2nd hatch at Manton Bay…Late Thursday in Bird World

15 May 2026

Hello Everyone,

It is Thursday evening, and Toby and I are having our ‘quiet’ time. Thursday was a busy day working in the garden. We are so excited about planting the flowers and veggies this weekend! Our neighbour has finished the longest railing for the deck, and we will be looking for over-the-rail planters for shade flowers. The colour will be ‘red’ this year!

Unless something dramatic happens, I will take at least a day off to plant and enjoy being outside instead of checking the screens. I urge you to do the same!

Not wanting to start any rumours, but where are the fish for our Iris? There is some concern about the whereabouts of New Guy2 at Hellgate Canyon. Is he around? Is he bringing fish? A piece of a fish was brought in by a male, but was it NG2? All I will say is that if these males are going to fail Iris, then do it before the eggs hatch. Crap. I desperately want to be wrong about this – just like I thought P3 was sick. It isn’t, thank goodness. Maybe just sleepy and in a food coma????

The second egg has hatched for Maya and Blue 33 at Rutland’s Manton Bay nest! Congratulations.

A close-up view of a bird's nest containing several eggs and newly hatched chicks, surrounded by twigs and grass.

Geemeff’s Woodland Trust daily summary for Loch Arkaig Thursday 14th May 2026The forecasted rain held off, just the occasional shower, and nest life went on uneventfully today, no intruders or alarms. Louis delivered two fish to Dorcha, taking the Nest Two tally to sixty one, and Garry LV0 brought one fish taking the Nest One tally to sixty three. Aurora 536 made that one fish last a very long time, and it travelled a fair bit too. There was much discussion around eggs, chick hierarchy, fostering and survival rates. WTS George reposted his comment 

around expectations and the challenges of nest cam watching, link in the bonus section. Tonight’s forecast is partly cloudy and light winds with a low of 3°C, continuing tomorrow with light cloud, gentle breezes and a high of 12°C.

Today’s videos:

https://youtu.be/cUs6bSMpe4g N2 Dorcha calls enthusiastically as Louis lands with the first fish 11.17.48 

https://youtu.be/0F29q35-vd0 N1 Garry LV0 finally brings a fish late in the day 15.10.35 

https://youtu.be/BFJs2_2Iqog N2 Louis lands with fish number two, a headless trout 20.09.42 

Bonus read – the highs and lows of nest cam watching:

https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/osprey-cam/?ht-comment-id=33998383

Blast from the past, this day in previous years:

https://youtu.be/FlMmlJjYav0  N1 Aila’s attacked again by an owl 2019

https://youtu.be/a82-7I-dU0A  N1 Musical nests: Aila & Louis hop on and off the nest 2020

https://youtu.be/d-HM-pAELtE  N1 Sleepy Aila manages an afternoon nap 2020

https://youtu.be/UQsvtAT9sAI  N1 Blue 152 pays a dawn visit to the nest 2021

https://youtu.be/V1vbOK3ewwc  N1 The Newsome Twosome are getting better at it! 2021

https://youtu.be/zsPVChFoZ88  N2 Dorcha and the big stick 2023

https://youtu.be/j4RTRS0Yni8  N2 Intruder Blue PU0 invades Nest Two 2023

https://youtu.be/bSxkqptK4Eg  N1 Louis mantles at an unseen intruder 2023

https://youtu.be/B_R0BHuZaZg  N1 Is it a Tree Pipit dashing across the cam view 2024

https://youtu.be/WPtsG8MRD6k  N2 Does an egg move by itself? 2024 

https://youtu.be/o_ES4CRH3LM N1 A male Tawny Owl visits 2025

https://youtu.be/xZrjpYMESsU N2 A Jay (Garrulus Glandarius) pays a visit to Dorcha 2025 (zoom)

https://youtu.be/lzo2elmyrE8 N1 A Great Spotted Woodpecker pays a flying visit 2025 (zoom)

Why not come and join the lively community at Woodland Trust’s Osprey forum, it’s friendly, free and everyone’s welcome:

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

Big Red and Arthur’s chicks are fine. https://youtu.be/C5XbJkZD5Zw?

A red-tailed hawk parent watches over two fluffy chicks in a nest made of twigs and grass.

You don’t see it very often, but Arthur got to feed his babies. Arthur would love to care more for his children, but Big Red can be very bossy in that regard! He’s rather good at this! https://youtu.be/KEBghI2Yml0?

A red-tailed hawk feeding its chicks in a nest filled with twigs and feathers. Several fluffy chicks are visible, eagerly interacting with the parent bird.

SK Hideaways has the video of Monty and Hartley’s foursome being banded. Have a look. https://youtu.be/xAj20H9x1OI?

Smile. An osprey saved.

Text post from NorthWestern Energy discussing the successful rescue of an osprey tangled in baling twine with the help of local wildlife organizations.
A person holding an Osprey, showing the bird's features and its foot for banding.

Fish continue to come to Achieva. Jack is doing well! Keep it going.

A close-up view of a bird's nest containing two young hawks perched on a pile of twigs and branches. The nest is situated on a platform high above a neighborhood with trees and a street visible in the background.
A nest with young birds perched on a large nest made of twigs, overlooking a suburban area with houses and trees, under a clear blue sky.

