Jackie and Shadow make the news, E23 self-feeds, and Hope and Chandler lay the first egg…Saturday in Bird World

10 February 2024

Good Morning!

I wish I could replace my battery with Hugo Yugo’s. I think Calico does, too. I seriously don’t know how she can get from the very back of the conservatory into the sitting room and disturb Hope in a couple of seconds and run back and leap on top of Calico putting her nose out of joint without even taking a breath!

This morning she was intent on watch the Blue Jays. They arrived right after a big pile of peanuts was put on the big table feeder. It looked like Hugo Yugo’s eyes were going to pop out of her head!

It’s the baby Blue Jay. Well, not such a baby anymore but the youngest of the six that hatched in the summer. It and Junior are still here. Their tree across the lane is still standing but the other Blue Jay family lost theirs this week when the City went on a cutting spree. My lovely treed neighbourhood is not lovely anymore. If I did not feel responsible for the garden animals, I would pack it up and move to a large wooded lot.

She is also fast – Dyson! She was getting peanuts, too. I ran to get the camera, but she was already hurrying off with her nut down the top of the fence. I worry about her, too. When they cut the 122-year-old Elm tree on the boulevard, she cannot go up, leap to the tree branches across the lane, and down to safety. She will have to cross the lane, which can be busy sometimes. Is there a proactive City that plants a small tree near a big one that they know might get disease and have to be cut down??? 

The big cat tree is taking a beating this year from these four. Thankfully the man who built it considered how one might need to replace some areas with new carpet and not others. But it is heavy! Made out of 3/4″ plywood – I wonder if I can learn upholstery.

She is chasing her tail on the top of the tree. Seriously, she is either going at 100% power or 0%. there is nothing in between. I get tired watching her.

That little square measures 20.3 cm or 8 inches square. 

Today, Calico decided that she wanted to watch the little birds, too, in the vines. 

On March the 13th there is going to be a Zoom presentation sponsored by The International Osprey Foundation by Dr Alan Poole, US Osprey expert. For a $10 US donation, you will get a link to attend. It will be on line from 7-8:15pm EDT. Here is the information to register.

You can also listen to Sir David Attenborough tell about the return of the Osprey to the East Midlands – . What a great history. It is on YouTube and is titled ‘Ospreys – Flying Home to Rutland Water (2004).

This is all to get you in the mood for those little ones with the dark eye stripe and all that bonking!

Despite the snow, various species of wildlife in Latvia are now working on their nests and looking forward to spring egg laying. Acacias and Rasene, the White-tail Eagles, were busy.

Goshawks are visiting their nests!

The Red-tail Hawk at Cornell, Arthur, was also visiting the nest he shares with mate, Big Red, bringing sticks anticipating March eggs.

What an image to wake up to – beautiful Jackie being kissed by the morning sunlight incubating and protecting the three eggs that her and Shadow hope will hatch in 20 days. Twenty-days. Leap Year eaglets! (More on them later… You just had to see this gorgeous image early! Jackie is soooo beautiful)

Highlights are still playing at the Channel Islands nest of Jak and Audacity. We are thinking there could be a second egg today.

Two Harbours was back on line Friday morning. There is certainly evidence of either Chase or Cholyn being at the nest, but nothing so far as to visits Friday morning.

There have been at least four feedings for Swampy and Meadow at Eagle Country and it is only 1120! Most often, I see Swampy’s head. I want to be hopeful that Blaze and Abby are reaching down and making sure that Meadow is getting some good bites. I will check throughout the day.

Meadow seems to be getting bites at Eagle Country. It should be highly improbable that any eaglet would starve on the nest of Abby and Blaze. It is loaded with stacks of fish that remind me of dear Louis of the E1 nest he shared with Anna. That first season, they brought in – wasn’t it 20 fish – and had them stacked for the wee babe. Oh, how we will miss that pair in the coming years. But, I digress. Meadow is getting its share.

Finally!

Just look at those huge hunks of fish everywhere. That nest must smell…good, gracious.

Shadow and Jackie exchanging incubation duties.

FOBBV NightBot reminds us: ”Standard Incubation Period is 35 days. Pip watch begins on 2/29. In the past, our eggs hatched ~38-39 days.Learn more about the hatching process, go to this link:

https://bit.ly/3xnmUHL

And our beloved couple made the news again…everyone adores them. We are all holding our breath til those eggs hatch!

I lost count. There was a strange piece of prey and at least two fish and I could not tell you how many feedings. M15 and F23 must be afraid that E23 is going to try and fly! Not ready, of course, but goodness. Every time I checked someone was feeding that eaglet who now has almost its entire juvenile plumage. Check the time stamps in the top left.

And then…an Armoured Catfish arrives. E23 self-feeds for the very first time – what a fish to start. My goodness. 

Not only did E23 feed itself for the first time, but s/he also stood on the rails! Two milestones in one day. Wow.

Cal and Lusa can feed themselves. They can sleep standing up like the adults with their heads tucked under their wings, but, of course, they prefer Mamma to feed them. It has to be so much easier when you are really hungry. Beautiful eaglets. 

The eaglet at JB Sands Wetlands has grown so much we can now easily see it. How wonderful. It is growing and growing.

No egg at Moorings Park. I can put that on rewind, right?

It’s raining in Gainesville, Florida and Stella and Talon don’t have their first egg either.

Many wonder about that third egg at the Achieva Osprey nest. It seems highly improbable that there would be 11 days between eggs one and three. That would be a much-needed relief if it had just been overlooked and not seen until the morning of the 8th.

Remember I mentioned the metal ring on a bird. Well, Gracie Shepherd gives us the video of Rose feeding R6 the pigeon leg with the band attached.

Egg #2 arrived at the Venice Golf and Country Club as expected on Friday.

‘J’ sent me something funny. It is the Raptor Resource Project dictionary on nesting language. Print it up and use it if you go on chat! ”Eagle Time – throw your clock away, we are on eagle time…” I will be saying that about the Ospreys when they start nesting.

Hope and Chandler have their first egg at Port Tobacco. Congrats.

The bird of the day comes from a short article in The Guardian. It is the American Bittern. We have them in Manitoba in the spring and summer and it is glorious to see them searching for prey around the wetlands.

Bittern-0001” by Phil Fiddes is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

All About Birds says, “You’ll need sharp eyes to catch sight of an American Bittern. This streaky, brown and buff heron can materialize among the reeds, and disappear as quickly, especially when striking a concealment pose with neck stretched and bill pointed skyward. These stealthy carnivores stand motionless amid tall marsh vegetation, or patiently stalk fish, frogs, and insects. They are at their most noticeable in spring, when the marshes resound with their odd booming calls that sounds like the gulps of a thirsty giant.”

They are not listed as endangered in the US, but are of ‘high concern’. 

  • Cool Facts
    • American Bitterns are heard more often than seen. Their booming, clacking, gulping calls have earned them some colorful nicknames, including “stake-driver,” “thunder-pumper,” “water-belcher,” and “mire-drum.”
    • When field scientists want to trap American Bitterns for study, they take advantage of the males’ aggressive territoriality. Knowing that the birds will respond to other males’ calls from as far as 1,600 feet away, or to the image of another male, the researchers use recorded calls and mirrors to draw the birds in.
    • The American Bittern’s yellow eyes can focus downward, giving the bird’s face a comically startled, cross-eyed appearance. This visual orientation presumably enhances the bird’s ability to spot and capture prey. The eyes turn orange during breeding season.
    • The oldest recorded American Bittern was over 8 years, 4 months old, when it was found in Ontario where it was banded as an adult 8 years previously in 1940.

At the Dulles-Greenway Bald Eagle nest, they are expecting the first egg any time. Rosa’s new mate has been named Lewis. 

