Peregrine Falcon Cam, Orange, Australia
- seira
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Re: Peregrine Falcon Cam, Orange, Australia
October 5
NEWS 4th October 2023 Cilla Kinross
1st hatch 2/10 0634
2nd hatch 3/10 1005
NAMING of the NESTLINGS. Link to the website:
https://falconcam.csu.edu.au/2023/10/04 ... nestlings/ Go to 'News' and follow the links. Voting open until 5pm Sunday 15th October. Only ONE vote please (you can select up to three names).
Videos of both hatchings are on the youtube channel. Both doing well so far. They can hold their heads up and can feed really well. Here Xavier is having a short brooding time this morning before Diamond feeds the pair: https://youtu.be/cp-VOFjuncw
The third egg may or may not hatch. At this stage, there is evidence of a hole (pip). It's not too late, however (last year there was a five day gap between hatches, although that is really unusual). Whether it does or not, I will put up the link for the naming quiz later this week.
14:23
NEWS 4th October 2023 Cilla Kinross
1st hatch 2/10 0634
2nd hatch 3/10 1005
NAMING of the NESTLINGS. Link to the website:
https://falconcam.csu.edu.au/2023/10/04 ... nestlings/ Go to 'News' and follow the links. Voting open until 5pm Sunday 15th October. Only ONE vote please (you can select up to three names).
Videos of both hatchings are on the youtube channel. Both doing well so far. They can hold their heads up and can feed really well. Here Xavier is having a short brooding time this morning before Diamond feeds the pair: https://youtu.be/cp-VOFjuncw
The third egg may or may not hatch. At this stage, there is evidence of a hole (pip). It's not too late, however (last year there was a five day gap between hatches, although that is really unusual). Whether it does or not, I will put up the link for the naming quiz later this week.
14:23
- Liz01
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seira
There was a discussion in the chat about whether peregrine falcons eat fish. I found evidence that a female fish served to the chicks.
FEMALE PEREGRINE FALCON (FALCO PEREGRINUS)
EXPLOITS FISH AS PREY
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/vie ... ntext=wnan
there is a study
Peregrine falcons capture fish in Brazil
Julio Amaro Betto Monsalvo
University of Brasília
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... _in_Brazil
and here:
https://www.birdsoutsidemywindow.org/20 ... peregrine/
October 4th.
From today
There was a discussion in the chat about whether peregrine falcons eat fish. I found evidence that a female fish served to the chicks.
FEMALE PEREGRINE FALCON (FALCO PEREGRINUS)
EXPLOITS FISH AS PREY
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/vie ... ntext=wnan
there is a study
Peregrine falcons capture fish in Brazil
Julio Amaro Betto Monsalvo
University of Brasília
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... _in_Brazil
and here:
https://www.birdsoutsidemywindow.org/20 ... peregrine/
October 4th.
From today
- seira
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October 7
06:30 cute
interesting, thanks Liz
06:30 cute
interesting, thanks Liz
- Liz01
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- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
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Feeding
I did a video, Xavier is feeding his little ones in a great hurry before Mum returns
BTW: big problem with the 367 Collin Falcons. It seems there is a intruder. eggs are not covered for more than 4 hours! Male and female are still alarmed!
I did a video, Xavier is feeding his little ones in a great hurry before Mum returns
BTW: big problem with the 367 Collin Falcons. It seems there is a intruder. eggs are not covered for more than 4 hours! Male and female are still alarmed!
- seira
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- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
October 8
15:27
FalconCam Project~Dad we are hungry Great Feeding by X round Crop on both~3:27 pm 2023/10/08
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsPcvQQ8Ryc
by our Liz
15:27
FalconCam Project~Dad we are hungry Great Feeding by X round Crop on both~3:27 pm 2023/10/08
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsPcvQQ8Ryc
by our Liz
- Liz01
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October 9th
Cilla wrote: Central Western Daily 9/10/2023
Cilla wrote: Central Western Daily 9/10/2023
- Liz01
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October 12
FalconCam Project~Little ones are totally stuffed what a great feeding by Mum~10:53 am 2023/10/12
FalconCam Project~Cute interaction between the siblings ~1:09 pm 2023/10/12
FalconCam Project~Little ones are totally stuffed what a great feeding by Mum~10:53 am 2023/10/12
FalconCam Project~Cute interaction between the siblings ~1:09 pm 2023/10/12
- Liz01
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Interesting to know:
The Raptor Resource Project
Why are you shining a light on the animals
I originally posted this blog in 2012. You’re asking about IR light and the North Nest, so I thought I would repost it here.