Thank you so much for being with us for this quick check-in. It is very windy outside, and we are in a ‘yellow’ warning – it is a huge dust storm! The temperatures are still warm – 23 C.

Take care of yourself. Go outside for a walk. Listen for the soothing sound of a bird singing.

Thank you to Geemeff for their always outstanding Loch Arkaig summary, to SK Hideaways for the great videos, to all those who post on FB with recent news and videos, and to the owners of the streaming cams that allow us to witness the lives of our favourite raptor families.

Oh, silly me…banding day is 13 May for San Jose chicks

6 May 2026

Oh, silly me…thank you SK Hideaways. I am so sorry I missed the finer details of your YouTube posting.

SK Hideaways has a post for the banding day of the San Jose chicks. So mark your calendars. One week away.


SK Hideaways
1 day ago

San Jose City Hall Falcons Banding Day News (4 May 2026) From Zeka Glucs Director of the Predatory Bird Research Group at UC Santa Cruz https://predatorybirdresearch.sites.u… We have scheduled this season’s nest entry for the morning of Wednesday, May 13th! All the chicks will be 22 days old since they hatched within the same 24 hrs of each other. We enter nests for nestling banding and sample collection when the young are all 21-28 days old. During this phase of development they are still shuffling around on their forelegs rather than upright on their feet so they are less mobile and we can safely enter the nest without flushing them off the ledge. At the same time, their legs are fully grown so they can receive the identification bands that will help us follow them throughout their lives. Through body measurements we can determine the sex of each chick. We will also be collecting feather samples for genetics and contaminants. For the first time EVER, we will be placing ultralight radio transmitters on one of each chick’s leg bands that will allow us to remotely track their movements through their first winter and hopefully beyond. I’ll follow-up with more information on this transmitters after they are deployed. All the above research is part of our decades-long peregrine monitoring program in the Greater San Francisco Bay region. On Wednesday, we will assemble our team at City Hall at 8 am and then make our way to the roof and then down to the nest ledge. Many have been asking about how we are preparing for Hartley’s nest defense this year since she was so full-contact last year. I’ll be wearing a new helmet with a face shield and no gopro attachment. Hopefully that along with some different seating arrangements should set us up for a more protected chick banding effort this time around. My sincere thanks for following this peregrine family and our work, Zeka Glucs

Thank you SK Hideaways.

Big Red is drenched…Wednesday in Bird World

6 May 2026

Oh, goodness. We woke up to a bit of snow yesterday and the temperatures have remained on the chilly side. In Ithaca, New York, it is really raining on Big Red and Arthur and their nestlings. Big Red is a very experienced Mum. She has been through season after season of rain, wind, snow, and being buried in ice. Still, I worry about the little ones getting cold and damp and having difficulties. Two have hatched, one died trying to hatch, and it appears to me that we have a beak sticking out of the last egg.

Arthur is providing food – and he will continue to line the nest – no matter the weather.

A red-tailed hawk sitting in a nest surrounded by twigs and branches, with several chicks nearby.
A close-up of a red-tailed hawk nest featuring two fluffy chicks, one egg, and remnants of feeding materials among sticks and nesting materials.

Please send them and all the nests your most positive wishes.

Jill at Achieva is going to be the Mother’s Day Mum of this season. She continues to defy everything we know and is out fishing, sometimes past 2000, to get fish to her growing babies. Little is now so strong that it is, as ‘PB’ notes, ‘wanting to rule the nest’.

A close-up view of an osprey nest situated on a platform, with several sticks and twigs forming the nest structure. Two ospreys are visible, one perched and the other moving within the nest. Lush green trees surround the area, and a street can be seen in the background.

Geemeff’s Woodland Trust daily summary for Loch Arkaig Tuesday 5th May 2026

Another reassuringly boring day where nothing out of the ordinary happened.  The odd stick or bit of bark was brought to a nest when fish was expected, but fish were delivered too. Garry LV0 delivered one trout to Aurora 536 on Nest One, taking his tally to forty six, and Louis delivered two to Dorcha, taking the Nest Two tally to forty two. No intruders, no drama, just two females incubating their eggs – Aurora with a few absences – and males delivering fish then taking their turn on egg duty. Fingers crossed tranquility reigns until hatching and beyond.

Today’s videos:https://youtu.be/zn5cJS4L4Wg N2 Dorcha departs with her breakfast leaving Louis on egg duty 05.14.58https://youtu.be/Gqv2rjFcyTE N2 Louis gets to egg-sit when Dorcha leaves with fish two 10.04.27https://youtu.be/RNMca79xnG0 N1 Garry settles down on egg duty as Aurora leaves with her fish 10.06.41

Bonus watch and read – how Woodland Trust is saving Scotland’s rainforests:https://youtu.be/NzoAxoG3AZghttps://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/about-us/where-we-work/scotland/saving-scotlands-rainforest/