Thank you so much for being with us today. Take care of yourself! See you soon – and the very best for the Lunar New Year to our friends celebrating around the world.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’J’, TIOF, Rutland Water, Latvian Fund for Nature, Arlene Beech, Cornell RTH Cam, FOBBV, News at 12, IWS/Explore, Eagle Country, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Androcat, Window to Wildlife, SK Hideaways, JB Sands Wetlands, Moorings Park, Achieva Credit Union, UFlorida-Gainesville, Gracie Shepherd, Diana Lambertson, Raptor Resource Project, Trudi Kron, The Guardian, Open Verse, and All About Birds.

Achieva does get egg 3…Friday in Bird World

9 February 2024

Good Morning Everyone!

To those celebrating the New Year (新年) or, as it is often known, the Spring Festival (春节), I wish you great prosperity, good health, and a long and happy life. Millions will be travelling to be with their families – and, as we know, it is the year of the Dragon (the Wood Dragon). Trees may be decorated with red lanterns, and couplets will be pasted to each side of the entrance door. These are ‘wishes’ for the new year. Many of my students would cook a special stir fry that had 16 to 19 kinds of vegetables. Those ranged from cauliflower, broccoli, bean sprouts, and snow peas. Other foods were prepared – each tasting different – and served in various coloured covered dishes. I always wondered at the variety, beauty, and hard work that went into the celebration. It was the joy of my teaching career to spend time with these students, missing their families who were far away and not being able to celebrate 年夜饭 – niányèfàn – or the lunar New Year’s Eve dinner with their loved ones. They taught me a lot! Many are now good friends. 

The girls will be wanting to eat some of the spring Festival Dishes tonight – and play with the longevity noodles and dumplings. We have been practising making them and Hugo Yugo was right there – wanting to help. I will try and get some images from the festivities on Saturday night to show you our curious kitty!

In Winnipeg, the forecast for Thursday was correct. As I was sitting and laughing with the allergy doctor testing me to see if I was allergic to anything – including my beloved cats – winter hit just as predicted. The rain shifted to snow, and the winds picked up, and two and a half hours later, I was glad to be tucked inside with ‘the girls’. As it happens, I am not allergic to anything! Nothing. What a relief. Mind you, I would never have gotten rid of my cats for an allergy – and there is treatment now, but it is best for those who work with animals daily, such as vets. I have Vasomotor Rhinitis, which is being treated with a kind of inhaler. ”These symptoms are excessive at times and are exacerbated by certain odours (e.g., perfumes, cigarette smoke, paint fumes, inks); alcohol; spicy foods; emotions; and environmental factors such as temperature, barometric pressure changes, and bright lights”. It can also include wildfires and hot soup. My symptoms have been excessive and have prompted a growth in the stockmarket value of Kleenex tissues. LOL. 

At any rate, winter has returned, and I am pleased. We need the snow cover, and most people need to slow down. Winter storms can help with that! The arrangement of the newsletter is a bit different since I was gone most of the day. And the poor girls. I have a new book just for them which we will read tomorrow – Be Mine, Porcupine. I wonder what else we can get to help celebrate Valentine’s Day with them. They are my ‘loves’. Let’s see if they will cooperate and give me some nice photographs for you in the morning. They have been darlings this evening. The onset of winter has slowed them down. It is now nearly 2100 and they are not leaping about reminding me of their last meal before bed! This is highly unusual. 

Two of Dyson kits were at the feeders early trying to find seeds from under the snow.

Hugo Yugo and Missey were watching the birds landing on vines on the side of the conservatory.

Hugo Yugo wanted to leap and grab one! I sure wish I had her energy. She kept me away half the night…she discovered necklaces hanging from pegs and was jumping at the wall trying to get them! Eventually they were all taken down and hidden in a drawer. Next it was the box with all the pens in it. She has figured out how to get the lid open…never stops, always funny. Adorable. Just look at those little paws.

Baby Hope was wishing for bird videos – not the real thing. It is so funny. She doesn’t care a thing about the animals outside! When she wants the videos turned on, she will lie in front of the screen. 

Achieva Osprey Platform, St Petersburg, Florida: I am not pleased that Achieva has a third egg. Jack and Diane are not the most robust ospreys and have great difficulty if three eggs hatch. It cannot always be put down on them -. The area is full of birds, including gulls and eagles, that eat fish and steal fish from ospreys. The other issue was the extreme drought conditions in the area last year. Jack often doesn’t deliver enough fish. One year, perhaps four years ago, we thought he might even have another nest. Diane had to resort to going out and finding her catfish. I had hoped that the third egg would not come, and now it has, a little late, and that is also concerning for that third hatch. 

We are going to start off with Ospreys because they really are on my mind. It feels like there is going to be a huge flurry and now that the third egg has been laid at Achieva, 11 days after the first, I am already trying to find the box of worry beads.

The first egg was laid on January 28, and the second on the 31st. Those are expected differences in dates. The problem is the third egg, which was laid on either the 7th or 8th of February. I think you can begin to imagine my concern. That is a difference, as mentioned earlier, of 11 days. I want you to sit and imagine an 11 day old osplet and a newly hatched. I know we had a miracle at Patchogue, Long Island last year with the fourth hatch, but let’s be honest. Jack and Diane are not the parents at Patchogue. Ospreys are different from one another and circumstances are different. We have no idea the competition Jack has for fish and if he loses fish to gulls enrolee back to the nest. What we do not is that the deliveries on this nest, historically, have not proven to be sufficient. Diane has gone out fishing when the osplets were old enough and, indeed, her catfish have kept some alive that might otherwise have perished. The couple are not young either.  This is highly worrisome. 

Captiva Osprey Platform, Barrier Islands, Florida: The new female at the Captiva Osprey nest is being named Jill – so we now have Jack and Jill. They have mated and it is a good nest. Let us hope that we have some chicks here this year.

Moorings Park, Naples, Florida: Harry and Sally, meanwhile, are taking their sweet time. No first egg on that nest yet!

Pelican Bay Osprey Platform, Naples, Florida: We have hatch but it is unknown how many eggs there were or how many hatched -yet.

Venice Golf and Country Club: First egg laid on 6 February. Second expected today.

Can catch their streaming cam here:

Here is the weekly summary for Gil and Brad at Port Lincoln, our South Australian fledgling ospreys:

A Spanish site to follow. Sunnie Day comments, “The osprey is categorised in the Red Book of Birds of Spain as “EN – Endangered” and is included in the Spanish Catalog of Threatened Species, as “VU – Vulnerable.” For more information about the species, consult SEO BirdLife’s Guide to Birds of Spain: https://seo.org/ave/aguila-

Want to send a special Valentine:

European and UK Ospreys – the very first of the monitored returnees – will be home in 6 months or 42 days! Yes. 

This came up on one of my FB groups today and I wanted to share it with you. The Return of the Ospreys to Loch Garten. Just to get you excited.

Switching back to the Bald Eagles in the US.

Big Bear Valley with Jackie and Shadow. Live fish delivery! Eggs have been rolled, both have taken incubation duties. Today is 9 February and in 20 days we are on pip watch. I am marking off my calendar, are you? 

Our loved eagles have made The Washington Post! ‘B’ kindly saved the article as a PDF so we could read about them. How nice! It is a really good read. I hope you enjoy it.

Not to worry about that fish. Jackie returns and enjoys her dinner. Thanks Baibai for capturing these events.

Redding Eagles. Liberty was on the nest checking out the flood water. She does not seem particularly concerned. She was still on the nest after dusk. I wonder.

Gabby brought in a pile of moss to the nest slightly covering that egg. Is it time for Gabby to say goodbye to the hopes of motherhood this year?

Nature Chat has added a new Kansas Bald Eagle nest to its list of streaming cams. The adults are Ellie and Harvey. Here is the link if you are interested.

