Rutland Ospreys Webcam

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Malewitsch

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Post by Malewitsch »

Millicent in Mauritania....by richard thaxton

Just a wee blog-ette with the latest on Millie.

After her long flight on 4 September, Millie had a relatively late start at 08.00 GMT on 5 September and headed SSSW reaching altitudes up to 1200m en route. She finally came to roost in the Western Sahara, S Morocco at 18.00 GMT having travelled 415 km or so.

She left the roost early on 6 September flying S stopping at 08.00 GMT. At 12.00 GMT she crossed the Tropic of Cancer and changed direction to SSW. At 16.00 GMT she crossed the border into Mauritania travelling at an altitude of 1890m. By 20.00 GMT she was at roost 40 km NW of Akjoujt, a copper mining town and capital of the Inchiri region. She again travelled a great distance of 530 km.

September 7 was a more modest day with her only travelling 275 km. She left the roost at 08.00 GMT travelling SW towards the coast. When she was near the coast at 16.00 GMT she turned SSSE passing E of Nouakchott on the way to her roost 30 km SE of the town in the Trarza region. Over the last three days she has travelled over 1200 km.
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Post by Kukelke »

Today's blog about the Manton Bay nest; an overview of what happened this season, including a video:

http://www.ospreys.org.uk/the-never-ending-story/

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Post by macdoum »

Kielder ospreys

Osprey UV drifts south

Must be the slowest migration in osprey history:

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... fts-south/

Great heights and about turns. :whistling: :laugh:
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Post by Malewitsch »

Millie in Senegal! - 4 minutes ago by Jen Clark

Mike has the latest on her travels:

On 8th September she travelled in a southerly direction from her overnight roost S of Nouakchott in Mauritania and at 18.00 GMT she crossed into NW Senegal coming to roost at around 20.00 GMT on a small tributary of the Senegal River. She completed another 200 km.

She had a more leisurely day on 9th September only travelling around 40 km. Between 10.00 and 14.00 GMT she was perched at different locations close to the Senegal River before flying S to arrive at Lac de Guiers, 23 km S of the town of Rosso. This is a large lake and she may well have stopped for fishing before coming to roost at 20.00 GMT close to the lake.

On 10th September she had a leisurely start leaving the area around 10.00 GMT and she may well have gone fishing in the lake before this time. By 14.00 GMT she was at the S end of the lake near the small towns of Morar and Sièr before changing direction to roost at 18.00 GMT close to the small town of Keur (house) Modibèye. A modest day’s flying of 100 km.

On 11th September she flew SE at around 10.00 GMT and at 14.00 GMT she was flying just N of the town of Linguere.

Overall she had travelled a further 430 km over the last three days making it a total of around 5350 km since leaving Loch Garten.

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Post by Kukelke »

Update on the crossing of the dreaded Bay of Biscay by 7H, a chick from one of the Kielder nests:
A truly epic crossing of the Bay of Biscay by 7H

There had been no data update on 7H since early on 9 September until today; the reason is now clear, she was having a flight of nearly 39 hours non stop over the Bay of Biscay. How incredible, and what a strong juvenile she must be. EDIT: Actually not under her own steam all the way , after turning to the north and flying around a bit, she must have hitched a lift on a cargo ship heading NE; she possibly only realised she wasn’t on another island when it got light! So deduct 12 hours.

She headed off from the Scillies at 06.55 on 10 September where she had been since just before 15.00 on 9 September. (At the moment there is no data covering her journey there from Wales.)

She headed south, on track for a crossing to the NW of Spain. A very long trip in itself for a juvenile on her fourth day of migration. But at 17.00 she turned round when virtually half way to Spain. EDIT: She flew around mainly moving east or north and then must have boarded a ship; by dawn she had actually passed the NW coast (SW England next stop!) she abandoned ship and headed south at just before 06.00 on 11 September. An interesting overnight roost!

She eventually made landfall about 35 km west of Aviles at 21.40. Actually, she was on offshore rocks and she stayed on them all night. She had still been flying at 37 kph or more before landing..

There will be more on her stay in the Scillies and on what she did next in another post. For now, just marvel at this journey of over 1200 km. With 250 km of that on a ship, so still nearly 1000 km, albeit not at one go. With thanks to Tiger and Paul especially for getting a blogger on the right track!

Image

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... cay-by-7h/
Smart osplet, resting on a ship :mrgreen:
Luckily this was a ship that didn't go west to America, otherwise 7H would have been in serious trouble.
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Incredible that lucky 7H
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

30 reaches her winter home

By Tim on September 12, 2014

She's done it! The latest satellite data from 30(05)'s transmitter shows that she reached her winter home on the Senegal coast at 11am yesterday morning after an amazing 11-day migration from Rutland.