Blast from the past, this day in previous years:

https://youtu.be/vi57aF6RvWs  N1 Aila suffers an owl strike 2019 (slo-mo)

https://youtu.be/50n9gpytiy4   N1 A typical night on the nest for Aila 2020

https://youtu.be/fCzbYErsSgA  N1 Persistent Hoodie won’t leave Aila alone 2020 (Slo-mo)

https://youtu.be/pBzJsBFIzek  N1 Strange Osprey lands on the empty nest 2023

https://youtu.be/Rg-hxBiPEPM  N2 Louis has an aerial encounter with an intruder 2023 (zoom)

https://youtu.be/eX9kUX1m6QM N1 Aida wants fish, Garry wants to mate, gets rejected 2024

https://youtu.be/J0T2g4AjXv0 N2 Finally – Louis delivers the first fish to Dorcha 2024

https://youtu.be/VvL_ZaQsu7s N1 Woodland Trust have given Blue 536 a name – hello Aurora! 2025

https://youtu.be/PNRVXZc0NDU N2 Louis alarm calls as an intruder Osprey flies overhead 2025

https://youtu.be/SYZq9BrLbWs N2 Unringed Osprey intrudes on Louis: aerial battle ensues 2025

You’re invited to join the lively community at Woodland Trust’s Osprey forum, it’s friendly, free and everyone’s welcome:

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

Rosie Shields has the latest from the Border Osprey platform.

A startling Netflix documentary about the killing of cylicist and the persecution of raptors in Scotland.

There is a job opportunity monitoring raptors in Scotland.

Monty and Hartley’s babies hatched on the 21st of April – yes, all on the same day. They are now 15 days old. Rumours had them being ringed today at 0800, but they are not old enough yet. I suspect we will have another 10 days to go or thereabouts.

Five fluffy owl chicks huddle together in a nesting box with a dirty background.
Two fluffy white bird chicks sitting in a nesting box at San Jose City Hall, surrounded by feathers and debris.
A close-up view of a nesting area at San Jose City Hall, showing three fluffy chicks and scattered feathers on the ground.

Sally and Winken enjoying a Tilapia at Moorings Park.

A close-up of a bird's nest with two osprey adults and several chicks. In the background, a lake is visible alongside modern buildings and lush greenery.

That is it for today! Please take care. I am off to get Don to the doctor in a few hours. It should all go well. Toby gets to spend the afternoon with Ann and her Australian Shepherd, Lucy. He is going to have so much fun!

Keep your eye on Iris’s nest!!!!!!!

Thank you to Geemeff for the Woodland Trust summary, to ‘PB’ for cheering on Jill at Achieva, and to the writer Ruth of Raptor Persecution UK. We need investigative reporting in the world of raptors. Too much human harm gets covered up! To the others who have posted on FB and other platforms and the owners of the streaming cams that allow us to watch these incredible birds.

2nd little one at Cornell makes it out of shell…Tuesday in Bird World

5 May 2026

Hello Everyone,

I did say I was going to take a break, didn’t I? Well, reports will be short, but Iris laying her first egg and Big Red’s nestlings are keeping me on the edge of the sofa. Besides, the nice warm weather we had disappeared. Melissa kept looking out the conservatory windows as she was cleaning them, asking, ‘Is that a snowflake?’ And yes, of ourselves, her eyes were not deceiving her. It is freezing. Tomorrow will be 0 C. Not much fun. Toby and I worked on the bookcases. We now need a 154 cm long piece of moulding and some finishing nails. The whole needs to be painted in the same shade as the walls only glossy so it is slightly different (thanks, Geemeff, for the idea). I had battled between just matching the walls which are the same colour as the rice straw tea huts in Japan, going for something bold like the Bloomsbury Group would have done, or painting them in Tar (a deep grey/black). My mind needs calm. So, some time in the future, David will return to paint them and the French doors all the same. It is a picky job, not for someone like me who wouldn’t have the patience.

As of Monday evening, this is the state of the third chick releasing itself from the shell at Big Red and Arthur’s nest. Arthur is already lining the nest cup with chippies and squirrels.

I am so glad this little one didn’t get exhausted trying to get out.

A red-tailed hawk in a nest with eggs and chicks, captured in black and white from a live webcam feed.
A red-tailed hawk in a nest with two fluffy chicks and one unhatched egg among twigs and nest materials.
A Red-tailed Hawk tending to its nest with two fluffy chicks and an egg visible among the twigs and nesting material.
A young red-tailed hawk chick sitting in a nest beside an unhatched egg, surrounded by straw and leaves.
Close-up of a large, blue-green bird egg nestled among soft downy feathers and natural materials in a nest.

At the Achieva Osprey Platform, Jill went out late and caught another catfish for her and the kids. That is three today. I do not believe she has ever left the nest to fish after 2000. She did tonight. As the kids get older they need more food and she needs to keep herself healthy for them! Jack is simply not delivering enough – two today. Jill had three and one was a whopper.

Thanks ‘PB’ for the screen capture of Jill and her whale.

A close-up view of a bird with wings spread wide, perched on a tree. The background shows green foliage and a road.

For those wanting to keep a file to recognise Jill, here you have the perfect underwing patterns to go with the top of the head! These two locations are the only patterns that do not ever change from the time the ospreys fledge.

Iris and NewGuy2 (I do agree with everyone that he needs a name – I am certain that Dr Green is working on this) are settling in to incubation. I just hope he knows that he has to provide fish for Iris and the babies…

Two ospreys perched in their nest with a parking lot and trees in the background.
An osprey nest with two adult ospreys sitting among branches and twigs, overlooking a parking lot and landscaped area in the background.
Two ospreys sitting in a nest made of sticks, with a parking lot and greenery in the background.