US Steel Bald Eagle Nest, Pittsburg. No egg yet for Irvin and Claire. They have been fiddling with their nest, too!

SW Florida with M15, F23, and E23. That little much loved eaglet is still adored, but my goodness how it has grown. Well fed and every need has been attended to by his very doting parents. Check out that tail in the image below. You can see the quills holding the blood feathers. Then look, you can see them on the wings. Those quills will break off during preening or as the feathers grow and develop. What a beautiful eaglet with such a huge wing span. Many think our E23 is a female. That would be fantastic after years of speculating that the others were mostly male.

Florida’s Eagle Country with Abby, Blaze, Swampy, and Meadow. We all have our favourites, often little ones, that we are concerned about. I often root for the underdog, the younger one that struggles with a big sibling intent on bonking. Swampy, despite piles of fish and prey on the nest, continues to go after Meadow. Sometimes it is not even when it is a feeding. But, today, it seems Meadow got fed up and gave some back.

Swampy got its nose out of joint right before 6pm. Reminds me of Calico and Missey – the no apparent reason just to be miserable.

I think these eaglets offer some good insights into what we should be doing – finding joy and happiness and cooperation. Not beaking each other for who is the most powerful or dominant. There is plenty of fish provided by Blaze and Abby is a good Mum. Just chill you two! (I do tell Calico that every night BTW).

Rollin’ Rag had some good observations on Swampy and Meadow for today:

WRDC, Dade-Country, Florida nest of Ron, Rose, and R6. It seems that R6 is destined to eat strange things and survive. Rumour has it R6 ate the leg, and the metal ring of a bird recently brought to the nest. I cannot say…just a rumour. R6 looks extremely healthy with its fat bottom and strong wings. The dandelions are disappearing fast, and that dark charcoal thermal down covers this eaglet. He would make quite the model on the couture runway this season! Everyone seems to want expensive fleece – . Aren’t birds and animals fortunate? They don’t have to decide what to wear in the morning or do laundry! They certainly don’t contribute to the piles of waste textiles filling many African landscapes.

Captiva Eagle nest of Connie, Clive, Cal, and Lusa, Barrier Islands, Florida. The two eaglets are self-feeding. Not completely adept at this milestone, but they are sure trying hard. Standing on the rim of the nest bowl. Scary stuff. Another milestone.

PA Country, nest of Lisa and Oliver: First egg!

At Decorah North, Mr North and Mrs DNF are fiddling with the sticks for the nest. They are hilarious – like Shadow.

At the fruit table feeder in Panama, there is a visitor – a Roadside Hawk.

Cornell says, “The Roadside Hawk is one of the most widespread raptors of the Neotropics. Its name is due to its preference for the edges of forests. It is found in open to semi-open areas, forest borders, roadsides and plantations. It is usually not found in the forest interior. The Roadside Hawk feeds on a variety of small prey including reptiles, small mammals and birds, but mainly feeds on insects. This is not a social species; pairs can be seen during breeding season.”

I wonder if they would eat the hummingbirds flittering around as Cornell does not specify which small birds.

The Peregrine Fund gives us more information on these neotropical hawks:

  • There are twelve sub-species of Roadside Hawks
  • The Roadside Hawk tends to avoid dense forest habitat.
  • The Roadside Hawk is one of the most commonly seen raptors throughout its range.
  • Researches reported one observation of nestling siblicide in Roadside Hawks – meaning one nestling intentionally kills one or more of its brothers or sisters while they are all still young and in the nest.

The PF also tells us how this beautiful raptor got its name. “When you first hear the name “Roadside Hawk” you might guess that this raptor likes to hang around the sides of roads, and you would be correct. This hawk is often seen perched in trees, or on fence posts or power lines along highways, trails and paths. Just as it has a varied diet (which you can read about below), it also spends time in a wide variety of habitats including forest edges, plantations (such as pine, coffee and eucalyptus), woodland, scrubland, savannas, pine-oak forest, river edges, mangrove edges, and thorn forest. It can even be found living comfortably near humans – in suburbs and city parks.”

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, photographs, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog this morning: ’A, B, H, J, M’, Achieva Credit Union, Heidi Mc, Moorings Park, Pelican Bay, VGCC, PLO, Sunnie Day, Mary Cheadle, The Washington Post, FOBBV, Baibai, FORE, Eagle Goddess, Nature Chat, PIX Cams, Lady Hawk, Eagle Country, Rollin’ Rag, WRDC, Window to Wildlife, Trudi Kron, Raptor Resource Project/Explore, Cornell Bird Lab, and The Peregrine Fund.

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.

John Bunker Sands Eagles have first hatch, hunger at the WRDC…Saturday in Bird World

27 January 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Yesterday, the 26th, I ate a very special cake for my late Dad. It is his birthday. He had two favourite cakes – a fresh Coconut and, the other, a fresh Orange Cake. Some who live in the Southern US might be familiar with these – a nice white layer cake (sturdy and only handmade) filled with either freshly grated coconut with a buttercream frosting or freshly grated oranges mixed with some sugar, spread liberally between 5 or 6 layers, and let to sit.  If anyone is responsible for my feelings for abandoned animals, it is certainly him. Happy Birthday, Dad.

Hugo Yugo would have loved to have some of that cake. My goodness that little cat can get into the most trouble without even trying. She is sooooo curious. This coming week, she goes back to Dr Greene for her check-up. I think the vet will be pleased. 

Watching bird videos with Hope.

Hope is very patient with her little sister.

‘The Boyfriend’ enjoyed the Friday evening feast of organic roast chicken. The neighbourhood rallied around and showed their love for him – and the others – when it appeared that one individual would call the pound. I am joyful and grateful to live in an area with such compassion for animals.

Congratulations to the John Bunker Sands Wetland eagles on their first hatch of the season!

‘M’ sent me the video of Mum joyously calling Dad to tell him about the egg.

Jackie has been taking good care of the first egg at Big Bear laid on Thursday the 25th. Shadow brings his gal a nice fish lunch at 11:01. Mark your calendars for a Leap Year pip/hatch. Shadow actually brought in three fish on Friday for Jackie. Way to go….the reason nearly 10,000 people love this couple and wish them success this season. They are adorable.

If Gabby’s egg is to be the miracle of the breeding season, it should show signs of a pip Friday and hatch on Saturday or Sunday.

There seems to be a prey problem at the WRDC nest. For unknown reasons hunting seems to be difficult. Ron has not brought prey for a week, and Rose seems to be having a prey drought the past couple of days herself.  Both parents seem healthy, but I’m sure they are hungry.  We have not seen Rose with a crop, and Ron ate some of the fish on the nest yesterday.  They have run out of scraps for Rose to feed R6. The eaglet ate well Thursday, and had a small crop after a morning scrap feeding early Friday. PS are still okay.

Late afternoon on Friday. There is still no food delivery and everyone is getting worried, even if they are not saying it. Something is very much amiss here. 

Rose flew in after dumpster hunting with a child’s pull-up nappy and what appeared to be a piece of red meat (an organ) attached. R6 was fed. We must remember that eagles are carrion eaters. Their stomachs are made to digest the most horrible dead, maggot-eaten prey. Hopefully, this will keep R6 from starving, but imagine that the eagles have to eat garbage in one of the wealthiest neighbourhoods in Florida. Rose was plucking the plastic off the nappy. Then Ron flew in with a partial fish at 1730. What a relief. It was left on the nest and rightfully so – Rose doesn’t know when the next meal will come and R6 did eat – whatever it was.

