Wow, I am so far behind in posting about the Scottish Ospreys.....sorry. Both have successfully fledged.
July 17th, 2010 by rboardman
All appears calm to begin this day. Yesterday was full of excitement highlighted by âourâ female catching 4 fish in as many attempts. I have been hoping that this would occur over the past few days. What a gal! The unexpected, as ever, â bone caught in the throatâ hopefully has not had ill effects on her.
When very little appears to be going on in front of our eyes, the egg âthat wasnâtâ stands large. I once called it âdecorâ, but perhaps now it can symbolise those past experiences for us all over the past 3-4 months.
Some days, the moments spent on the nest are spaced farther apart, by all parties, including âourâ brilliant male. Let us try to savour each and every one of these times, the egg âthat isâ. Rinchen
Posted in Diary 2010 | 18 Comments »
Osprey Diary 16th July
July 16th, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT
Four Together Again:
Yesterday evening we were treated to an unusual sight on the nest for this time of year, but one which warmed my heart- all four of our ospreys on the nest together again. It as only a brief moment, but when dad arrived with a whole fish, mum and the younger chick were ready and waiting and the older chick appeared lightning fast from stage left. Mum then quickly grabbed the fish and took off with it, whist dad gave chase to an intruder nearby- a frantic few moments. The look on the chicks faces was absolutely priceless- âwhat is no one going to feed us!?!â. No fear, mum soon returned with it having eaten the head- she must have been really hungry.
Moments like these are just wonderful, and make you realise how much we are all going to miss our wee family all too soon- but they still have a few magic moments and interesting behaviours to share with us yet this season!
Emma Rawling Perthshire Ranger
Posted in Diary 2010 | 305 Comments »
Osprey Diary 15th July
July 15th, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT
We are all hoping here at Lowes that the weather will finally improve today as it has been the wettest and coolest period so far this season. Not that the rain isnât welcome, with the Loch (and our well) so low, however, the rain has made life difficult for our ospreys.
The male (and female) have certainly had their work cut out fishing as the wind has created substantial waves on the lochs and visibility is poor. All the wild birds have been using the more sheltered bays on the leeward side of the loch for foraging and roosting. The ospreys, young and old, have been sitting in the sheltered trees across from the nest the last couple of days, hence the empty camera for so much of the day.Donât worry it is normal for the youngsters to continue to use the nest for some weeks, and most of the fish deliveries will still take place there. We should be able to enjoy views of them for some time to come- before the real withdrawal symptoms kick in for all of us as the chicks migrate into their future.Emma RawlingPerthshire Ranger
Posted in Diary 2010 | 245 Comments »
Osprey Diary 14th July
July 14th, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT
A cool, damp and windy morning here at Lowes, with both the chicks visiting the nest in between training flights. Both are looking more confident in their flights and making remarkably good landings all things considered.
Our poor lady osprey has been looking a wee bit lonely on the nest -a bad case of empty nest syndrome literally. Some of us have been noticing that she seems to be spending a lot of time on the nest, rather than joining in with fishing, which would be more usual at this time of year. Is she resting up to build her strength? She seems to be supervising the youngsters and watching carefully, but taking things easy. Not a bad thing as she has only weeks left to gain strength before autumn migration. We can only hope she reaches full condition in time, in order to have the best chance of surviving the journey ahead.
Emma Rawling
Perthshire Ranger
6pm Update : Hi folks Emma here, sorry for the camera being a bit static today- someone forgot to change it to roving HD mode this morning ( we are human alas ) . Iâve just taken a wee tour of the loch and found two of our four ospreys ( mum and one chick) hiding in the better cover of the trees just across the bay- this is the side that is not so wind blown today! Donât worry they will still use the nest for quite a while yet, itâs just that today it is the wettest and windiest palce on the loch so theyâve sensibly decided to shelter elsewhere. Emma
Posted in Diary 2010 | 220 Comments »
Osprey Diary 13th July
July 13th, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT
Sorry about the camera problems overnight folks- the computer which hosts the camera to the web was a wee bit overtired again- restart and a few kind words and its working again- thank goodness!