The previous batch of data had shown that 30 roosted in the remote desert of Western Sahara on Sunday evening. Next morning she must have left her overnight roost site at around 9:30am because by 10am she was 18km further south, heading south-west at 41kph at an altitude of 660 metres. She continued to make fairly steady progress over the next four hours and by 2pm she had flown 158 kilometres on a south-south-westerly heading at altitudes of between 500 and 1300 metres. During the heat of the afternoon she took advantage of thermals created by the searing desert, crossing into Mauritania just after 4pm and continuing south-south-east at high altitude. By 6pm, she had covered another 133km and was migrating at an altitude of 2300 metres. An hour later she was a further 31km south-east and now even higher: 2440 metres above the remote and desolate desert. She continued flying for another hour before settling to roost on the desert floor in northern Mauritania after a day's flight of 350 km.
Image
By first light on Tuesday morning 30 had moved 2km south from her position the previous evening and, like on Monday she resumed her migration at around 9:30am. For the first time in ten days of migration, though, it seemed that conditions were not in her favour. During the course of the day she only flew another 164 kilometres before settling to roost in the desert of central Mauritania.

For a third morning in succession, 30 resumed her migration at around 9:30am on Wednesday. By 11am she had flown 47 kilometres and was flying south at 34kph at an altitude of 350 metres. Conditions for migration must have been much better than on Tuesday because over the course of the next four hours she covered a further 146km at altitudes of over 1000 metres. 30 must have now sensed that she was getting closer to her winter home; she had made a distinct turn to the south-west and was nearing the Senegal border. At 17:30 she passed over Richard Toll and into Senegal, crossing the Senegal River; almost certainly the first water she had seen for at least four days. After flying over the huge Lac de Guiers she pressed on towards the coast. She passed to the east of St Louis as dusk was falling at 7pm and continued flying for almost an hour after dark before reaching the coast and settling to roost for the night. She was now just 40km north of Lompoul beach after a day’s flight of 450km.
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By 9am next morning 30 was perched 23km south of her overnight roost site, probably eating her first fish for five days. She didn't linger there for long, though. Two hours later she was perched in one of her favourite trees just inland from Lompoul beach. Just over 11 days after leaving Rutland, she was back at the site where she has spent every winter since her first autumn migration in September 2005. She had arrived two days later than last year, but having departed from Rutland 48 hours later than the previous year, her migration has taken exactly the same length of time. And when I say exactly, I mean exactly. If you give or take a few minutes, her journey last autumn took a total of 267 hours.This year it was…yes, you guessed it, 267 hours. Remarkable!
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Having arrived at her winter home 30 will spend the next six months in leisurely fashion; catching one or two fish each day and then spending the rest of her time on her favourite perches on the beach or just inland. We know exactly what the beach looks like because last year project team members Paul Stammers and John Wright visited it.
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/a-rutland-osprey-in-senegal/
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We'll be sure to keep you updated with 30′s movements over the coming months and watch out for a summary of her migration early next week. In the meantime, take a minute to marvel at this most incredible of migrations. Over the course of her 11-day journey 30 flew 4681km (2908 miles). She certainly deserves a rest!
Copyright © 2014 Rutland Ospreys
http://www.ospreys.org.uk/category/satellite-tracking/
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Post by Kukelke »

More on the fascinating crossing of the Bay of Biscay by Kielder osprey 7H:

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... -to-spain/

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Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

More from meandering Millie

by Jen Clark

More news from our young satellite tagged ospreys courtesy of Mike. It looks like Millie is doing a bit of border hopping whilst Breagha is being as predictable as ever – which really isn't something to complain about! It looks like Millie can't quite decide where she wants to settle, having explored Senegal, she has made her way back to Mauritania and is now swithering on the border of the two countries.

Over to Mike:

Millicent has returned to Mauritania after a few days exploring what might have been a dry region of North Senegal.

The last report on 11th September at 14.00 GMT showed her flying SSE where she roosted at 18.00 GMT in what may be an area with an active or dried up river. Overall she had travelled 135 km on this day. She left the roost at around 10.00 GMT the next day and travelled only 20 km or so before turning N at 12.00 GMT and then NW at 14.00 GMT heading towards the Mauritania border eventually going to roost at 20.00 GMT to the W of the town of Mbilor Dieri, Senegal close to the Senegal River and the Mauritania border. Another 220 km had been covered on 12th September. At 10.00 GMT on 13th September she was flying over the Senegal River near the town of Richard Toll and into Mauritania where she proceeded to explore a small area over the next two days. At 14.00 GMT on 13th she was perched at the side of a small lake on a tributary of the Senegal River and she had returned to this area by 14.00 GMT on 14th September where she was perched between 14.00 and 18.00 GMT on the tributary 2.5 km NE of the town of Keur Madike on the Mauritania – Senegal border.