We all need to learn something from Port Lincoln. They dared to provide fish for the family during the crucial period when one or both of the osplets might have perished. Their plan worked. It did not stop the adults from bringing fish to the nest. Five fish have been arriving daily, on average, for the fledglings, Gil and Brad. Three individuals with big hearts realised that it was time to help – so I say to those who are the administrators of the WRDC nest: the feral cats in my neighbourhood have more empathy and food than these beautiful eagles at the WRDC. Tonight ‘The Boyfriend’ had his normal organic chicken dinner. So, please, Help the eagles! Get them over the hump.

When we know there is a crisis, it is our duty, if we can in any way, to help the animals through the rough patch. Weather, overfishing, loss of habitat and thus loss of prey can now be linked to humans. There is your cause for intervention.

Rose appears to be feeding R6 some of the fish. Remember – these parents are hungry, too. They will protect the territory, feed themselves, and then feed the eaglets. Let us hope that tomorrow is a much better day and that the wind, or someone, gets this nappy and its plastic off this nest.

Here is the incident in question in video.

It appeared that R6 ate some of the plastic from the nappy…those stomach acids should do the trick. At the same time, the darling almost choked. 

We know that our beautiful birds around the world hunt in landfills. The storks of Western Europe, the General Adjutants in Assam, etc. What a testament to our mismanagement of the land that the animals and fish they need to survive are not abundant. One of the big threats to all of our birds, eagles included, is the growing abundance of plastic – as trash, as microplastics, fishing lines, etc. and now nappies.

The live stream went down at 2050 Friday night and returned at 0915 Saturday morning. The plastic has been removed from the nest with permission from USFWS. I hope that some fish were delivered as well. 

It appears that Ron has been able to deliver a fish Saturday morning. Let us hope that the dry spelling in prey at this nest is over. And then Rose brought in a big fish. Lovely!

Royal cam chick is being fed and weighed. 

Unfortunately, the amount of food the Royal Cam chick is getting is not sufficient and the Rangers – doing great diligence – have switched chicks with another family. They do amazing work, the NZ DOC rangers – everything they do is to ensure that these chicks survive to fledge. Swooping chicks, supplemental feeding, misting, you name it, they do it. Let us hope this attention to the care of these endangered seabirds spreads to other nests throughout the world.

The Royal cam chick was returned to the nest!

No shortage, so far, of prey items at SW Florida. E23 does get impatient and wishes Mum would get those bites a bit quicker to its beak!

Clive keeps the fish coming in at Captiva. These two are adorable, Cal and Lusa. Some think the plumage patterns on their backs look like turtle shells while others see them as bulls eyes.

Do you know what Doris Mager’s contributions to Bald Eagles was? If you do not know the name, have a read – and even if you do, refresh your memory!

Here is Condor Chat in case you missed it on Thursday. The missing birds will be added to the Memorial Page for 2023 in the new few days.

Dr Sharpe is out fixing cameras at the Channel Islands nests! Retired? Doesn’t seem so.

Please join various wildlife groups – such as Cornell and Audubon – for the great Bird Count on the 16th of February. The more that count, the more we know about the declines and gains in bird populations.

Bird Count is on this weekend in the UK and will there be winners such as the Waxwing? We wait to see.

Concern for the population of seabirds in the United Kingdom is growing.

Want to know more about the winter bird visitors to Scotland and their migration? Have a read!

We are 7 weeks and counting til the Ospreys return to the UK.

Thank you so much for being with me today. Please send positive wishes for a good prey day at the WRDC and if you can produce a miracle for Gabby and Beau, please do so! Take care everyone. See you soon.

Always free. You can unsubscribe anytime. Normally one post a day. No ads, no spam.

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, articles, zoom chats, photographs, videos, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ‘A, M’, John Bunker Sands Wetlands, FOBBV, Marylu Pitcher, WRDC, Eagle Goddess, NZ DOC, Lady Hawk, Sharon Dunne, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Window to Wildlife, Saturday Evening Post, Audubon Magazine, Ventana Wildlife Society Condor Chat, Gracie Shepherd, National Audubon Society, and The Guardian.

Royal Cam chick returned to Mum…Wednesday in Bird World

24 January 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Your smile for the day comes from Auntie ‘H’ who modified a Scott Metzger cartoon:

Perfect! I couldn’t wipe the smile from my face all day. 

The weather is warming up and tomorrow it is forecast to be either 1 or 4 degrees C. That is ‘plus’. My plan is to go out for a long walk at one of our provincial parks before things get too soupy. Today it was a jaunt around a local forest and a walk through The English Garden at our zoo. The air was so clean and fresh. Everyone was friendly and smiling and saying ‘hello’.

In the house, the girls had a ball watching their bird video. Baby Hope was extremely animated and determined to catch one!

Cornell and NZ DOC made a short video of the return of the Royal Cam chick to the nest! What a cute little fluff ball! Look at the loving eyes of the parent as they see their chick for the first time. Precious.

Royal Cam chick (like all the albatross chicks) has been checked and re-checked and has been fed at least twice.

Gabby is still incubating that egg! And V3 is there on the branch, cuts healing on his feet, from protecting her and the nest. These two have had a real time of it this year and, sadly, we know what Gabby probably does, too – there is no little eaglet. I feel so sorry for her. Two years without a chick – 2023 and now 2024. 

At SW Florida, E23 is being left alone more and more, even at night. This morning the eaglet was spreading its large wings. I held my breath thinking about the GHOs…maybe they are too busy with their own nest to worry about the eaglet! Let’s hope.

E23 is growing so fast! All that good food – and what a variety this wee one has had. The mohawk is there, clown feed, and there were some nice close ups of the ‘blood’ feathers today. 

Blood Feather Information: 

“When a feather is pulled out or falls out during a normal moult (a normal loss of feathers), a new feather is stimulated to start growing right away. As the new feather, also called a pin or blood feather, emerges from the skin’s feather follicle, it looks like a spike, quill or much like the feather shaft itself. This new feather has a blood supply flowing through it and is encased by a keratin (type of protein) coating or feather sheath. The base, where the feather is developing and being nourished by blood, is a dark blue color. On smaller feathers such as those around the head, the base may be a red or pink color. Some pin feathers may be sensitive, and birds may not enjoy being handled while moulting. As the feather continues to grow, the tip will mature first as the blood recedes back down into the follicle. The bird will gradually preen off the keratin feather sheath from the maturing feather tip and the newly formed feather will emerge.” (VCA Animal Hospital)

At Captiva, C10, Cal, had a crop that looked like it could pop any time. Connie was busy ensuring C11 had a good fish meal, too. Isn’t she lovely? Both eaglets have thrived, although I must say I did worry about C11, Lusa, during the storm.

Connie sleeps on the rim of the nest while her babies dream about fish breakfast.

The only true fluffy little eaglet right now is R6. Rose stays right on top of her keeping her warm and dry in case a storm hits Dade County. Little R6 is growing and stretching. It is much easier to see it being fed from that nest cup than it was even yesterday.

There is the first egg, laid on Monday the 22nd, at Duke Farms for Mum and her new mate.

At Port Lincoln, Bradley and Giliath were caught on video following Mum and Dad fish begging.

Good News coming from Senegal: Blue 497, the oldest chick from Mrs G’s last brood in 2022, has been seen and photographed. Congratulations, Glaslyn. This is the first time it was seen. Blue 2H2 from Rutland was seen the other day and Blue 5F our grand Mamma from Clywedog was photographed in her usual spot. We are getting close to really dreaming about their return – is it really less than 60 days now?

It looks like Wisdom wasn’t just dancing, but is breeding again on the Midway Atoll. Fingers crossed for our oldest albatross ringed in 1956 – she is at least 73 years old!

Tim Mackrill has written a new book on Ospreys. I wonder if it will beat my favourite, most reasonably priced, packed full of great information and photographs he wrote for the RSPB? You can pre-order now. Published by Bloomsbury, there are 150 photographs, and it will be out on Leap Year Day. I have an order and will tell you how it compares to the earlier RSPB version! (Thanks, Geemeff).

