Cornell Lab Barred Owl Bird Cam

For any with avian voyeuristic tendencies, Cornell Lab of Ornithology has several web cams to satisfy your curiosity and enhance your understanding of bird behavior for both feeding and nesting.  I have been enamored, particularly with the barred owl cam as we have barred owls in my woods.

Owlet Pair sharing together time with Mom in NestBox
So while I see the male hunting and hooting (and her anwering from deep in the woods),  I have not yet figured out their nest location. But we've had them for years, and they are lovely (if not startling) to see flying at dusk and early morning.  The barred owl cam, though, gives me a vicarious experience of watching the Indiana barred owls.  It is hosted by the owner of Wild Birds Unlimited. 

The camera set up is first rate:  an interior camera and an exterior camera--both high definition. They use an infra red light inside the box so that you can see what's what even at night. I caught the owls toward the end of her brooding her eggs--two of them.  I also so the first hole where the great escape was to take place.  The first owlet hatched and the very next day the second one emerged.

In the space of just two weeks, viewers have been treated to the careful tending of the mother to the chicks.  They went from looking like cotton balls to now having their feathers coming out and reflecting the lovely pattern characteristic of barred owls.  I feel like they are part of my family!

I note that watching is not for the faint-hearted.  These birds are predatory; all manner of prey--snakes, frogs, baby rabbits, fish, mice, crayfish--are brought to these hungy lungries.  They bring a whole new meaning to eat, sleep, prey!(sic)   Though watching the loss of one life to feed another can be upsetting to some, the animal world is eat or be eaten.  It is the balance of life, and you can see that NOTHING goes to waste.  Food is stockpiled like you would have a pantry.  If the owlets are sleeping when the prey arrives, it is deposited in the box.

IN the beginning, the mother would have to feed the owlets by tearing up the prey and carefully offering it to the little ones.  NOw....GULP.  They snarf down the food (head first).  When you see how much they eat, you realize that the parents (as any avian parent) has to work pretty hard to keep the bellies full.  The female is now hunting, but for almost a month, it was the male who was feeding first the female as she at on the eggs, and then the three of three of them.  The hen has to stay with the nestlings until they can regulate their body temperature.

If you are interested in the process, I hope that you will click on the link.  Also consider supporting the great work doen by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

Bluebirds, Season Two

Last year was our first season of having Bluebirds.  We had 5-6 Bluebirds actively winter with us this year.  Within the last couple of weeks, I now just have a mating pair, as the others in the small flock have likely moved on to their chosen nesting areas. I put out suet and live mealworms for them, whistling each time.  They are attuned to the sliding glass door opening, the whistling and the clang I make against the mealworm dish. Sometimes my customers are waiting on the deck rail prior to getting any auditory cues that a meal is coming. It is lovely to see in the morning.

My customers for suet and mealworms are not just the Bluebirds.  This year, for the first time, I noticed the cardinals eating both suet and mealworms...though for the latter, their interest in them did not appear until recently.  I have a smallish flock of about 8 or so cardinals that have over-wintered in my backyard.  Other  visitors have included Yellow Bellied sapsucker, Red bellied Woodpecker, Hermit Thrush, Brown Creeper, Tufted Titmouse, Carolina Chickadee, White Breasted Nuthatch, Red Breasted Nuthatch (who gone for about a month now heading toward breeding areas) Carolina Wren, Dark Eyed Juncos, White Throated Sparrows, Goldfinches, Pine Warbler and House/Purple finches.  Oh...and squirrels and noctornal visitors opossums and racoons.  I don't wish to feed any of that trio and bring in the suet vending machine.

When the weather was warm for a few days in late February, I saw the female Bluebird with nesting materials in her mouth and activity at the nest box.  Then real February weather kicked in, and I noted no further activity.  It was clear that in late February, birds had paired up for Spring mating.  Where visitors were singular to the feeding stations, I noticed that they had paired up. Where it is difficult to see one Pileated Woodpecker, I saw a pair flitting about in the oak trees--making raucus noise.  Same to be said for the Red-bellied (who have excavated a cavity in a dead branch outcrop of a White Oak, Carolina Wren, White-breasted Nuthatch and the Tufted Titmouse.  What is really touching is to see the males offering mealworms to their females.

Two days ago, I noted that the male Bluebird had a beak full of mealworms and flew to the box.  Was it possible that eggs had been laid and hatched and I missed it?  I whistled on my way to the box with my step ladder and screw driver to unfasten top of the box to peek in.  I tapped on the box several times to give the female a chance to leave if she was in there.  When I opened the box, the female was quietly sitting on the nest.  I could not observe either eggs or young.

Did you know?  Birds typically lay their eggs in the morning.  So if you you are monitoring a nest, you should do it after noon time to give the hen a chance to lay her egg (it is a process).  Egg laying is a serialized event...one a day until the clutch is done.
I went back yesterday after I observed the hen off her nest (and eating mealworms I had offered).  Her nest had 4 eggs.  I'll check again this afternoon to see if there is a 5th one.  If not, I have a starting point for monitoring the nest.  I monitor the nest through Cornell's NestWatch and I also participated in Project Feeder Watch this year.  Both offer a great way to systematize your observations and reporting of bird activity.