Meanwhile, Breagha still appears to be healthy and not doing much more than short trips around his favoured area close to the Casamance River.
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http://www.rspb.org.uk/community/places ... illie.aspx
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Latest position for Millie near Dagana

Posted by ALAN PETRIE on 15 Sep 2014 8:22 PM
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http://www.rspb.org.uk/community/places ... 32219858=6
Malewitsch

Post by Malewitsch »

Soaring so high and so free

By Kayleigh Brookes on September 17, 2014

On Sunday 31st August 2014, our satellite-tagged Osprey, 30(05), set off on her long migration south to her wintering grounds in West Africa. Just over eleven days later, she arrived! It took her exactly the same amount of hours as last year (267), and the route she took was almost exactly the same!
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In the photograph above you can see the three lines indicating 30's three tracked journeys to and from Rutland and Senegal. The red line is this year's migration – autumn 2014. The green line is her autumn migration of last year, 2013. The yellow line is her spring migration back to Rutland in March 2014. Below is a table that shows the total distance 30 travelled on all three of her tracked migrations. They are remarkably similar!

It is incredible how Ospreys know where they are going, and how they stick to a similar route each year. We imagine that they must use significant land marks and remember them to guide them on their way. In reality, we’ll never really know how they do it, it will remain something that we cannot possibly ever fully comprehend. But that doesn’t matter, we don’t need to know everything, what matters is that we can appreciate the intricacies and complex abilities of nature, and feel awed and inspired by them!

30's autumn migration this year is without doubt an awe-inspiring thing. During her eleven-and-a-bit days of migrating, she travelled a total of 4686km (2911 miles), averaging 424km a day (264 miles), at an average speed of 36kph (22mph). Out of her 267 total hours of migration, she spent 130 hours actually flying, which is just under 50% of her time, and averages at 12.8 hours per day of flying.

The photograph below shows 30's complete, and incredibly direct, migration to Senegal this autumn
Image
Migration is truly mind-blowing, and not fully understanding how it is done just serves to make it even more admirable. Just look at what this 1.9kg bird has accomplished this autumn, in just over a week and a half. It doesn't get much more amazing than that.
Image

http://www.ospreys.org.uk/soaring-so-high-and-so-free/
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Post by Malewitsch »

7H crossed the Atlantic to Africa yesterday!

Posted on September 22, 2014 by joannadailey

News just in, 7H crossed from SW Portugal to Morocco yesterday, flying 430 km over the Atlantic Ocean in around 12 hours.

She roosted in scrub on 20 September, having flown to the Portuguese equivalent of Land’s End then back inland a short way.

On 21 September she may have fished in the sea before setting off to Africa; by 08.49 she was about 10 km off the Portuguese coast. She flew steadily at about 35 kph until 11.45 when she increased her pace, moving at 45-55 kph for much of the rest of her flight, with occasional short slower spells. Landfall must have been about 21.00 because at 21.02 she was stationary just inland, near the Golf Course at Bouznika, south of Rabat. She roosted until this morning when she appeared to fish at sea before heading on.

Well done, 7H, stay strong.
Image
7H explores in Morocco. UV goes nowhere!

Posted on September 24, 2014 by joannadailey

After her 12 hour sea crossing from Portugal to Morocco on Sunday 7H has been taking it easy. On Monday she was on the move early for her, possibly hungry after her long journey, but she didn’t leave her roost area until late morning. She could have fished at sea in that time, but was also by a couple of streams or small rivers inland. She then flew over the Bouznika Forest (tiny, especially compared to Kielder!) before heading parallel to the coast and south of Casablanca. Initially she flew at altitudes of up to 470m but generally around half that before a spell of an hour mainly over 500m. She travelled at speeds between 25-45 kph, mostly nearer the lower end. 7H found a roost for the night at 17.45 GMT about 5 km inland, having first circled around to the coast and back. She was on agricultural land in a row of tall trees between fields. She covered about 150 km in the day...
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Post by macdoum »

Kielder Ospreys UV & 7H

Many stopovers;

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... stopovers/

:D We can call them the wandering ospreys,or are they lost ? :puzzled:
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Post by macdoum »

Kielder ospreys : Day Trippers in Portugal

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... -trippers/
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Post by macdoum »

Loch Garden ospreys Millie & Breagha still going strong;

http://www.rspb.org.uk/community/places ... teady.aspx

:wave:
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Post by macdoum »

Ferenz wrote:Incredible that lucky 7H
More on 7H Kielder Osprey;

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... wasnt-all/

:rotf:
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Post by macdoum »

More updates on Kielder ospeys including a video by Paul Wildlifewriter.

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... -resident/

Such detail,its incredible. :thumbs:
:D
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Post by macdoum »

Rutland Osprey 30 (05) a new blog published today,5Th Dec 2014

http://www.ospreys.org.uk/rutland-ospreys-in-africa-2/

Tracked to the last millimetre.. :bounce: :whistling:
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Post by macdoum »

Kieider Ospreys 7H & UV

One makes some trips,the other stays at home;

http://kielderospreys.wordpress.com/201 ... s-at-home/

:thumbs:
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