We are starting to get questions about the night-time illumination of our nests, so I wanted to write about visible light, invisible ‘light’, and our IR illuminators. What we see – the world of visible light – is just a tiny fraction of all the types of light that exist. Infrared light, gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet light, microwaves and radio waves are types of invisible light that we group into spectra based on wavelength.
The illustration below shows the entire electromagnetic spectrum. The IR portion, aka our night lights, hangs just off the red end of the visible spectrum. It spans the frequency range from 780 nm to 300,000 nm (.78 to 300 um) and has a longer wavelength and lower frequency than visible light.
Birds see a very different world. They have four color cones instead of three, more cones and rods to see color and light, a higher proportion of cones to rods (at least in diurnal birds), and different peak sensitivities to light. As the graph below illustrates, we have narrower spectral sensitivity than birds and are much less sensitive to certain wavelengths of light. However, like humans, birds do not see above about 700 nanometers. While some birds range into UV, IR light is as invisible to them as it is to us.
How can we use an IR illuminator if we can’t see IR light?
The IR spectrum starts at about 780 nm. The LED IR illuminators used on our camera emit ‘invisible’ light at a wavelength of 850 nm: well above the 700 nm visibility limit we share with birds, but well below the high-energy ‘hot’ end of the spectrum.
Here is how it works! The illuminators shine IR light into the darkness. The camera’s IR sensor detects IR and focuses it onto a CCD (Charge Coupled Device) imager chip, which has a spectral response of up to roughly 1,000nm. The chip maps IR wavelengths of light into the visible spectrum via tiny electric charges generated by IR light striking an array of tiny sensor cells. Since IR doesn’t contain color information, at least in spectra that we can see, the camera generates a monochrome image.
In short…
Mammals and birds can’t see IR light, but our camera can. We use low power IR illumination devices that are eight feet or more from the animals we are watching. They are not hot and do not emit dangerous radiation. A chip inside the camera does the work of converting the IR image into visible light via tiny electric charges. IR does not carry color information in spectra that we can see, so it generates a monochrome image.
Why do the animals we watch have ‘flashlight eyes’? Since they can’t see IR light, their pupils remain fully dilated. The light reflects off the tapetum lucidem, a layer of tissue behind the retina, which dramatically increases the light available to the animal’s photoreceptors. This gives it superior night vision and results in the flashlight effect. Their eyes wouldn’t be quite so big and bold if their pupils contracted to block out the light.
Experimenting with IR light
To see IR light for yourself, take an IR-based television remote. Press a button and look at the LED on the end. You won’t be able to see anything. Now, take a digital camera or phone camera, point it at the remote to take a photo, and press a button on the TV remote. You should now be able to see the infrared light. Like our camera, your camera uses a CCD chip that maps IR down into visible light for humans. But neither we nor the eagles can see IR without technological assistance. Again, our locations are dark at night.
The following sources helped me understand all this:
https://www.dptips-central.com/infrared-light.html (cameras and infrared)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_visi ... perception (bird vision)
Color Vision in Birds: https://www.webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/17B.html
color vision, birds, and much more!
Ken Ries, who came up with the real-world experiment.
The Raptor Resource Project
Why are you shining a light on the animals
I originally posted this blog in 2012. You’re asking about IR light and the North Nest, so I thought I would repost it here.
We are starting to get questions about the night-time illumination of our nests, so I wanted to write about visible light, invisible ‘light’, and our IR illuminators. What we see – the world of visible light – is just a tiny fraction of all the types of light that exist. Infrared light, gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet light, microwaves and radio waves are types of invisible light that we group into spectra based on wavelength.