Here is the publisher’s description: 

If you do not live in the land of peat burning, you might not fully understand why it is important not to burn it – these are huge carbon sinks. Here is a document in simple language that all of us can understand – who is burning the peat and why they should stop.

‘J’ sent me the summary of the Raptor Resource’s Project tracking Golden Eagles. What a treat.

I have a wee bit of a winter cold and am going to tuck it in early tonight. The newsletter is, thus, shorter than expected. I know you will understand.

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, photographs, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog this morning: ’A, Geemeff, H, J’, Cornell and the NZ DOC, Holly Parsons, NEFL-AEF, SW Florida Eagle Cam, VCA Animal Hospital, Window to Wildlife, WRDC, Duke Farms, PLO, Raptor Resource Project, Raptor Persecution UK, and Bloomsbury Publishing.

Blue KWO makes Birders Bird of the Year list!

19 January 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

Mamma Calico and Baby Hope wish each of you a very wonderful Friday.

They had fun playing with the Chinese chair – Hugo Yugo and Missey – while Baby Hope looked on, wanting to enjoy her bird video.

Oh, it was an odd morning. It felt like the air was full of water. All of the seeds were frozen together although there was nothing more than the humidity. No new snow. The squirrels were all out – Dyson and her kits and the two Reds. The Blue Jays were here along with the various sparrows. I did not happen to see the Crow or the Starlings. Of course, ‘The Boyfriend’ arrived at 0900, 1200, and 1658. He is, like Calico, a creature that is attune to time, but does not wear a watch.

The girls ‘helped’ me put together a new desk. After 25 years, it was time to get a longer one to spread all of my books and papers about it. I broke my desire to not buy anything in January. Fortunately, I did not fall into the right after Christmas sales and the discount on this desk was too deep to ignore. I had a gorgeous one with a glass top in my office when I was teaching and helping direct the School of Art, but my one at home was much smaller. Of course, it had to be put together! The base is heavy metal, and they did not drill any pilot screws, not one. What a job to keep everything straight and then try to drill a pilot screw and not go through the top. Ridiculous! Now I know why it had such a discounted price! Can’t imagine what the folks who paid full price felt when they had to fight trying to get those screws into holes under a piece of 1 inch metal tubing. It is now together, and I love it, but I am glad you could not hear me when I was trying to get those screws tight. Hugo Yugo was in there like a rocket, supervising every second. 

Geemeff sent me the news and I am jumping up and down for both Blue KWO and my friend, Michael St John in Barbados, that spotted this Scottish bird – and wasn’t sure what he was looking at. How in the world did this osprey get to the Caribbean from the UK last fall? We might never know that secret but Blue KWO continues to thrive on the island and has been seen with another osprey! Might we have a bonded couple?

I’ve shared below the announcement two recent images that Michael took. One with Blue KWO and her ‘friend’ (potential mate) and another of her with a nice catch. Michael has gotten to see her catch fish twice. How lucky! And how lucky he spotted that blue band. 

This is so exciting. I remember the day I got Michael’s note and posts went out everywhere trying to find out all the information that we could about the bird. Many did not believe that an osprey could get from the UK to the Caribbean – but, well, there is the proof. There are also other birds on the island that should be in the south of England but are basking in the beautiful blue skies of the Caribbean. I wonder how grateful they are?

Well, I couldn’t be more happy. Well done, Michael St John! May Blue KWO’s crop always be full and may it be a long and productive life on your island.

At the NE Florida nest, Gabby was on and off the egg. She missed Beau bringing her a fish present, which he ate on the nest himself. She must have been hungry to have left the egg unincubated….maybe she knew Beau would be there and take over? We have about a week or nine days to go (I think by my bad math) to see if this egg is viable.

It is day 27 (if my math is correct) – so 9 days. 27 January we should be watching for a pip. With Beau’s delivery of a fish to the nest, I really would like to see these two get a chance to raise a little one this year. A change of heart for me…they have worked so hard and Beau has come such a long ways in his journey to adulthood.

Beau did not incubate the egg.

Gabby has been gone almost two hours. Beau is waiting and watching for her.

Gabby is back at 1537.

Rose has turned out to be a great Mum over at the WRDC nest. R6 has had Coot and an Ibis to eat today! What a little cutie pie.

Meanwhile, in Fort Myers, M15 and F23 decide to blanket little E23 with its huge crop (so big the eaglet can hardly move) with nesting material! SK Hideaways caught it on video.

Clive had the nest full of fish today! C10 and C11 had the biggest crops. They could not have felt any hunger! Notice that almost all the white down dandelions on their heads are gone. You can see the pin feathers coming in – everywhere -and they are now completely covered by dark thermal down. Both ate well today. No worries at all. 

Please send your positive wishes to Lori Covert who owns the land that the Captiva eagle and osprey nests are on. Her house has flooded from all the rain and there is ongoing issues with the wiring. 

‘A’ sends us the past reports for two days at Sydney—SE31 is sure a beauty:

January 18: It was a fine early morning and our juvenile was seen on the island at 7:30am, flying around a bit and then on the exposed mudflats nearby. Then after a short fly about, she disappeared into the mangroves behind River Roost. No adults were seen before this. Then later, at 9:30am, she was seen picking at bits of rubbish on the mudflats. Sometimes there may be dead fish for scavengers. However, human rubbish may cause injuries. There were no more reports until just after 4pm, when one adult was seen on River Roost, but SE31 was out of sight.

January 19: At 7:30am, no eagles were seen at the river. Shortly after, we spotted SE31 hidden in branches on the island. At 8:15am, she was seen flying low over the mudflats in Ermington Bay, behind the island. She was possibly hunting and flushed out other water birds – ibis, herons, ducks. As the tide was going out, more of the mudflats were exposed and we saw her picking at scraps on the mudflats. She spent some time flying about the island, swooped several times on one circuit by an angry magpie. We feel she was eating at one stage, though prey was not identified. At 9:30am, neither adult had been seen. I returned at 12:10pm, and finally saw her fly from low at River Roost to a higher branch. Finally, just after 6pm, one adult was seen down on the river, but SE31 out of sight.

At Port Lincoln, Dad comes in with a fish at 0946. Brad decides to chase Dad off the nest and Gil grabs the fish. Go figure!

I love Jackie and Shadow in the morning…thank you, SK Hideaways for these diamonds!

There is concern that neither egg at Berry College is viable. The average for hatch of Bald Eagles is approximately 36.5 days. Egg one is 42 days old today and egg two is 39 days.

On the 17th, the Decorah North Female (DNF) caught a pheasant and had a fantastic lunch on her snowy nest.

The smallest penguin visits the Royal cam nest in New Zealand.

A flock of over 100 Cedar Waxwings photographed in Oklahoma. This is a double ‘wow’.

Mark Smith caught an Osprey catching a very poisonous Manowar Jellyfish. 

The Cattle Egret is a common sight in the Caribbean. They are often around the cattle in Grenada and I have photographed them for many years. They are characters like Hugo Yugo. Today, the numbers in the UK have grown since 2008. Here is why.

A new approach in Mongolia is protecting the last Dalmatian Pelicans. BirdLife International tells how what is happening.

In case you missed it, ‘R’ has reminded me of the video at the end of the article on the Billion Dollar mouse. It is roughly 20 minutes long and is full of personal recollections that we think you will enjoy. 

This is the link: Vimeo.com/285024252

Please cut and paste.

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, articles, videos, photographs, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, Geemeff, J, MSJ, R’, NEFL-AEF, WRDC, SW Florida Eagle Cam, SK Hideaways, Window to Wildlife, PLO, Chickiedee64, Raptor Resource Project/Explore.org, NZ DOC, Janice Blanton, Mark Smith, The Guardian, BirdLife International, Vimeo and Birdlife International.