Geemeff’s Woodland Trust daily summary for Loch Arkaig Monday 4th May 2026

Another peaceful and uneventful day, although one event was missing – Aurora 536 has not laid a second egg, it is overdue by more than 24 hours so chances are she will only have the single egg laid on 30th April at 19.18.37. There is concern that she is leaving the egg unprotected for several hours at a time, and as she and Garry LV0 have not been seen mating on a sufficiently regular basis, perhaps this egg will not hatch. As always, it’s wait and see – Osprey eggs are quite hardy. Although Garry only brought one fish to the nest for Aurora, it’s possible fish are being delivered early during the nest cam down time. His on-cam tally now stands at forty five. Over on Nest Two, normal service was resumed and Louis delivered three fish to Dorcha, taking the nest total to forty. Dorcha was very pleased to see the first fish arriving after a gap of thirty five hours and demolished it in no time. The weather was mainly settled with a little light rain around 11pm.

Today’s videos:

https://youtu.be/BMjnfTZhaCM N2 First fish 35 hours after the last one! 08.25.51

https://youtu.be/uYMCcC97Qbw N2 Normal service resumes! Fish 2 arrives 2 hours after the first 10.35.21

https://youtu.be/X7NonFthu2Q N1 First fish for Aurora, a good size headless trout 14.31.26

https://youtu.be/M8d0uY6Yys8 N2 Louis brings a third trout for Dorcha 15.06.39

Bonus activity – how well do you know spring tree flowers? Take Woodland Trust’s quiz: https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/blog/2026/05/spring-blossom-quiz/

Blast from the past, this day in previous years:

https://youtu.be/RZcdDsctW8s  N1 Stick-gate! Louis brings a silly stick 2019

https://youtu.be/MkeAZ4Rtyjw  N1 Arkaig Ospreys star with Chris Packham, Megan McCubbin & Holly Gillibrand 2020 

https://youtu.be/8937KrWsAvQ  N1 Aila stands on Louis’ tail 2020

https://youtu.be/E9pd_5HuvsU  N1 Hoodie chases Louis and his fish to the nest 2020

https://youtu.be/01RR3gk-KAo  WT season highlights 2021

https://youtu.be/MYwuD6jtpBA  WT season highlights 2022

https://youtu.be/CMPNawu15bo  N2 Louis is blown away! 2023 (slo-mo repeat)

https://youtu.be/HIbtIkk_ELg  N2 Unringed intruder lands 2023 (slo-mo repeat)

https://youtu.be/UYHOuHSAjdo  N2 Dorcha’s turn to show off her underpinnings! 2023

https://youtu.be/wFCI5B_bVPQ  N1 Garry LV0 arrives with moss, calling softly, who’s he watching? 2024

https://youtu.be/5zmxN6jpNNU  N2 Dorcha brings a stick and lands it on Louis 2024 (zoom)

https://youtu.be/AOxOLsyGJV0  N2 Dorcha gets hit by a Tawny Owl while tangled in moss 2025

https://youtu.be/A8PwVgBjiAc  N2 Three strikes: 00.33.37; 00.35.21; 00.40.51 in <8 mins 2025

https://youtu.be/T0XQrgwLjko  N1 Tawny Owl (Strix aluco) does a thorough investigation 2025 

https://youtu.be/6b_2Tq6RFQA  N1 Tawny Owl pays a second visit an hour after the first 2025

https://youtu.be/TXp42g5YDtM N2 Dorcha fights off an unringed Osprey 2025 (slo-mo repeat with zoom)

Come and join the friendly community at Woodland Trust’s Osprey forum, it’s fun, free and everyone’s welcome:

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

Geemeff sends a sad story but at least, they say, ‘humans tried to help’. https://wgme.com/news/local/very-sad-ospreys-found-dead-after-building-nest-on-power-lines-in-camden-maine-cmp-central-maine-power

Sadly, these falcons fell at the hand of humans and their guns in Cambridgeshire.

Winken enjoying a meal while there remains a reminder of the saddness as Blinken’s body is near the nest rim at Moorings Park.

An osprey feeding its chick in a nest, with a tranquil river and greenery in the background. The image highlights the environment and the interaction between parent and young bird.

It looks like the dream of seeing osplets on the Loch Garten RSPB nest are gone as Blue KL5 kicks out the third egg!

A live camera feed capturing an osprey nest with branches. The scene shows the nest at dawn with a distant view of trees and sky, indicating it's early morning. The top image shows the osprey destroying egg number 3, while the bottom image shows the nest after the egg has been destroyed.

News from Kielder Forest:

The four chicks of Monty and Hartley will be ringed at 0800 Wednesday nest time! Tune in on YouTube!

A peregrine falcon is feeding three chicks in a nesting box atop San Jose City Hall, with a view of city buildings in the background.

Thank you so much for being with us! Take care, everyone. Keep watching Iris for that next egg…See you soon.

Thank you to Geemeff for the Woodland Trust summary, to ‘PB’ for the great image of Jill and her monster fish, and to all those who post information on FB and the owners of the streaming cams that let us watch this amazing wildlife. I am very grateful for the investigative reporting of Raptor Persecution UK.