The illustration below shows the entire electromagnetic spectrum. The IR portion, aka our night lights, hangs just off the red end of the visible spectrum. It spans the frequency range from 780 nm to 300,000 nm (.78 to 300 um) and has a longer wavelength and lower frequency than visible light.
Birds see a very different world. They have four color cones instead of three, more cones and rods to see color and light, a higher proportion of cones to rods (at least in diurnal birds), and different peak sensitivities to light. As the graph below illustrates, we have narrower spectral sensitivity than birds and are much less sensitive to certain wavelengths of light. However, like humans, birds do not see above about 700 nanometers. While some birds range into UV, IR light is as invisible to them as it is to us.
How can we use an IR illuminator if we can’t see IR light?
The IR spectrum starts at about 780 nm. The LED IR illuminators used on our camera emit ‘invisible’ light at a wavelength of 850 nm: well above the 700 nm visibility limit we share with birds, but well below the high-energy ‘hot’ end of the spectrum.
Here is how it works! The illuminators shine IR light into the darkness. The camera’s IR sensor detects IR and focuses it onto a CCD (Charge Coupled Device) imager chip, which has a spectral response of up to roughly 1,000nm. The chip maps IR wavelengths of light into the visible spectrum via tiny electric charges generated by IR light striking an array of tiny sensor cells. Since IR doesn’t contain color information, at least in spectra that we can see, the camera generates a monochrome image.
In short…
Mammals and birds can’t see IR light, but our camera can. We use low power IR illumination devices that are eight feet or more from the animals we are watching. They are not hot and do not emit dangerous radiation. A chip inside the camera does the work of converting the IR image into visible light via tiny electric charges. IR does not carry color information in spectra that we can see, so it generates a monochrome image.
Why do the animals we watch have ‘flashlight eyes’? Since they can’t see IR light, their pupils remain fully dilated. The light reflects off the tapetum lucidem, a layer of tissue behind the retina, which dramatically increases the light available to the animal’s photoreceptors. This gives it superior night vision and results in the flashlight effect. Their eyes wouldn’t be quite so big and bold if their pupils contracted to block out the light.
Experimenting with IR light
To see IR light for yourself, take an IR-based television remote. Press a button and look at the LED on the end. You won’t be able to see anything. Now, take a digital camera or phone camera, point it at the remote to take a photo, and press a button on the TV remote. You should now be able to see the infrared light. Like our camera, your camera uses a CCD chip that maps IR down into visible light for humans. But neither we nor the eagles can see IR without technological assistance. Again, our locations are dark at night.
The following sources helped me understand all this:
https://www.dptips-central.com/infrared-light.html (cameras and infrared)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_visi ... perception (bird vision)
Color Vision in Birds: https://www.webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/17B.html
color vision, birds, and much more!
Ken Ries, who came up with the real-world experiment.
- seira
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- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
October 14
NEWS 13th October 2023 Cilla Kinross
Both nestlings are strong and healthy, getting five or six feeds a day, including starling, pigeon, rosella, wattlebirds and just today, ducklings.
Diamond has started hunting and brought in a pigeon the other day. Here she is showing off her flying skills: https://youtu.be/_ATTxLYrRgM
The third egg is clearly unviable. It has been nicknamed 'Gabuda' Wiradjuri for 'egg'. She might still try and incubate for some time. I will remove it after fledging and check whether fertilised by candling (holding a torch underneath). If not broken, it will be donated to the Australian Museum.
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but going on averages, more likely from 12th.
17:11
17:12
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Prey for the hungry little ones ~1:26 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlhqeuIqLT8
FalconCam Project~ Oops! The little ones don't fit under my belly anymore ~ 1:44 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCkAI23er6Q
FalconCam Project~Duckling by Dad, Feeding by Mum~2:49 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbIMDhmbZQU
FalconCam Project~Don't worry, sibling, I'm just preening you ~5:00 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XHGRguDQ9E
FalconCam Project~Breakfast for the little ones~6:50 am 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pza78FdisTw
FalconCam Project~Dad brings another prey, Mum is feeding the chicks ~8:18 am 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcyI9j0ShlU
FalconCam Project~X brings prey! End of feeding #1 walks to Mum~1:56 pm 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzttrMlbOxs
FalconCam Project~Starling by X ! Feeding by Mum~5:06 pm 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PrWbyHS0Ek
NEWS 13th October 2023 Cilla Kinross
Both nestlings are strong and healthy, getting five or six feeds a day, including starling, pigeon, rosella, wattlebirds and just today, ducklings.