R6 hatches, hatching underway in NZ…Monday in Bird World

15 January 2024

Good Morning Everyone,

We are still experiencing life threatening extreme temperatures with the wind chill. Without the wind, it is -25 C now as I am writing – fifty degrees difference between Winnipeg and Melbourne!

Hugo Yugo has been watching television ‘again’. Isn’t she adorable?

The others are fine, and so is ‘The Boyfriend’, who is snug as a bug in his super-insulated home. 

The Starlings had been in the garden, nearly 30 of them in November and December. Today, there were eleven that returned. They were eating snow and the solid suet cylinder on the big table feeder (it had fallen off its holden and broken).

I have a heater for the bird bath, but there was a problem with the closest plug, and the instructions say not to attach the cord to an extension cord. So I wait…I feel bad because studies repeatedly show that the birds need water more than seed, and if you feed seed in the winter, water should be provided.

The Pritchetts reported that it was a fish hook in E23’s mouth that M15 worked and got out. Was it that or a fishbone? Whatever it was, it was a miracle that M15 got it out. CROW was monitoring the situation. Thankfully, it was resolved by the hard work of M15 and F23.

Here is the video of that removal!

E23 is OK. What a relief. E23 is eating well later. As so many of you must be thinking – the best parents, lots of food, still do not protect these babies 100%. This precious little one, the only child to the new bonded pairing of M15 and F23, must thrive! That is all there is to it. I am so grateful that the Pritchetts and CROW monitor these events and will respond immediately if help is required.

It is 13:29 Sunday and the pip has turned into a pea size hole at the WRDC nest of Ron and Rita. Everyone is waiting for R6 to arrive safely.

Missing fish. Ron took it. Rita not impressed. Hopefully he will bring some back!

Pat Burke aka gr8lakes and all those staring at the screen waiting for the hatch are celebrating Sunday night. R6 is here!

HeidiMc made the best hatch video of the bunch and my system is not letting me post it directly. Please click on the link below and have a look at a nicely edited concise video from pip to hatch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSgwj-F6AwY

Rose talking to R6 as she appears to remove the last part of the shell.

So where is the food, Dad?

Good Morning Gabby.

Beau came and gave Gabby a much needed break in the afternoon.

Bella and Scout keeping a close watch over their nest and territory.

We so want Sauces Canyon to have an eaglet this year…8 eggs last year Audacity laid with no luck due to the lingering impact of the DDT sprayed and remaining in the area after fifty plus years. Send this couple positive wishes.

Both eagles were at the Dulles-Greenway nest today…Rosa and her new mate.

C10 and C11 are changing from little eaglets to getting their full thermal down and losing all those dandelions. Before we know it, they will have their juvenile feathers.

How many of you are checking out the Bald Eagle nest at Seagoville, Texas? You might just want to put this one on your watch list. It is in the John Bunker Sands Wetland Centre which is 25 SE of Dallas, Texas. The nest is 26 metres (85 feet) off the ground on the tower shown in the image below. The Eagles returned on the 10th of September. They are called Mum and Dad and both are believed to be approximately 19 years old.

The female is believed to be the one that was here in 2014 but there is a divided opinion on whether the male is the original or not.

Here is the link: 

It is so nice to get some news of dear Ervie!

Meanwhile, it was very rough at Port Lincoln today. Mum, Dad, and Gil were spotted on the old barge while Brad stayed at the nest.

Brad got the first two fish deliveries with Gil getting the mid-afternoon one at 1529.

The two oldest eggs at the Royal Albatross colony in NZ are hatching!

News coming from The Gambia of Rutland fledglings. 2H2 from 2022 seen!

Also caught on camera was Arthur, mate to Big Red, on the Cornell Campus. You could be fooled into thinking this is Big Red until you see the apron across the breast. Not Big Red but our darling Dad.

Some interesting nest building happening on Kauai this year. Will there be torrential rains to impact the eggs? Let’s wait and see if these Laysan Albatross are better predictors of the weather than the meteorologists!

The climate crisis is killing some of Scotland’s wildlife including the smallest raptors, the kestrels.

Remember, the news at the bottom is not the least important. Often it is what comes to me right before I hit ‘publish’. A gamekeeper and his son pleaded guilty to selling wild peregrine falcons on the market in the UK. What is going on with their sentencing?

She is a special person and that is why I am including this today. You should remember Sacha Dench for her efforts in finding the answers to conserving the Ospreys and the flyway from the UK and Western Europe to West Africa. Some of her interviews with local people were linked to my blog – the goal was to get the people of West Africa on board with conservation efforts, and to do that, they needed education about the ospreys. 4K was the bird being followed at the time – the subject of Simon Curtis’s new book. That journey was undertaken after a horrific accident in the Scottish highlands. She is known as ‘The Human Swan’ because of her earlier 7000 km trip tracking the Bewick Swan and their migration from Russia’s Arctic region to the UK in 2016.  A crowd funder to get prosthetic legs for Sacha Dench has been opened. Here is the information.

Thank you so much for being with me today. Take care. Stay safe. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, videos, posts, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog today: ’A, H, J, M’, SW Florida Eagle Cam, SK Hideaways, WRDC, Heidi Mc, Pat Burke, Gracie Shepherd, NEFL-AEF, NCTC, Deb Stecyk, Dulles-Greenway, John Bunker Sands Wetland Centre, PLO, @TimMacKrill, @CornellHawks, Sharon Dunne, Holly Parsons, Raptor Persecution UK, and Conservation without Borders.

Thursday in Bird World

4 January 2023

Good Morning,

It is almost the last of the warm weather. We are beginning to dip. It is -12 C. Next week the forecast is for -23 on Friday. I know you will be wondering how on earth we stay warm, but we do! Insulated houses, jackets, boots, warm mitts/gloves, warm hats, triple pane windows, etc. It is, of course, bloody cold! And I tend to find it much nicer to have lots of story times with the girls than go out. 

As I am writing this, Hope and Hugo are chasing one another all over the place. They are the best of playmates. When you look remember that both were the kittens of strays. Baby Hope, the Calico, was born on 2 July 2023 and Hugo Yugo was born on 2 September 2023. There is only two months separating them. Hope is almost as big as her mother. Hugo is very, very tiny. You can see this better in the second image. Still, Hugo Yugo is not afraid of anything and she loves nothing better than a play fight and tumble with Missey or Hope.

Hope likes to pose. She is so beautiful.

Precious Mamma.

Awhile ago I played with names. Never did change her name from Hugo because she was a girl but I have found myself calling her Hugo Yugo and she comes running even when she is busy in the twinkle tree when she hears it. 

You can get an idea of how tiny Hugo Yugo is from comparing her head to the ornament below her. 

We don’t have any new snow but Baibai caught the first snow for Jackie and Shadow on Wednesday. It is so beautiful.

The eaglets are eating, sleeping, and growing at Captiva. They are really at that ‘awkward’ moment, but so cute with those full crops. ‘Oh, just have one more bite!”

Beau did not completely bury the second egg when he was incubating and aerating. Beau will learn – he is learning. Gabby is back on deck.

Here is a video of that three hour incubation shift.

There is what all the fuss is about in Fort Myers! That little fuzzy cutie-pie of an eaglet of M15 and F23—-E23. They are finishing up that rabbit on Wednesday. This chick and its first time Mum have no idea how lucky they are…’Harriet-trained M15′ as a dad and partner. Wow.

M15 feeding F23.

M15 feeding his only eaglet.

Dad and the new female at the ND-LEEF have that nest that collapsed when Little Bit ND17 went overboard in tip top shape for a new season. They are north so the eggs will come later than the ones in Florida and the other parts of the south.

The female at Duke Farms is working with the new male on their nest. There are a lot of new pairs this year, did you realise this?

