Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Hamilton: news


Another year begins!

Spring 2008 - The adult Peregrines spent the winter of 2007-2008 roosting at various locations around the Hamilton downtown core. They are aggresively defending their nest site on the Sheraton Hamilton hotel. In the next few days we will be seeking to confirm that the two falcons in our skies are still Madame X and Surge.

Our live webcam will be operational by March 10th.

In 2007 Madame X and Surge hatched four chicks. They were stricken by a bacterial infection a few weeks after hatching, and sadly, two chicks did not survive to fledge. When the surviving two chicks were banded in June, one was found to need a bit of medical assistance (and was removed from the nest for a few weeks), while the other was found to be strong enough to fight off the infection on its own. The surviving pair, named 'Jump Up' and 'Blue Foot', gained strength, and went on to become agile masters of the air.

Madame X was hatched on a bridge on Pennsylvania Route 309, the Cross-Valley Expressway in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Banded as a hatchling on 7, June 1999 she was known to the falcon watchers in Northeast PA as 'Runaround Sue', a name suggested after she was found running along the expressway guide wall one morning. We are keeping the folks in Pennsylvania posted on Madame X's progress.

Many birds exhibit a trait called 'site fidelity'. If at least one of a pair that used a nest site in the previous year return, and if there have been no significant physical changes to disturb either the nest itself or the birds generally, they will use the same nest site over and over again, year after year. Peregrine Falcons are known for site fidelity. This will be Madame X's seventh year in Hamilton and Surge's second, and the thirteenth year the same nest site on the Sheraton Hamilton Hotel has been used.

Oberhausen


Rome: Aria & Vento


There will be 2 more eggs. Otherwise she would be breeding now.
Breeding starts after she laid her egg before the last one.

James River Bridge




Lady Elizabeth keeping het eggs warm. She is very beautiful

Indianapolis

Our falcon in it's favorite place

Florence: Giotto & Monna Tessa


Derby: third webcam installed!!


A new camera was installed today on top of the tower of Derby Cathedral. It will be under test during the following week, so its picture will replace that from the right hand side of our nest ledge. We hope we may see some roosting and feeding activity, even at night. It is infra-red enabled and we’re looking forward to seeing how this works when it gets dark here in the UK in an hour’s time. We may also see some of the recent raven activity, though this has mostly been on a different side of the 450 year old tower.

The main “nest scrape” pictures will still be viewable during this period. We recently increased the refresh rate of our web cam pictures, though lack of funds prevents us from being able to bring a full audio/video feed at this time.

Bologna


This is her 6th breeding day. Changes in the egg are enormous now.

Zwolle





Exciting news about the webcams in Zwolle, Electrabel had decided to make the webcams in Zwolle livestreaming. It will be a test from 1 april until 1 july, and will be hosted on the site of Electrabel from the first of April on. Until then we can all enjoy the live streaming on the WSN site as usual. Next week it will start. http://www.werkgroepslechtvalk.nl/ccms.104.Werkgroepslechtvalk.LIVE-BEELDEN.html
In case both falcons in Zwolle won't start breeding the livestreaming will be switched to the nestbox in Nijmegen.

Nijmegen




I'm sure there will be eggs here this season.