Diamond has started hunting and brought in a pigeon the other day. Here she is showing off her flying skills: https://youtu.be/_ATTxLYrRgM
The third egg is clearly unviable. It has been nicknamed 'Gabuda' Wiradjuri for 'egg'. She might still try and incubate for some time. I will remove it after fledging and check whether fertilised by candling (holding a torch underneath). If not broken, it will be donated to the Australian Museum.
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but going on averages, more likely from 12th.
17:11
17:12
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Prey for the hungry little ones ~1:26 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlhqeuIqLT8
FalconCam Project~ Oops! The little ones don't fit under my belly anymore ~ 1:44 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCkAI23er6Q
FalconCam Project~Duckling by Dad, Feeding by Mum~2:49 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbIMDhmbZQU
FalconCam Project~Don't worry, sibling, I'm just preening you ~5:00 pm 2023/10/13
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XHGRguDQ9E
FalconCam Project~Breakfast for the little ones~6:50 am 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pza78FdisTw
FalconCam Project~Dad brings another prey, Mum is feeding the chicks ~8:18 am 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcyI9j0ShlU
FalconCam Project~X brings prey! End of feeding #1 walks to Mum~1:56 pm 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzttrMlbOxs
FalconCam Project~Starling by X ! Feeding by Mum~5:06 pm 2023/10/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PrWbyHS0Ek
- Liz01
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- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
October 15
seira
NEWS 15th October 2023 by Cilla Kinross
NESTLING NAMES are Marri (=red kangaroo) 40.7 % and Barru (bilby) 40.3%.
If we have one male and one female, my suggestion would be Marri for the female and Barru for the male. But good luck with telling them apart at the moment!
1st hatch 2/10 0634
2nd hatch 3/10 1005
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but going on averages, more likely from 12th.
1:26 Xavier is feeding the Kiddos
video from this feeding
https://youtu.be/Z3vHmmmDHIc
BTW: I chose both names. The animals are so beautiful and the names are easy to write and remember
seira
NEWS 15th October 2023 by Cilla Kinross
NESTLING NAMES are Marri (=red kangaroo) 40.7 % and Barru (bilby) 40.3%.
If we have one male and one female, my suggestion would be Marri for the female and Barru for the male. But good luck with telling them apart at the moment!
1st hatch 2/10 0634
2nd hatch 3/10 1005
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but going on averages, more likely from 12th.
1:26 Xavier is feeding the Kiddos
video from this feeding
https://youtu.be/Z3vHmmmDHIc
BTW: I chose both names. The animals are so beautiful and the names are easy to write and remember
- Liz01
- Registered user
- Posts: 77507
- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
October 17
Picture from yesterday poor Di, bad Marri
Charles Sturt University falcon project offers global audience a glimpse into peregrines' private life
ABC Central West / By Lauren Bohane
Posted 5h ago
A lone water tower standing tall above a regional city may not look like much but its inhabitants have captured the attention of bird lovers across the world.
The brick tower in Orange, in Central West New South Wales, is home to a family of peregrine falcons.
Their nest box was set up on the tower on the Charles Sturt University campus in 2007 when staff noticed a pair of falcons hunting in the area.
A year later, the first egg was laid.
Over subsequent years, cameras were set up and people watched on with joy as chicks took flight, and shared the heartbreak when others didn't make it.
At any given time, up to 900 viewers across the world tune in to the live stream as peregrine parents Diamond and Xavier and their new additions navigate life.
This year, the enclave has welcomed two new chicks. A bittersweet celebration against the contrast of the sorrow experienced this month by Melbourne's falcon-watching community, when all of this year's eggs were deemed unviable.
'Emotional interaction'
Charles Sturt University adjunct lecturer in wildlife management and biodiversity conservation Cilla Kinross has based her research on the peregrine project.
A small fluffy white falcon chick stares directly at the camera.