Pepe and Muhlady have a beautiful nest. Will there be a second clutch?

Abby and Blaze continue incubation at Eagle Country.

Liberty is so gorgeous in the sun at the Redding nest she shares with Guardian.

Some action at the NCTC nest of Bella and Scout.

It was a good day for Gil and Brad at Port Lincoln and that was just up to early afternoon!

One of my favourite Osprey couples is Blue 33 and Maya at Rutland Water. Blue 33 is Maya’s second partner. She how now broken Osprey history at Rutland by fledgling 37 chicks. Her and Blue 33 are considered to be a Super Couple because they have also successfully raised several clutches of four!

Annie and Lou were not impressed when humans entered ‘their’ territory.

Because I see the rivalry at my bird feeders, this article coming out of Audubon on the birds that win at getting seed turned out to be very interesting. I think you will be surprised, too.

Did you know?

The Midway Atoll has some hatches.

A study to determine if painting a wind turbine blade black will help stop bird deaths.

Of course, there can sometimes just be too many studies and not enough action. A Norwegian study from four years ago -.

Iberdrola is already undertaking this action because of previous research.

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

Thank you to the following for their notes, posts, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog this morning: ’A, H, J’, Baibai, Window to Wildlife, NEFL-AEF, SW Florida Eagle Cam, Lady Hawk, ND-LEEF, Duke Farms, Superbeaks, Eagle Country, NCTC, Meredith Gertz, PLO, Bart M, Rutland Osprey Project, SK Hideaways, Audubon, Projeto Albatros, USFWS, Wiley Online Library, and Iberdrola.

Gil fledges at PLO and R5 is spotted!…Good news in Bird World

16 December 2022

Good Morning Everyone,

First up. Gil fledges. What a great flight. Just like a pro.

The girls are doing great. Thank you for all your messages. We are starting a new book. It is all about Wilding. I cannot tell you how thankful I am to the person or article that suggested reading to cats in a soothing voice was a good way to get them to trust you. You might recall that when I brought Calico into the house that was what we did – we had story time 5 or 6 different periods of the day. Gosh, I got to read a lot. She was fed while I was reading and often wound up sleeping on my lap. I did the same thing when Baby Hope joined us. Then, when it was safe, all the others joined in. Now Baby Hugo is in the mix. There is something so ‘moving’ seeing them on the old quilt my grandmother made or sitting in a chair ‘listening’ to the words of the stories. I am forever grateful to have these four beautiful girls in my life and our dear Lewis, bless him. 

It is hard to believe, but I use Uncle Claudio’s trick of the Marigolds to clean the wool fabric on the chairs twice a day doesn’t make a dent in it…there is always cat fur!

Meanwhile, one of Hugo’s aunties suggested applying a little olive oil on those little crusty bits below the eyes. Done! Hugo loves to play. She loves balls with jingle bells and tearing around. I often find her and Hope together with a pile of little toys. It is joyous. 

Hope and Hugo getting ready for story time. They claim the chairs. Hope wants the other wool camp blanket and Hugo always has to have a toy. Missey will be on the table and Calico will be on my lap or the old quilt.

We were all disappointed when the second egg of Pepe and Muhlady broke with no apparent chick inside. The good news is that there is time for them to have a second clutch and it is rumoured that this has happened before, and Muhlady laid eggs again in February. That would be wonderful.

‘H’ is overjoyed and I assume all of you will be jumping up and down with glee. She writes, “R5 (9 months old tomorrow) has been spotted in Palm Beach County, north of Miami-Dade.” Brilliant. Just the kind of good news that we needed today in Bird World.

Wow. Beautiful juvenile.

There is more good news coming from the Royal Albatross colony near Dunedin, New Zealand. Moana, the Royal Cam chick that hatched in 2016, has returned safely and is now banded. With all the challenges the birds encounter flying to Chile and being alone foraging over the high seas, this is simply a wonderful miracle. 

Here is Moana’s story:

If you missed it, the 2023-24 Royal Cam couple is LGK and LGL.

Also, if you missed it, Trudi Kron reminds us: “From Cody Wayne · ·Andria is being transported to the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine for the necropsy and many of the tests we requested. She will arrive on Wednesday at noon. Preliminary results from various tests should start to come back to us by the end of next week. I will share information as I receive it.”

There is a lot of nest restorations going on at Redding. Just look at that beauty. No chance of an eaglet falling overboard here. Good luck – eggs required!

‘J’ caught some very intimate moments between Gabby and V3. She obviously loves this male eagle. We are always hopeful for them.

Tail swishing.

Eagle affection!

Gabby and V3 have been together both morning and evening. They are a beautiful couple. 

‘J’ also caught a glimpse of the two eggs at Captiva while the nest of Clive and Connie rocks and rolls with the winds of the thunderstorms brewing in the area. The storms will be heavy for the next two days. Let us all hope that chick stays in that egg! The same bad weather will be hitting the SW Florida nest of M15 and F23. Their hatch date is at least ten days away.

They didn’t wait for the weather to pass. There is a pip at Captiva Saturday morning!

Osprey visitors checking out the Captiva nest. They are in for bad weather, too – just a short distance from Connie and Clive.

Since Martin’s disappearance, Rosa has had several suitors. Now another one.

It looks like Alex might have a new mate.

All is well at Port Lincoln. Brad is on the left and Gil on the right. Gil doesn’t even notice the tracker. Well done, Ian Falkenberg! One of the chatters said that Ian Falkenberg practised putting the tracking harness on his chickens before ever applying one to an osplet. If that it true, it is brilliant.

The days observations and fledge and return times for Gil.

At Orange, Marri buzzed the scrape box.

SE32 continues to be photographed. Isn’t this wonderful?

Lastly sad news has come in. Chris Wood has died. It seems it was only yesterday that I spoke to him about a trip to visit The Gambia for next year to observe ospreys. The UK and West African community have lost a formidable supporter of ospreys and a wonderful chap. My condolences to all.

Thank you for being with me today. Lots of good and exciting news. See you soon.

Thank you to the following for their notes, videos, articles, and streaming cams that helped me to write my blog: ’A, Geemeff, H, J”, HeidiMc, Sharon Dunne, DOC-NZ, Holly Parsons, FORE, NE-AEF, Window to Wildlife, Gracie Shepherd, Lucille Powell, Dulles-Greenway, PLO, Helen Matcham, Lady Hawk, Eagle Cam, Tiger Mozone, and Bart M.

Eagles are busy…Sunday in Bird World

26 November 2023

Good Morning Everyone,

I hope that you had a chance to get out for some time and enjoy yourself. Breathe in the fresh air and listen to some birds! It was nippy in Winnipeg. No snow but a crisp wind. So, keeping the vow to continue ‘moving’, I headed off to Assiniboine Park to the recently opened Leaf.

But before we get to the Leaf, awhile ago, I mentioned leaf blowers. My friend ‘R’ explained to me – the choir – how much he dislikes them. ‘R’, you are not alone! As the girls and I neared the end of The Comfort of Crows, Renkl’s chapter ‘How to Rake Leaves On a Windy Day’, reminded me of that conversation with R. She says, “Leaf blowers are like giant whining insects that have moved into your skull. They are swarming behind your eyes, drilling down Ito your teeth. Leaf blowers have ruined autumn with their Insistent drone and their noxious fumes, and they are everywhere. You may believe it is futile to resist then, but you can resist them. In almost every situation where something is loud, obnoxious, and seemingly ubiquitous, resistance is an option. Head to the toolshed in your backyard and fiddle with the rusty padlock until it finally yields. Reach into the corner where you keep the shovel and the posthole digger and the pruning shears. From that jumble of wonderful tools requiring no gasoline, pull out a rake…Leave the leaves lie everywhere it is possible to let the leaves lie. You aren’t trying for clean lines; you are trying only to pacify the angry neighbour who complained because some of your leaves blew into their yard. Leave the leaves in the flower beds. Leave them close to the house…When the birds return in springtime, these insects will be a feast for their nestlings. Whatever it might feel like on a damp November day, remind yourself that spring is coming.” She continues, “The leaves you let sit today will colder and rot through the winter, generating their own heat and protecting large trees and small creatures alike. Think of your desultory raking as a way to feed the trees, as an investment in an urban forest. If your neighbour complains again, tell them that you are feeding their trees.”…”Before you go inside, take a leaf into your head. Put it on your desk or next to your bed. Keep it nearby, through whatever troubles the long winter brings. It will help you remember that nothing is truly over. It will help you remember what the wind always teaches us in autumn: that just because you can’t see something doesn’t mean it isn’t there”. (241-43)

Moving to another Leaf.