P1 hatches at Cornell…Saturday in Bird World

3 May 2026

Good Morning Everyone,

Sadly one of the four chicks of Big Red and Arthur’s did not survive hatching. I am going to presume that it was, as it appears, the crushed egg. The other one appears to be fine. Two more eggs to go.

Close-up view of a red-tailed hawk nest with three eggs, one partially hatched, surrounded by nesting materials.

Big Red tried several times to feed P1. There was even a live snake on offer! Eventually the little one was ready.

A Red-tailed Hawk tending to its nest containing two hatchlings and one unhatched egg, surrounded by twigs and natural nesting materials.
A red-tailed hawk stands near its chick in a nest, with two eggs visible in the foreground, surrounded by twigs and nest material.
A red-tailed hawk sitting on a nest containing eggs, surrounded by twigs and small branches.

P1 is getting stronger.

A red-tailed hawk sitting near its nest containing a chick and two eggs, surrounded by twigs and branches.

‘SP’ sent the link to the Cornell video of the hatch: https://youtu.be/2cMuMRxZBAQ?

SK Hideaways Videos, Week of 26 April 2026

FOBBV Eagles ~ Big Bear Valley, CA ~ Jackie, Shadow, Sandy, and Luna
Courtesy FOBBVCAM | Friends of Big Bear Valley
Nest Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4-L2nfGcuE
Wide View Cam (Cam 2): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41eq4VzCYc4
LIVE Recap & Observations https://bit.ly/3Md8TSz

Meet Socialite Sandy & Laid-Back Luna ~ Figuring Out Who’s Who (2026 May 1)The votes are in and the 3rd graders selected the names Sandy and Luna for Jackie and Shadow’s chicks. I’ve  pointed out some of the differences in the video to help you discern which is which. 

Here’s the FOBBV announcement: 
****** 
Chick 1’s name is Sandy with 30 student votes. 
Chick 2’s name is Luna with 25 student votes. 

The remaining top 5 votes are as follows: Star with 22 votes. Chip with 22 votes. Phoenix with 18 votes. 

Sandy was the most popular name entered with 3706 of the 63,915 names submitted. Please know that although Sandy would not have wanted us to outright name one of the eaglets Sandy, she would have been honored that you and the students went through the process and named one of the 2026 eaglets after her. Thank you for your participation and your generous support of Friends of Big Bear Valley from the entire team. You are much appreciated! 
***** 
Videohttps://youtu.be/lTEiU33HYgo

One chick gets chatty with neighbors ~ Birdwatcher in training (2026 Apr 29)
Videohttps://youtu.be/k1noEq1qAoE

Jackie & Shadow protected the eaglets through storm ~ Daylight brought sunshine (2026 Apr 26)
Videohttps://youtu.be/ckmcHQL6WFw

Fraser Point Eagles ~ Santa Cruz Island, CA  ~ Cruz, Andor, Sasha, Zuma, and Ryder
Courtesy Institute for Wildlife Studies | explore.org | Fraser Point Eagles Cam Ops 
Nest Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OY4V_AppZ6s

Sasha, Zuma & Ryder ~ Giant Crops, Clown Feet & Independence (2026 Apr 28)
Videohttps://youtu.be/dbhIIQsTVN0


San Jose City Hall Falcons ~ San Jose, CA ~ Hartley, Monty, and 4 chicks

Courtesy San Jose City Hall Peregrine Falcon Cam
Nest Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBSxPjy5sow
Ledge Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pp9TisLmLU
Roof Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQLhmV6bP6o
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/SanJoseCityHallFalcons/
Wiki https://sanjoseperegrines.editme.com/

8-Day Old Chicks Place Rush Order for Lunch ~ Plus One Leg Down the Hatch (2026 Apr 28)
There was an eating milestone during lunch ~ one chick downed a leg. (If you want to skip that celebration, it happens from 2:44-3:44 in the video.) 
Videohttps://youtu.be/YQmkKceqN3k
Redding Eagles ~ Redding, CA ~ Liberty and Guardian
Courtesy of Friends of the Redding Eagles, Redding, California
Livestream page: https://www.youtube.com/@FriendsoftheReddingEagles/streams

Guardian romanced Liberty with a fish dinner and a bath in the river (2026 Apr 26)
Videohttps://youtu.be/K7ZhwXpLRq4

Check out Ruth and Oren’s two hawklets, too! And, of course, check out Monty and Hartley’s kids in SK Hideaways video.

A Red-tailed Hawk tending to its nest with two chick hatchlings visible among the twigs and foliage.

Dual feeding with Milda and Zorro and the two White-tail Eaglets at the Durbe County nest in Latvia. They are getting pin feathers!

Ohk they are so cute.

Two sea eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) are attending to their chicks in a nest, surrounded by twigs and greenery, with a forest background.

Thank you for being with us today. It is a lovely 20 degrees and we are going to spend it outside. It is supposed to rain and get cooler. Tomorrow the cleaning lady comes and I am working on the moulding for the door. I will be watching some of the nests on my big screen but I might not be publishing a post until mid-week. So take care of yourselves. Enjoy the week, get outside, listen to birdsong. Be happy.

Thank you to SK Hideaways for their video links and the owners of the streaming cams that allow us to watch the lives of our birds (the good and the not so good).

