos osprey nest: There were seven fish brought to the nest that I saw. A couple of the fish were tiny, a few were large, and there was one whopper. I did not see any aggression during the meals. Little ate well today, but at the 12:29 meal, s/he was kind of crowded out due to Soo’s positioning, and Little didn’t really make much effort to get up to the chow line. The feeding duration times (in minutes) were: 4, 4, 8, 10, 7, 60, 11. I’ll bet you can guess which meal was the whopper, lol. There were no fish that I saw between 1229 and 1741. Sometime after that, the video feed went offline. A high temperature of 31C/88F is predicted for 7/4. And, temps will be gradually increasing each day, peaking at a predicted 41C/106F by the middle of next week. Fingers crossed that Olsen will be able to find fish to catch.



7/4 Captiva Ospreys: I try to avoid hyperbole. But, there is a tragedy in the making at Captiva. Ding and Darling are 72 and 71 days old. Ding fledged on 6/22, Darling fledged on 6/26. They rely on their parents to bring them fish. Jack was last seen on 6/29, and Edie has not been seen since mid-day on 7/2. Fishing conditions for ospreys should not have been particularly difficult, so Jack and Edie are simply missing. The last time Ding had a meal that we know of was 7/1 at 1800. The last meal for Darling was 7/1 at 1600. Because Darling won’t allow Ding to be on the nest, Ding has been out of sight quite a bit. But, when we have seen Ding, she does not look well fed. Overall in recent days, Ding was been better fed than Darling. The official word is that there are rescue plans in place if any of the ospreys are found grounded. Please send positive wishes to this much loved osprey family.


‘PB’ confirms that Little Three had a good feed at Cowlitz:

She notes that Steelscape also had a good feeding for its little one. Excellent news.

‘PB’ also sent this note form a rescue. Oh, our poor osprey babies.

Did Diamond deliver Xavier a very special bonding gift? A racing pigeon?
The two golden eaglets on the Estonian nest have not had food for two days on Wednesday. I hope that we are not witnessing an event like we saw several years ago with Klints. I am very concerned about these eaglets whose nest is in an area of Estonia where there is a military base. Because of their location, it might be impossible to get them the help they require.
The situation is being monitored. I hope that the Eagle Club of Estonia is getting permission to enter the military zone and take the eaglets into care.

‘MP reports issues at one of the Dave Hancock nests in British Columbia today. That is the HWW-BBC nest where two rather emaciated eaglets are not being fed, although everyone insists there is food and the parents are not feeding the eaglets. No one wants to help because they are too near fledgling. Is it better to starve on the nest? All of this reminds me of Meadow. It is often too late when they fall out of the nest.
The decline of the Blackbird is due to another virus.
Thank you so much for being with us today. Please take care. See you soon!
Thank you to the following for their notes, comments, questions, posts, articles, videos, summaries, images, and streaming cams that helped me to write my post today: ‘A, BL-P, Geemeff, H, PB’, McEuan Park, Cal Falcons, William Dunn – Menhaden, Little Fish, Big Deal FB, Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation, SKY News, Woodland Trust, Geemeff, Michelle Gowland, LRWT, Rutland Osprey Project, yahoo News, Newfoundland Power, Montana Osprey Project, Field Farm, Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, Osoyoos, Window to Wildlife, Tampa Bay Rescue, Collins Marsh, Pam Breci, Cilla Kinross, Eagle Club of Estonia, Looduskalender, The Guardian

























































































































