So a new year is upon us and what will it bring? Every year we think it cannot be as interesting or exciting or the year just gone but it usually is.
The first priority will be to see EJ and Odin back. I will be opening the guessing game two months from today as usual. You should know the format by now.
I have watched the Loch Garten nest for about 12 years now. I have yet to see a Loch Garten chick definitely return to Speyside. Will 2015 change that? All our hopes rest with Breagha. In a mere 16 weeks or so he should be heading north. The day when the tracker tells us that "he is off" will be an exciting one indeed.
Another burning question is whether Lady will return? Well that is a question which divides osprey fans. I guess it is best to wait and see, either way it will be highly emotional.
Last year Dyfi treated us to the most amazing spectacle to two female ospreys fighting over the same nest. Will it be repeated this year? A lot of fans are hoping it won't but there is a really good chance that it will if the Henry/Orange VS saga of yesteryear is any guide.
In early September last year Monty had dispatched the two bairns and normally one would expect him to migrate almost immediately but he stayed around for a few days, just loafing mainly, but certainly thrilling the watching fans before he began his climb into the sky and heading south.
Of course a new book "Ospreys in Wales the first ten years" by Emyr Evans has just been published. A truly wonderful book it is.
The Glaslyn birds are usually back very early and get down to reproduction faster than any other osprey pair. One hopes they have another season just like the last ten. Mind you 11 (98) will be 16 years old and with 3 (97) one of only two of the remaining ospreys translocated to Rutland in the period 1996 to 2001.
In recent years 3 (97) has always been the first British osprey to be reported as having returned to a nest following the winter break. Since he usually arrives around mid March the fans will be scanning the skies for him. Last year his son 5R failed to return and that was definitely one of the saddest events of 2014.
Of course there will be great interest in seeing 33 (11) return to establish a new dynasty in Manton Bay.
Two years ago we had one of the most amazing weeks in osprey history. White YA caused great interest when misidentified in the spring edition of RSPB magazine (it was actually the Loch Garten Nethy from 2008) and then turned up for real at Blagdon Lake where he proceeded to get himself caught in nets three times. Still he did wonders to publicise both Welsh and Kielder ospreys. Amazingly another Welsh osprey, yellow 37, came back from the "dead" at the same time.
Kielder had an amazing year in 2014 and they tracked three of their juvenile ospreys. The blogs on the tracking written by Joanna Dailey with input from Paul Wildlifewriter have brought analysis of tracking to a new level.
The Hellgate Canyon nest in Montana had another successful year with a very large fan base. There are lots of really good US osprey cams now available to those osprey addicts that need late night fixes. So much has changed since Betty and Dennis as the only streaming osprey cam back in 2003.
There have been many very fascinating migrations by Finnish ospreys. The most remarkable was surely Tero who kept us guessing as to where he was going to winter. Well the answer seems to be Keyna which is yet another new destination.
Well that is a brief summary of 2014 as I saw it. No doubt 2015 will bring a lot of pleasure as well as many tears. It is certainly great to wake up on the first day on a new year and feel excitement surge through ones veins. Let us hope it is always true.
Tiger Signature
Almost exactly a year ago we got the bad new that Caledonia had perished. Very bad news indeed. See ....I can barely bring myself..........
Our osprey page contines to get hits from many places around the world. Until about three months ago we never had hits from South America. Now we get them every day.Even more recently we started getting hits from India.
Yes Tiger, it has been really amazing to see how the hits have spread over time, into areas we would never have expected.
ChloeB & Tiger's Osprey Data
ChloeB said: Yes Tiger, it has been really amazing to see how the hits have spread over time, into areas we would never have expected.
Yes even in that two days there were hits from Guatemala and Malaysia. I cannot be sure but I think that those were both new.
Unknown said:Tiger - maybe this is a Herculean Project assigned for you - :).
Possibly too much for everyone.
I have said that I will donate a bottle of the finest to Loch Garten when Breagha arrives home. Are you willing to do the same?
I think I am with you onh that one Tiger re Breagha.
A belated 'thank you', TIGER, for your opening post - lots of memories, happy and sad. I would like to put in a word for a bird who made a huge impression on me, Mrs5R (renamed Maya). That bird held out for as long as she could, waiting in vain for 5R, working hard on the nest whilst repelling would-be squatters and partners.
The condition of the nest on 19 March, soon after her arrival:
31 March, ready for eggs:
She suffered fish-thieves, male suitors, female intruders, an evicted partner and lost eggs, and finally spent a long bonding period with Blue33, champion (?!) stickifier:
I claim osprey-deprivation licence ;-)
IMAGICAT
Ah scylla that is absolutely lovely. Are you not forgetting something though? Maya got together with Blue 28 and they did have eggs before 33 turned up and evicted his brother.
The eggs had been laid very quickly after Maya and 28 got together.
Tiger I think that it what 'Mission Control' is alluding to in the script under the fourth photo where Maya is 'nestorising'.
Birdies LG DU update.
Mike B said: Tiger I think that it what 'Mission Control' is alluding to in the script under the fourth photo where Maya is 'nestorising'.
Yes that seems right Mike. If was blue 28 I would still feel airbrushed from history.