Migii, named for the Wiradjuri word for lightning, was the first chick to hatch in December, 2008.(Supplied: Charles Sturt University)
Dr Kinross says there are between 400 to 900 people watching the stream at any one time.......
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-10-17/ ... /102943516
BTW: there is a pic from the first chick 2008
Picture from yesterday poor Di, bad Marri
Charles Sturt University falcon project offers global audience a glimpse into peregrines' private life
ABC Central West / By Lauren Bohane
Posted 5h ago
A lone water tower standing tall above a regional city may not look like much but its inhabitants have captured the attention of bird lovers across the world.
The brick tower in Orange, in Central West New South Wales, is home to a family of peregrine falcons.
Their nest box was set up on the tower on the Charles Sturt University campus in 2007 when staff noticed a pair of falcons hunting in the area.
A year later, the first egg was laid.
Over subsequent years, cameras were set up and people watched on with joy as chicks took flight, and shared the heartbreak when others didn't make it.
At any given time, up to 900 viewers across the world tune in to the live stream as peregrine parents Diamond and Xavier and their new additions navigate life.
This year, the enclave has welcomed two new chicks. A bittersweet celebration against the contrast of the sorrow experienced this month by Melbourne's falcon-watching community, when all of this year's eggs were deemed unviable.
'Emotional interaction'
Charles Sturt University adjunct lecturer in wildlife management and biodiversity conservation Cilla Kinross has based her research on the peregrine project.
A small fluffy white falcon chick stares directly at the camera.
Migii, named for the Wiradjuri word for lightning, was the first chick to hatch in December, 2008.(Supplied: Charles Sturt University)
Dr Kinross says there are between 400 to 900 people watching the stream at any one time.......
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-10-17/ ... /102943516
BTW: there is a pic from the first chick 2008
- seira
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- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
October 18
15:35
15:36
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~ Marri hits Di again then she walks toward to us ~12:13 pm 2023/10/17
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32dVMIVlxQU
FalconCam Project~Holy sugar! Bad Marri ~4:25 pm 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p10S5pNvSzA
FalconCam Project~Di is blowing away by the wind Great feeding for Marri & Barru~1:57pm 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHrFUhGpuhc
FalconCam Project~Marri & Barru are almost ready for self feeding ~8:21 am 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssnM0fDRQyA
15:35
15:36
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~ Marri hits Di again then she walks toward to us ~12:13 pm 2023/10/17
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32dVMIVlxQU
FalconCam Project~Holy sugar! Bad Marri ~4:25 pm 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p10S5pNvSzA
FalconCam Project~Di is blowing away by the wind Great feeding for Marri & Barru~1:57pm 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHrFUhGpuhc
FalconCam Project~Marri & Barru are almost ready for self feeding ~8:21 am 2023/10/16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssnM0fDRQyA
- seira
- Registered user
- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
October 22
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~ Marri is exploring the nest! Barru stands short on his own~1:56 pm 2023/10/19
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHEtqwsPwIE
FalconCam Project~Marri loves the stone Selfies by Marri~3:43 pm 2023/10/20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trFE_2sEElU
Falcon Cam Project~Breakfast for the big Kiddos ~6:41 am 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g45_HbIdWvc
FalconCam Project~Marri & Barru are walking to the left 6 right corner! ~7:45 am 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_qB7yK9h7Y
FalconCam Project~Chicks sit next to each other like in a school class~3:54 pm 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20Xz2cKs-wo
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~ Marri is exploring the nest! Barru stands short on his own~1:56 pm 2023/10/19
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHEtqwsPwIE
FalconCam Project~Marri loves the stone Selfies by Marri~3:43 pm 2023/10/20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trFE_2sEElU
Falcon Cam Project~Breakfast for the big Kiddos ~6:41 am 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g45_HbIdWvc
FalconCam Project~Marri & Barru are walking to the left 6 right corner! ~7:45 am 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_qB7yK9h7Y
FalconCam Project~Chicks sit next to each other like in a school class~3:54 pm 2023/10/21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20Xz2cKs-wo
