July 2022 thread
Our Osprey family
"Axel", Blue AX6(16) male (yes he does have strong chest markings), a single chick (possibly from 3 eggs) hatched Glen Affric, near Beauly, seen Lossiemouth 2020, then at LG in 2021
"Asha"- Female - Unringed - partnered Axel in 2021.
Axel & Asha (as "Mistle") fled the nest May 2021 due to unknown intruders.
HATCH #1 - 11 June @ 05:30
HATCH #2 - 13 June @ 04:11 (first sighting)
AT RINGING - Quote RSPB Abernethy Facebook "The male BLUE 1C2 is thought to be the older one at 1.5kgs with the female BLUE 1C1 being the younger one at 1.5kgs."
RSPB Video Channel - Osprey, Goshawk, Barn Owls: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl8QdQ9ZaBT65tF1yOmbMBQ
All pictures & videos ©RSPB LochGarten & WildlifeWindows
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IMAGICAT
Unknown said:
Thank you for pointing out my error, jaydee. Much appreciated.
Birdie's DU Summaries 2018 https://www.imagicat.com/
Scattered thoughts from me, too!
(Tiger's female persona gets quoted.)
Hazel b said:The most important question to answer about IC2 is to ask how young have ospreys migrated
I asked this question (not including the "and survived to be adults" bit) several days ago but got no response.
Now I think that, as long as they can fish, young ospreys can start wandering/exploring without returning to the nest much younger than their actual migration age, which will never be known if they are untagged, or ringed but not spotted by a birder, or unringed. So a juvie's "last seen in the nest area" date may be no indication of when they started their migration.
SHEILA - this was so precious, thank you for posting it here - I'm bringing it forward for anyone who missed it - I was charmed to tears by the presentation and it was nice to have some scenes inside the Centre, too:
Unknown said:It is actually the youngest of the 3, Blue 042, who is on the Plym Estuary. From Friends of Threave Osprey's FB group yesterday - "Just got a message to say that chick 042 has been seen on the Plym estuary in Devon.
Thanks to SHEILA & JAYDEE, I've just wasted half an hour on google maps trying to figure out if I could have walked there as a child - but there's been too much redevelopment since, my post-war prefab estate was demolished decades ago. I do love to see Devon & Cornwall sightings of our ospreys. (Which reminds me - what a lot of catching up with ALAN PETRIE there is to be done !!! )
Scanning the day, clutching at straws/sticks
I couldn't find any birdies either, SHEILA.
"Predictably, the stick KL5 moved got blown off":
A golden nest at one stage of the evening:
Tiger Signature
Here are the tracks of all the Loch Garten Birds that were tracked.
See Osprey TracksRothes was the youngest to leave at 79 days and lived the longest of all the birds.
Here is Rothiemurchus' first day of migration
Hazel b said:"(Tiger's female persona gets quoted.)"
One of several faults with the quoting system after the major site rewrite a couple of years ago is that it seems to drag up an old ID instead of using the current one - CATLADY springs to mind as being similarly afflicted. So I felt it necessary to clarify that I was quoting you, TIGER, not some mysterious female poster who had disappeared.
I don't recall seeing that interactive tracking for individual tagged ospreys! Brilliant, but sad memories.
Hazel b said:In spite of what some people think they do not catch fish. They live on their fat by a process of Beta Oxidation.
I didn't know the "biologiical" term but have always accepted that very few young ospreys fish before migration - which is why Axel's under-performance has been such a worry. Therefore the mental image of 1C2 tripping around the north of Scotland and finding his fishing feet and building himself up over the next couple of weeks... is what I've settled on
20 August
Wickedly windy this morning:
54s
No-one seen up to 06:30, I've been doing something else since.