JC26 is a cutie pie…Sunday in Bird World

1 March 2026

Toby and I were woken up by the phone pinging and pinging around 2330 Saturday night. It wouldn’t stop. What was going on? Turns out the two-story woodframe house at the corner, home to our neighbour Jim Russell for 27 years, was on fire. It went up in flames so quickly that the fire and police personnel could not get into the structure. We still do not know if our neighbour was in the house at the time. Jim was a brilliant eccentric. He had studied math at Cornell and came to Canada in the late 1960s, as I recall. Paramedics and fire crew are still there as little blazes continue to flare up. I am tired. Toby is tired. We were up til 0300 worrying if Jim was in the house and remembering, with great sadness, our neighbours, Bert and Joanne, who died in a house fire across the street in 2011. They were our dear friends. We bought our house form them and Don helped Bert when Joanne was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Memories came in like a tsunami.

I know you will understand when I say that this posting will be short.

There have been a lot of rumours about the Bald Eagle nests this season, with the latest one being that Shadow had disappeared. Shadow is fine. It was confirmed that he was on the eggs last evening, even though the posting said he was MIA. Please check the cameras and exercise caution – there are too many ‘alternative facts’ floating around that cause worry and anxiety.

Thank you SK Hideaways for sending me your videos!

SK Hideaways Videos Week of 22 February 2026

Channel Island California Eagles
Livestreamed nests:
~ Fraser Point ~ Santa Cruz Island ~ Cruz & Andor
~ Sauces Canyon ~ Santa Cruz Island ~ Audacity & Jak
~ Two Harbors ~ Catalina Island ~ Cholyn & Chase
~ West End ~ Catalina Island ~Residents in flux



Fraser Point ~ Cruz & Andor
Courtesy Institute for Wildlife Studies | explore.org | Fraser Point Eagles Cam Ops
Nest Cam: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OY4V_AppZ6s

Cruz Lays 3rd Egg ~ No Muss, No Fuss Once Again
 (2026 Feb 26)
Cruz rose at 00:42 and laid her third egg at 00:43:28 ~ she wanted to get back to sleep. And sleep she did until she gave us a split-second peek of all three eggs at 06:58. Wishing Princess Cruz and Andor success with this full clutch. 
Videohttps://youtu.be/t4C95kIBhbs

Princess Cruz Lays 2nd Egg ~ Quick & Easy (2026 Feb 22)
A very easy labor for Cruz as she laid her second egg. Congratulations, Cruz & Andor!
Videohttps://youtu.be/AurPv3UFB1M

Two Harbors ~ Cholyn & Chase
Courtesy Institute for Wildlife Studies | explore.org
Overlook Cam: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2yx7RKxpyzQ
Eagle Cam: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5T2eHM8tcI

Cholyn Does Bedtime Egg Roll ~ Chortles Wispy Lullaby (2026 Feb 27)
After a day of textbook nest changeovers, Chase retired to his night perch and Cholyn settled in for overnight incubation. After she carefully rolled the two precious eggs, she called out in her unique wispy chortle. Because we’re hopelessly sentimental, we like to think that lovely music was a bedtime lullaby. Whatever it was, it was glorious. 
Cholyn Lays Egg #2 Early and Quickly
Cholyn was a few hours earlier than expected and laid egg #2 quickly and easily.  Congratulations Cholyn & Chase! (2026 Feb 26)
Videohttps://youtu.be/5Qnqo5nnXcg

28-Year-Old Cholyn and Chase Welcome 1st Egg of the Season🎉(2026 Feb 24)
In their 23rd season together, 28-year-old Cholyn and Chase welcomed their first egg. Cholyn fooled fans for a few nights before laying this first egg, but, of course, she had her own schedule. Congratulations! 
Videohttps://youtu.be/q3g9NCeN04E


FOBBVCAM Eagles ~ Big Bear Valley, CA ~ Jackie & Shadow
Courtesy FOBBVCAM | Friends of Big Bear Valley
Nest Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4-L2nfGcuE
Wide View Cam (Cam 2): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41eq4VzCYc4
Live Recap & Observations https://bit.ly/3Md8TSz


Shadow Snortles to Jackie’s Mating Call ~ Obliges Then Brings Fish (2026 Feb 28)
When Jackie called Shadow to the Cactus Snag, he was quick to respond. Turns out it was a mating call. Having taken care of business, Jackie returned to the nest to await her feesh brunch, which Shadow also provided. Together they are a power couple ~ super partners, providers, and parents. 
Videohttps://youtu.be/aoE-OV3sUeE

Jackie Delivers Egg #2 of Second Clutch ~ Congrats Jackie & Shadow! (2026 Feb 27)Jackie laid egg #2 of her and Shadow’s second clutch in the early evening. The 4-minute labor brought Jackie’s signature tea kettle sounds and another perfect egg. All good wishes to Jackie and Shadow for success with this second clutch.   
Videohttps://youtu.be/FKRbz02gZG0

Jackie Lays Egg #1 of Second Clutch ~ Shadow Checks on Jackie, Meets Egg 🥰(2026 Feb 24)
Jackie and Shadow welcomed the first egg of their second clutch. Wishing them a successful outcome. 
Videohttps://youtu.be/2xmOylatUyg