- seira
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- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
October 29
cute
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Great closeups by Marri ~ 3:43 pm 2023/10/29
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HL6WFgX4XMM
FalconCam Project~This time Marri hits Barru Great wing exercises~3:25 pm 2023/10/29
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Irpb46-bUg
FalconCam Project~Tug of war Mum Marri & Barru ~ 8:31 am 2023/10/28
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckNzdtghY7g
FalconCam Project~Lots of winging! Barru is busy with the egg- Both sing for Mom~4:36 pm 2023/10/28
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k69UArqlTTE
FalconCam Project~ Winging & Sefies by Marri & Barru~2:36 pm 2023/10/27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKHMeGnMx-Q
FalconCam Project~Nestlings activities! Winging, preening, hunting~11:01 am 2023/10/27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ORYeul6wdGg
cute
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Great closeups by Marri ~ 3:43 pm 2023/10/29
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HL6WFgX4XMM
FalconCam Project~This time Marri hits Barru Great wing exercises~3:25 pm 2023/10/29
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Irpb46-bUg
FalconCam Project~Tug of war Mum Marri & Barru ~ 8:31 am 2023/10/28
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckNzdtghY7g
FalconCam Project~Lots of winging! Barru is busy with the egg- Both sing for Mom~4:36 pm 2023/10/28
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k69UArqlTTE
FalconCam Project~ Winging & Sefies by Marri & Barru~2:36 pm 2023/10/27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKHMeGnMx-Q
FalconCam Project~Nestlings activities! Winging, preening, hunting~11:01 am 2023/10/27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ORYeul6wdGg
- Liz01
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- Posts: 77507
- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
November 4th
Good Day
Barru (male nestling) fell almost down!
pretty interesting
'FalconCam' captures moment peregrine falcon chicks hatch in NSW water tower at university campus
By Ryan Malcolm
Posted Sun 11 Oct 2015 at 12:45amSunday 11 Oct 2015 at 12:45am, updated Sun 11 Oct 2015 at 8:17am
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-11/ ... es/6843970
Good Day
Barru (male nestling) fell almost down!
pretty interesting
'FalconCam' captures moment peregrine falcon chicks hatch in NSW water tower at university campus
By Ryan Malcolm
Posted Sun 11 Oct 2015 at 12:45amSunday 11 Oct 2015 at 12:45am, updated Sun 11 Oct 2015 at 8:17am
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-11/ ... es/6843970
- Liz01
- Registered user
- Posts: 77507
- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
FalconCam Project~Kids experience their first thunderstorm~1:02 pm 2023/11/04
13:09 Thunder can be heard. Water splashes into the box. The juveniles are without fear. they are rather curious
NEWS 3rd November 2023 by Cilla Kinross
Our two peregrine nestlings progress very well at just over a month old. They are shedding their secondary down coat and the brown juvenile plumage is showing through. In a few days, they will be unrecognisable. They are starting to spend more time apart and are now self-feeding. The smaller male (Barru) is starting to realise that if he wants to eat, he needs to take it from his sister (Marri) as she will not share willingly unless she is full.
You don't need to worry about them falling out. They will only jump when they are ready to fly..
NESTLING NAMES are Marri (=red kangaroo) and Barru (bilby)
1st hatch 2/10
2nd hatch 3/10
The third egg is not viable ie it will not hatch and will be removed when the nestlings fledge, if not broken.
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but more likely from 12th.
Playlist FalconCam Project:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLqWKxQ ... R2XgLXefJl
13:09 Thunder can be heard. Water splashes into the box. The juveniles are without fear. they are rather curious
NEWS 3rd November 2023 by Cilla Kinross
Our two peregrine nestlings progress very well at just over a month old. They are shedding their secondary down coat and the brown juvenile plumage is showing through. In a few days, they will be unrecognisable. They are starting to spend more time apart and are now self-feeding. The smaller male (Barru) is starting to realise that if he wants to eat, he needs to take it from his sister (Marri) as she will not share willingly unless she is full.
You don't need to worry about them falling out. They will only jump when they are ready to fly..
NESTLING NAMES are Marri (=red kangaroo) and Barru (bilby)
1st hatch 2/10
2nd hatch 3/10
The third egg is not viable ie it will not hatch and will be removed when the nestlings fledge, if not broken.
