Loch Arkaig Ospreys - 2018

Loch Arkaig web cam:  It will be switched back on next month, and should be found here

Here are "All the best bits from the Loch Arkaig Pine Forest osprey camera, Summer 2017, in 2.5 minutes", from the Woodland Trust.

Here is the RSPB Forum for the 2017 Season.

2008       A pair may have started nesting at Loch Arkaig

2013       Chick      White KL(09) f, hatched 2009 Loch Arkaig, Inverness seen in Senegal, 2011 & 2012, 2016 by Rutland team and Chris Wood.                 2013 is the likely first breeding year at Bassenthwaite of White KL(09) and unringed male

2015       No chicks

2016       No chicks

2017       The nesting platform used by the birds for more than ten years has been rebuilt almost from scratch as, with the birds adding new material every spring, it was beginning to sag under its own weight

                Unringed m    10 April named Louis m arrived. Inconclusive whether same 10-yr male, but later concensus was that he was a  first-time breeder

                Unringed f         30 May new unringed female accepted by Louis

                                             4 May 2017 WT named her Aila

                10 May                17.20      Egg #1        Arrives with a grunt from Aila!          

                                              22.39      Owl on the nest. Spooked Aila who flew off.  A slow start but the action is here.

                13 May                19.26      Egg #2    - speckled

                                                              Egg #3                   

                18 June                First chick hatched

                18 June               17.13 Second chick seen struggling out of shell

                22 June                Two chicks alive, just.

                                              One chick survived, and was ringed 22 or 23 July.  Blue JH4(17) m, Lachlan

                                                At 35 days old it has a body mass of 1,305g and wingspan of 291mm.

9 August             Lachlan fledges unexpectedly

 The Loch is home to otters (three orphans were released in the late autumn 2017)  Pine marten have been seen on the nest.  WTE and Osprey breed.  It's about time I tried to get back there!

Where is Loch Arkaig?

Birdie's DU Summaries 2018   https://www.imagicat.com/

  • George Anderson has been posting to the WT chat page this morning (with a very well balanced report). I have mentioned this discussion on the WT chat page on the basis that George will see it. I am personally undecided on the merit of the suggestion (as a result of my lack of knowledge) but see no harm in alerting WT to this discussion. Ian

  • Speed does not matter at all. The speed part is getting the Loch Arkaig pair sitting again and that is not hard.

    When the Loch Garten three are collected they can be kept in an incubator for a very long time. Maybe up until a few days before hatching. 

  • This is George Anderson’s comment on the Woodland Trust chat page....



    I hope Mary Cheadle will approve of my poaching this, to post here.

    It definitely presents a balanced view... and I cannot fault what is said.
    Nature is nature,,,,and it can be raw to see at times.

  • Thank you for posting that Trying.

  • Thank  you Trying I didn't thinkof the PM as a villian, I am just sad for Louis and Aila

  • I am sorry...but I personally cannot condone the thought of eggs being moved. It is what it is. It is not like the number of osprey in the UK is currently dwindling.

    What next? When we have a plight like EJ finds herself in....do we provide food for her....

    Where do you stop? What happened at Loch Arkaig last night wasn't man-made.

    Nature is what it is.... Nature.

  • Hazel b said:

    Speed does not matter at all. The speed part is getting the Loch Arkaig pair sitting again and that is not hard.

    When the Loch Garten three are collected they can be kept in an incubator for a very long time. Maybe up until a few days before hatching. 

    A 'phone call to SNH this morning putting forward a 'hypothetical' potential application and whether this is likely to be approved (if PM defence at LA can be improved) would be my first act. If the answer was positive then 1 visit to the LA nest asap, preferably when the adults were not in sight, to both put dummy eggs in the nest and during the same visit strengthen PM defences, would be my plan. 

    If the adults assumed responsibility for the 'dummy' eggs, then  second visit to replace them with the LG eggs at some stage in the future, assuming they are going to be abandoned.

    As Tiger said - worth considering / exploring.  

    Some people think Ospreys are a matter of life and death. I don't like that attitude. I can assure them it is much more serious than that. 

  • I have a feeling that is the view the 'authorities' will take too Trying.