EJ

I have always felt that we should have a thread for EJ as well as Odin.

My countdown clock says that we might expect her to swoop into Loch Garten 76 days from now. I hjope it has warmed up by then.

 

  • I just have to say, EJ is a wonderful mum and "The Star" of Loch Garten this year.

    Have a safe journey and see you next year you wonderful Osprey and fisherwoman :)

    My name "SuperMum" not sure but seen that before :)

  • As there have been two questions this afternoon relating to EJ's life story, I have updated the summary I assembled a while ago:

    EJ Biography

    1997 EJ hatched at a nest near Bridge of Cally in north-east Perthshire, where she was ringed by wildlife artist Keith Brockie. Her “colour” ring – white with EJ in black - is on her right leg, the metallic BTO ring on her left.

    Nothing is known of EJ’s life for the next 3 years.

    2001 EJ was identified nesting in Rothiemurchus Forest near Aviemore, with an older male osprey wearing an orange VS ring (OVS for short). That year the nest failed, probably due to predation of the eggs by pine martens.

    2002 EJ and OVS nested again in Rothiemurchus Forest, this time raising one chick (ringed but ID unknown).

    2003 After laying eggs, EJ lost her nest to a more aggressive female, Green 7B, a grand-daughter of Olly. She arrived in mid-June at Loch Garten, where she paired with male osprey Henry (ring Ochre HV), who had taken over the nest that spring. It was too late for her to lay eggs, but they stayed together at the nest site pair-bonding.  

    2004 EJ returned to Loch Garten on 26th March, and was joined by her old mate OVS, until Henry arrived on 3rd April and evicted him. EJ and Henry raised three chicks, which were given yellow leg rings with markings 27, 28, 29. Yellow 28 (unofficially named Baldrick) was a male,  while the other two were thought to be female.

    2005 EJ and OVS again mated at the Loch Garten nest, before OVS disappeared. A four year old male, Red 8T, tried to take over the nest but proved to be inadequate at providing food for our female. She laid several eggs before Henry arrived on 25th April, he was covered in oil and almost skeletal. He succeeded in chasing off Red 8T and then kicked the eggs out of the nest, a further egg was laid but that was also ejected by Henry. However, EJ and Henry stayed at Loch Garten as a pair till the end of the season.  

    2006 Once again, EJ and OVS mated at Loch Garten before Henry arrived. On 10th April he returned, chased off OVS and re-established the bond with EJ. Three eggs were laid, three chicks fledged – they were all considered to be female and were given yellow leg rings 8U, 8V and 8W.

    2007 History repeated itself once more as EJ returned to Loch Garten on 4th April and paired up with OVS.  EJ had laid 2 eggs before Henry arrived on 22nd April and kicked the eggs out of the nest. On 24th April EJ laid two eggs in two hours, Henry kicked these out of the nest too. This year was remarkable as our couple went on to produce a second clutch, eggs being laid on 11, 14 and 16 May. However all three eggs failed; two eggs hatched but the chicks died within 24 hours, the third egg seems to have failed mid-hatching.

    2008 Henry did not return this year, and EJ and OVS became the resident pair at Loch Garten. They raised two chicks, female Nethy and male Deshar.  A third chick died in late June.

    2009 Neither Henry nor OVS returned to Loch Garten. EJ arrived on 25th March and took a new mate, an unringed male osprey who arrived on 3rd April and was named Odin. They raised three female chicks; Rothes, Mallachie, and Garten.

    2010 EJ returned on 26th March and was joined by Odin on 3rd April. They raised three healthy chicks, who were not sexed, ringed or satellite tagged due to bad weather throughout the week scheduled for this operation. All had left Loch Garten on migration by 25th August.

    2011 EJ and Odin arrived on 24th March and 2nd April respectively. They raised two chicks, Tore (female) and Bynack (male); the middle egg did not hatch.  

    2012 EJ returned on 21st March, and enjoyed a liaison with blue XD, a male from a nearby nest, both before and after Odin’s return on 1st April. EJ and Odin eventually settled down and hatched three chicks; the youngest died before ringing during a period of fish scarcity and bullying by the elder siblings. The surviving chicks, both female, were named Caledonia and Alba.

  • Thanks, Sue C - a good reference, now that EJ has quite a history!

  • Thank you so much Sue - so clear & precise and much wanted info for us newbies!

     

     2013 photos & vids here

    eff37 on Flickr

  • Your update is really useful, Sue - many thanks!  I must confess, though, that I'm a bit of an anorak who has actually gone back and read previous blogs.  2008 was particularly heartbreaking to read.

    Our herring gulls are red listed birds.  Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.

  • Clare

    It wasn't all my work! The early details were obtained from Roy Dennis' book "A Life of Ospreys", the middle bit was copied from this 2008 LG blog, and the rest is a summary of subsequent events. 

  • Nicely done Sue. There are also our LG nest stats going back to 2003, accrued from various sources.

  • Unknown said:

    Clare

    It wasn't all my work! The early details were obtained from Roy Dennis' book "A Life of Ospreys", the middle bit was copied from this 2008 LG blog, and the rest is a summary of subsequent events. 

    It was kind of your work - you took the time to put it on here, which was most appreciated.

    I also think that Tiger, Chloe and JSB have put in lots of work to expand our knowledge of these lovely birds, so thank you all!

    Our herring gulls are red listed birds.  Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.

  • EJ has had a fascinating life. Highs and lows  OVS, Henry and not sure red 8T and recently Odin a really good match for her and Blue XD rocked the boat of Garten this year. I have probably missed something.

    Ej is wonderful and I wish someone would put her story here as it is definately overdue and definately a good book for some-one to write.

    EJ is the easiest Osprey to identify her speckled chest immediately tells you it his her.

    Also her past before LG what a fascinating story