Fledgewatch starts 10th November, but more likely from 12th.
Playlist FalconCam Project:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLqWKxQ ... R2XgLXefJl
- Liz01
- Registered user
- Posts: 77507
- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
November 9th
adorable siblings
Marri is testing her strength. Poor Barru
Xavier is feeding both
adorable siblings
Marri is testing her strength. Poor Barru
Xavier is feeding both
- seira
- Registered user
- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
November 15
NEWS 15th November 2023 Cilla Kinross
Marri (I think) spotted about 200 m from the tower. She was on the ground and while I turned my back on her to take a photo, she took off and disappeard. So all is well.
FIRST FLEDGE 09:38:43 Marri(at 43 days) fledges; lovely straight, followed by one of the parents. VIDEO https://youtu.be/A1UhaFqvuuk
SECOND FLEDGE 1536 h Barru (at 42 days) follows his sister, also a great fledge over the trees
https://youtu.be/Be9JKIP_GHY
As they both flew well, and the parents know where they are, I will not be looking for them, but expect they will return to the woodland and tower within a few days.
They may return to the box after a few days (or not) . Either way they stay in the area for a month or two learning to hunt. And the parents still feed them during this period if needed.
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Marri fledged in an age of 43 days! Congrats~9:38 am 2023/11/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNvUcj_0JDk
FalconCam Project~Barru fledged in an age of 42 days! Congrats~3:36 PM 2023/11/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0z0EQ6XgtHs
NEWS 15th November 2023 Cilla Kinross
Marri (I think) spotted about 200 m from the tower. She was on the ground and while I turned my back on her to take a photo, she took off and disappeard. So all is well.
FIRST FLEDGE 09:38:43 Marri(at 43 days) fledges; lovely straight, followed by one of the parents. VIDEO https://youtu.be/A1UhaFqvuuk
SECOND FLEDGE 1536 h Barru (at 42 days) follows his sister, also a great fledge over the trees
https://youtu.be/Be9JKIP_GHY
As they both flew well, and the parents know where they are, I will not be looking for them, but expect they will return to the woodland and tower within a few days.
They may return to the box after a few days (or not) . Either way they stay in the area for a month or two learning to hunt. And the parents still feed them during this period if needed.
video by Liz
FalconCam Project~Marri fledged in an age of 43 days! Congrats~9:38 am 2023/11/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNvUcj_0JDk
FalconCam Project~Barru fledged in an age of 42 days! Congrats~3:36 PM 2023/11/14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0z0EQ6XgtHs
- Liz01
- Registered user
- Posts: 77507
- Joined: January 21st, 2014, 2:06 pm
- Location: Germany
seira, thanks
NEWS 15th November 2023 Cilla Kinross
Marri (I think) spotted about 200 m from the tower this morning. She was on the ground and while I turned my back on her to take a photo, she took off and disappeared. So all is well.
And tonight about 6 pm I'm pretty confident I saw Barru in a tree with Xavier. I was several hundred metres away, so this is a rather shaky video
NEWS 15th November 2023 Cilla Kinross
Marri (I think) spotted about 200 m from the tower this morning. She was on the ground and while I turned my back on her to take a photo, she took off and disappeared. So all is well.
And tonight about 6 pm I'm pretty confident I saw Barru in a tree with Xavier. I was several hundred metres away, so this is a rather shaky video
- seira
- Registered user
- Posts: 6744
- Joined: May 6th, 2013, 9:28 pm
- Location: Taiwan
video by FalconCam Project
FalconCam 2023 11 16 Diamond and Barru in dead tree, Diamond flies
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jP5CR26MBw
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Juvenile, Xavier and prey on tower
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81H4kjBSNSI
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Fledgeling swooped by kite
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpwJ7TFf-cY
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Tower at dusk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cI0BCrhJ88c
FalconCam 2023 11 16 Diamond and Barru in dead tree, Diamond flies
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jP5CR26MBw
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Juvenile, Xavier and prey on tower
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81H4kjBSNSI
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Fledgeling swooped by kite
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpwJ7TFf-cY
FalconCam 2023 11 18 Tower at dusk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cI0BCrhJ88c