John Bunker Sands Eagles ~ Combine TX ~ Mom, Dad, and JBS24
Courtesy John Bunker Sands Wetland Center Eagle Cam
Eagle Tower Camera 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wdo7BzUU_g
Eagle Tower Camera 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEDb2KqvvyQ

JBS24 is in full Clown Feet and thriving (2026 Feb 26)
At 4-1/2 weeks, JBS24 is shedding some of that natal down, sprouting pin feathers, and sporting some rather impressive clown feet. Great to see this little one doing well and progressing as expected. 
Videohttps://youtu.be/wDCEsLT-XTU


San Jose CH Falcons ~ San Jose, CA ~ Hartley and Monty
Hartley & Monty Display Every Courtship Behavior Known to Falcons
 (2026 Feb 22)
Hartley and Monty are very focused on their upcoming nesting season. They had conversations, mated (twice), and pair bonded in the nest box. Monty provided the piece de resistance when he delivered a food gift, which Hartley happily tugged away from him and flew off. We’ll be looking for eggs in the very near future! 
Videohttps://youtu.be/LwwsKn4-vS4
Courtesy San Jose City Hall Peregrine Falcon Cam
Ledge Cam: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pp9TisLmLU

At the Winter Park Florida Bald Eagle nest, Peanut (aka Tiny Tim) is anything but tiny. Looks like a ravenous female to me that second hatch that survived some pretty challenging bonking early on. Peanut really took lessons and was doing a grand job of self-feeding on Saturday.

At the Johnson City nest, Baiba caught Boone feeding his little one JC26 for the first time. https://youtu.be/BYRwO0l-qfE?

From all of us – we wish you a great end to the weekend and a wonderful week. I will be back with you on Friday.

Thank you so much to SK Hideaways for sharing their video list, to the owners of the streaming cams where I took my screen captures – thank you for allowing us into the lives of these amazing birds.

Late Sunday and early Monday in Bird World

12 June 2022

UPDATE: The smallest, the 5th hatch storklet, at the Mlade Buky nest of Betty and Bukacek was eliminated on Sunday. I had missed this.

It looks like it could be another rainy day on the Canadian Prairies. We are certainly making up with moisture this spring for 4-5 years of drought. Everything is green and beautiful.

Well, the weather is taking its toll on other nests in Scotland and Wales on Sunday. Those long, cold rainy days with a dip in fish deliveries are making some of the Bobs cranky – and aggressive. Big Bob on the Loch of the Lowes almost pushed both Middle and Little Bobs off the nest. Little Bob has also missed out on some meals. I sure hope this weather changes and these chicks settle down.

At tea time on Monday, Telyn went out of her way – finally – to make sure that Little Bob had fish. I was terribly happy to see this as the biggest Bob is working hard to exclude Little.

Idris and Telyn at the Dyfi nest made sure that all three of the Bobs were fed well before bedtime on Sunday. It has been a stinker of weather over in Wales, too.

Monday’s tea at Dyfi was a Sea Bass followed by the delivery of a mullet by Idris to Telyn and the kids. The weather had considerably improved.

My goodness. Aran caught one of his whoppers! He cleaned off the head before delivering it to Mrs G and the kids.

Mrs G fed herself and the kids. Big Bob is in food coma and Little and Middle are up at the table.

There was lots of fish left over when Mrs G finished so Aran decided to have a really good meal before he got on the perch. All appears to be good.

The wind is still blowing a bit on the Glaslyn nest at tea time. All of the chicks are wide awake. Look at how good Little Bob is doing. He is standing at the back.

We have learned that a good nest can change in the blink of an eye – or weather, intruders, lack of prey. So far the osplets on the nest of Blue 33 (11) and Maya are doing fantastic. They are now all at least five weeks old and they will be ringed soon. Ringing normally takes place between 35-43 days in the UK. Any later and the osplets could bolt and any earlier and the leg would still be growing.

The weather has improved at Loch Arkaig – thankfully. Louis has brought fish in and has covered up Little Bob with some sticks brought in and from the nest. The surviving two Bobs appear to be fine this morning. They benefited from being under Dorcha during the cold rain and winds.

The rain appears to have stopped at the Llyn Clywedog nest of Dylan and Seren. Dylan is on the nest and in the early afternoon there was a male intruder with a blue Darvic ring that was flying around the nest. He was quickly sent off.

The three storklets continue to thrive in the care of the Veterinary School. Forest sounds have been added to their environment.

A very good article has been translated and placed on Looduskalender with the Forum for the Black Stork nest of Karl II and Kaia. The information could be applied universally to nests that depend on fish for their main food item. The specific nest that they are talking about is, however, that of Karl II and Kaia in the Karula National Forest.