Both our chicks have now taken their exciting first flights over the last 48 hours and both have done extremely well. Instinct is a wonderful thing and both chicks flew strongly, though not very far as yet. They will often perch up somewhere close by at this stage to build up the energy to return to the nest, as long flights are still a bit beyond them- those wing muscles need a lot of conditioning.
The first chick to fly is the older and seems more confident at this stage, whereas the younger is more tentative, but this is nothing to worry about. Both have returned safely to the nest for feeding last night so there is nothing wrong with their homing instinct!
Emma Rawling
Perthshire Ranger
Posted in Diary 2010 | 184 Comments »
Camera problems
July 13th, 2010 by Peter Ferns
Good morning all.
I am still having problems getting the cameras back on line. I will keep working on it until it is sorted.
At the moment mum is shouting for a fish from Dad but he is not around the nest area at the moment. We will give you a proper update a bit later. After I get this camera working. Technology is a wonderful thing but some times it can be a pain in the, well I wont say but you know what I mean.
Peter
Tags: camera, osprey
Posted in Diary 2010 | 7 Comments »
Osprey Dairy 12th : Chicks Fledging
July 12th, 2010 by E Rawling, Perthshire Ranger SWT
Update: Thuderstorms abound! Weâll get the system up and running again ASAP!
Our first born osprey chick has been pretty busy since fledging for the first time yesterday- no less than six flights from the nest and a few practise landings ( some better than others which can be comical!). This morning it has been away for quite some time- but donât worry weâve just found it perched high above the loch on the far side of the bay, getting used the new view.
With wing muscles only just getting used to all this work, chicks will often perch up somewhere nearby to rest and get the energy up to fly back to nest. Never fear though, as soon as there is even a hint of food arriving at the nest , the chick will appear as if from nowhere- sound familiar to anyone with teenage children?
The second, slightly younger chick seems to be getting ready to follow suit this morning- after an attempt this morning at about half past six. Stay Tuned!
Emma Rawling
Perthshire Ranger
P.S. at 9.10 am a spectacular aerial dog fight between the osprey parents and a heron who dared to come too close the nest, just shows the instinct to protect is still strong despite the chicsk being big enough to defend themselves now!
Update: at 9.40 this morning the second chick took its maiden flight- a text book one at that!
Posted in Diary 2010 | 227 Comments »
First chick takes to the skies!
July 11th, 2010 by fiona, osprey HQ
Hi folks,
If you were watching you will have seen chick no.1 spread its wings, hover above the nest and then fly free at 9:09am this morning! I will update you all more in a bit when I get everything else here sorted. Anyone else feeling emotional?!
Fiona
Well what a morning! When I got here at 8:40am, I just knew the conditions were right for a first flight, and both chicks were enjoying the fresh breeze, feeling the âwind beneath their wingsâ! I had sat by the video recorder for about 15mins and decided to get some work done and just as I sat down to count the money, the chick vanished from the screen! Youâll notice it took a while to find where it fly off too as mum had flown back onto her perch, just to confuse me! This was probably to be a landing beacon to the chick. It made a few attempts to land on various trees but the wind proved to strong and blew it over the top off them. An initial attempt was made to land on the nest, which it overshot by a long way, and I admit to having a giggle at that. But after another flight round about the loch, it came in for another attempt and made an almost perfect landing! Lady looked like a proud mum watching their child take itâs first steps while chick no.2 cowered in the nest looking slightly petrified! We just have to hope it plucks up the courage to follow suit, and today would be the perfect day to do so.
There was a lot of confusion as to whether one chick had flown last night, but I have had a look back at the footage and they did spend a lot of time on the edge of the nest just out of camera range of cam1. This is our night vision camera which gets switched on when we leave at night. Unfortunately it appears to have been blown to the right which we wonât be able to correct until the winter when we get up the tree to do some maintenance, so apologies for the poor picture your getting at night.
Keep your eyes peeled for flight number 2!
Fiona