So, today we are going to start off with something different. I am going to take you for a walk around The Leaf. It is at our zoo!

This is the Parks Department description of the four areas inside the glass building with some commentary running through by yours truly.

Hartley and Heather Richardson Tropical Biome

Visitors become immersed in the warmth and vibrancy of the Hartley and Heather Richardson Tropical Biome, where exotic plants and a balmy environment creates an oasis, particularly during the winter months. This rainforest-like paradise is brimming with tropical plants, bold textures and lush green colours. The largest of The Leaf’s planted spaces; it is home to Canada’s tallest indoor waterfall, a peaceful koi pond, and lush plant material from tropical regions of the world.

It was hot! Thank goodness the reception area recommended that everyone remove their heavy winter coats, hats, scarves, and gloves! People were happy, enjoying themselves. Looking at wonderful or sitting in quiet contemplation.

There was a time when everyone seemed to have a Prayer Plant in their collection of house plants.

Some of the very best Cacao I have ever tasted comes from the island of Grenada where my son lives. Deep, rich, and earthy chocolate.

The Chinese Hat Plant.

The Koi seem to have a wondrous pond.

Mediterranean Biome

The Mediterranean Biome is home to plants from regions known for their superb fruits, fine wines and abundant crops. Visitors are surrounded by plant life from climatic zones characterized by moist, cool winters and hot, dry summers including Greece and Italy, as well as South Africa, South West Australia, Central Chile and California. This biome hosts a memorable mosaic of colour, texture and fragrance that reaches its peak during the winter months. A welcoming seating area invites visitors to relax and enjoy the sights and smells of these fascinating plants. 

This area turned out to be my favourite because it was cooler than the Tropical area and also because they had the plants identified more clearly. As you enter, there was a long area (see below) of the herbs that grew so well in my garden this past summer – thyme, rosemary, mint.

What a gorgeous hibiscus this was. The one I have in the house – that goes in and out during the seasons – is pink. You can collect the flowers and make a very nice Hibiscus syrup or I have often added them to cakes – tiny chopped up bits of Hibiscus.

There are two other areas. One is a place for special floral displays and the other is the butterfly garden.

No one saw a single butterfly in the Butterly Garden. There are rumours that they flew out of the building by accident in the early fall. Perhaps, the call of migration was powerful.

The flower area was small but pretty. Would love to see it lit up at night!

It was a very nice afternoon.

We continue to wait to hear if little Greyish is available. We are approved for adoption but…the girls have slept most of the day. I caught Hope licking her incision. That is bad but, there is no way that she will wear a cone and unlike her Mamma, Calico, she will not let me get near enough to put antiseptic cream on the incision and olive oil. The trip to the vet caused her to go back weeks in terms of socialisation. It really did scare the wits out of her. Next time, when she needs her booster shots (in 3 weeks), the mobile vet will come to the house. The need for some cream on that tummy might mean that I have to toss the blanket on her and grab…I try not to do that because it is also stressful but, there is no way she is going to get an infection!!!!!!!!!

M15 got to see the first egg for him and F23. Today, he was caught bringing in a huge stick. He is going to make sure these babies do not fall out of that nest!

I know that each and every one of you is thrilled that M15 is going to get a chance to be a Dad again.

Pa Berry and Missey are working hard on their nest. Is it possible they could be next?

Gabby and V3 seem to have lined the entire nest with Spanish Moss. Just look at it. Think comfy. Now…let’s talk eggs.

There is good news coming from ND-LEEF. Lovely to see both Dad and the new female at the nest!

Looking for treats at Eagle Country…

Happy to see some stick moving at the nest of Jackie and Shadow at Big Bear on Saturday. Always good to see one or both at the nest.

Good night, Anna, and your two precious eggs at Kisatchie National Forest E-3.

Good night, Connie, at Captiva.

Good night, Muhlady. Just think. We are 12 days away from hatch!

At the NCTC nest of Bella and Smitty, Smitty has not been seen on the nest for 66 days – since 21 September. Feeling so sad for Bella. This nest has attracted many intruders with physical injuries over the past few years.

The Hancock Wildlife Foundation held its eagle count and the total was 1066 Bald Eagles. Wow.

Just look at the geese in New Jersey near the Barnegat Light Osprey nest! Oh, goodness. I would love to be there to listen to all their honking – or just to see them. I miss all the migrants once they leave Canada for their warmer winter homes.

Kestrels renewing their pair bonds in Germany.

The water at Port Lincoln looks quite calm. Mum and chicks are waiting for fish! Sometimes it seems that the life of a raptor is simply that – a life of waiting. Waiting for eggs to be laid, incubation, waiting for fish deliveries…waiting for it all to begin again.

The Fish Fairy arrives and saves the day with three fish. We get to see Giliath self feeding! They are growing up fast. Remember 8 December (that is Australian calendar/time) will be ringing, weighing, and putting on trackers. #2 will get its name.

Heidi Mc caught the fledgling/juvenile of Diamond and Xavier and its aborted landing in the scrape yesterday for us in video.

Falco, the Eurasian owl who escaped from the Central Park Zoo nine months ago, has made The Guardian in a story questioning whether or not the owl can survive in the Big Apple.

Sadly, Glaslyn has lost one of its oldest female Ospreys. Blue 8C was the daughter of Ochre 11 (98), the last chick from the original male of the translocation project. Blue 8C fledged from Rutland at 53 days on the 8th of July 2014. She was almost ten years old when Jean-Marie Dupart found her injured, and when he returned to the beach area where she was to retrieve her, she had died. Condolences. She knew her route well between the UK and Senegal…so sad to hear of her passing.

One lucky falcon. So many injuries, rescues, and will be free again soon. Magnificent.

The crimes against raptors in the UK are largely linked to the large land estates associated with shooting parties. Will a younger generation turn on this medieval tradition amongst the aristocratic classes?

A fun bird fact from ‘J’ today:

Roger Tory Peterson’s first painting was of a Blue Jay! And it was his favourite bird.
His seventh grade teacher brought a portfolio of The Birds of New York State by bird painter Louis Agassiz Fuertes. Each kid was given a small box of water colors and a color plate to copy. Peterson got the Blue Jay.

Thank you so much for being with me today. Please take care of yourself. Enjoy your Sunday — or whatever day it feels like. When you are retired, the days roll into one another! See you soon.

Thank you to the following for the comments, notes, videos, articles, screen captures, and posts that helped me to write my blog this morning: “J”, Margaret Renkl and her book, The Comfort of Crows, The Leaf, Janet Gray, Nancy Babineau, Berry College Eagle Cam, NEFL-AEF, Philippe Josse, Eagle Country, FOBBV, KNF-E3, Window to Wildlife, Superbeaks, Hancock Wildlife Foundation, Wildlife Conservancy of NJ, Michael Raege, The Guardian, Mary Cheadle and Jean-marie Dupart, Robin Stockfelt, and Raptor Persecution UK.