Black Stork – Ciconia nigra

The older chicks hatched on 28 May and turned two weeks old today. The third chick is considerably smaller but hatched three days later than the older two.
Mother Kaia and father Karl are managing to feed their chicks well, despite the youngest being significantly smaller than the others. We know and have observed that Black Storks sometimes carry out infanticide, i.e. the parent birds remove the weakest chick from the nest. The main reason for this is a lack of food. Chicks must be very well fed because they will embark on a long and dangerous migration in August on their own, but this is how black storks do it. Less than a third of this year’s chicks will be alive in a year.
What are we not seeing on the webcam?
In Karula National Park, where this black storks nest is located, Kotkaklubi has been organising clean-up campaigns for many years to clear the banks of the brooks of the Koiva river basin of undergrowth so that the birds can access them. Small natural streams quickly become overgrown with vegetation, but black storks are happy to feed in such remote places. Adult birds will also look for food in ditches where fish can be found during the breeding season. Still, these ditches may dry up during both spring and summer droughts, threatening breeding success. Therefore the birds need to be able to visit different feeding areas. Adult BS also forage in meadows, catching frogs and occasionally rodents. We can see on the webcam that fish is their primary food.
In addition, Urmas Sellis has installed a fish basket with live fish in a stream about ten kilometres away from the nest, and a trail camera has recorded the visits of black storks there.

Today, 13 June, the chicks are respectively 16, 16 and 13 days old.

The three storklets of Karl II and Kaia are waking up to a whole new day!

PLEASE NOTE THAT ON SUNDAY, BETTY ELIMINATED THE 5TH STORKLET. It looks like another rainy mucky day for Bukacek and Betty and their five little white storklets in Mlade Buky. I cannot look at the adult standing there without thinking about the plastic decoy with the storklets of Jan and Janika. Looks just like that decoy!

The storklets are getting their juvenile feathers.

A prey item has been brought to the ND-LEEF nest at 08:36:54. ND 15 stole it from ND16 and at 08:57:49 Little Bit 17 steals it, eats some, and then 16 gets it. They are all hungry but Little Bit is right in there!

Little Bit 17 is still ‘the king of the snatch and grab’. Fingers crossed for a lot more prey today!

It is extremely sad to see the Cape Henlopen nest with the three dead osplets of the long bonded pair on an empty nest. It remains unclear what happened to the 20 year old Dad and Mum from the nest after the intruders took over late Friday. An entire family lost because of intruders? So sad.

Will the intruders return? We wait.

Both fledglings were on the UFlorida-Gainesville Osprey nest this morning. Middle had control of the fish delivery. The parents have been excellent at bringing the two lots of fish during the day. They look to be in great health and their flying skills – and landing – are improving every day.

At 08:41 all four of Big Red and Arthur’s hawklets were on the nest. L2 fledged first followed by L1. L3 spent Sunday up on a higher level of the tower but it has yet to fledge along with the youngest L4.

L3 is 49 days old today and L4 is 46. The average of fledge at Big Red’s nest is 46.5 days. We could be looking at another two flying today or tomorrow.

Takoda is 69 days old today. On Sunday he had branched up to the height where Mr President normally perches. Early this morning he made it up to the cam which made for some lovely closeups just for us! Fledging is close at hand.

All eyes are on Star at the Redding Eagle nest. She is branching farther up and this early morning seems to have put out the sound on the streaming cam. As far as I know, there has been no sighting of Sentry since he fledged.

Could this be your day to fly Star?

Spirit is so beautiful. She is 3 months and 9 days old today. She hatched on 3 March and fledged on 31 May. She came down to visit the nest before taking off into the Big Bear Valley at 06:13. She might have been looking for breakfast!

There is one more fledge to go at the Pittsburgh-Hayes Bald Eagles nest and that is H18. Both H16 and H17 fledged on the 10th of June within an hour and a half of one another (06:20 and 07:50). That third fledge could happen any time.

Both eaglets at the US Steel nest are considering branching! What a gorgeous view.

Ahote and Kana’kini were on the move this morning. What a beautiful camera view of both of them. Sky is still on the natal nest. The time is o7:03.

An early morning view of the San Jose City Hall Peregrine falcons.

At 03:58 Annie was sleeping in the scrape with Lindsay and Grinnell Jr. Precious moments. Fledge will come before we know it. Goodness. Wasn’t it just yesterday that Alden came into our lives???? It sure seems like it. Annie and Alden have been super parents and I am thrilled that these two chicks got a chance to make their own way in the world. It could have been dramatically different without Alden.

Fledge watch begins for Lindsay and Grinnell Jr tomorrow – 14 June!!!!!!

It is early morning on the Canadian Prairies. We have had so much rain that the landscape could be the green of Ireland! It is impossible to see the birds and squirrels and even the small bunny in the jungle that has grown. Birds can be seen flying in and out and the feeders are empty by noon so they are in there – just covered by all the branches and leaves.

There may be several fledges today. There are eyes on many, many nests!

I hope that your Monday is a good start to the week. Thank you for joining me. Take care!

Thank you to the following for their streaming cams and/or websites where I took my screen captures: Friends of Loch of the Lowes and the Woodland Trust, Dyfi Osprey Project, Bywyd Gwyllt Glaslyn, LRWT, Friends of Loch Arkaig, People’s Post Code Lottery and Scottish Wildlife Trust, CarnyXWild, Eagle Club of Estonia, LizM, Mlade Buky, ND-LEEF, Cape Henlopen State Park Ospreys Cam, UFlorida-Gainesville Ospreys, Cornell Bird Lab RTH, NADE-AEF, Friends of Redding Eagles, Pix Cams, FOBBV, Explore.org and the Institute for Wildlife Studies, San Jose City Falcons, and Cal Falcons.