Page 26 of 33

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 27th, 2017, 9:02 pm
by Birdfriend
Yes, it's really very sad. This nest stands not under a good star. :blush:
I watch it since 2014.

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 28th, 2017, 1:03 am
by Abigyl
:hi:

I remembered that there was something written about the second clutch.

There are miracles sometimes, let's hope :thumbs:

Here is the article from 2015, they mentioned also the WBSE.

viewtopic.php?f=46&t=236&start=280

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: August 25th, 2017, 11:35 pm
by Birdfriend
Unbelievable, the parents always still incubate the non viable egg. :cry: :faint:
Image

Just I read it is Dad now on the egg. It is a beautiful sunrise there.
ImageReally sad...

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: April 17th, 2018, 11:54 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
Both cameras are working again. New season has started.
http://www.ustream.tv/seaeagles
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/sea-eagle-nest
Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: April 18th, 2018, 6:13 pm
by Liz01
Mamicja wrote: April 17th, 2018, 11:54 pm :hi:
Both cameras are working again. New season has started.
thank you :loveshower: hopefully a better start than in the last year :bow: :2thumbsup:

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: June 11th, 2018, 7:43 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
Last night Lady has laid an egg :loveshower:
Image

Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 14th, 2018, 12:55 am
by Mamicja
:hi:
Live stream has started on YT today
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_wP_D9Y43g
Image

Pip watch will start on July 19
Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 14th, 2018, 7:30 am
by Bawet
Mamicja wrote: July 14th, 2018, 12:55 am :hi:
Live stream has started on YT today
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_wP_D9Y43g
Image

Pip watch will start on July 19
Image
Thank you, Mamicja

hopefully it'll be a good season for both of them. :2thumbsup:

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 21st, 2018, 12:51 am
by Mamicja
:hi:
Little beak is moving inside the egg :loveshower:
Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 21st, 2018, 1:18 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
http://www.sea-eaglecam.org/video.html
Welcome to the world SE21 :loveshower:
Image

Image


Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 21st, 2018, 5:04 pm
by Bawet
How nice, there's a little fuzzy ball

Good luck little eagle

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 22nd, 2018, 11:57 am
by Bawet
First feeding.


Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 23rd, 2018, 7:57 am
by Bawet
The second chick has hatched.

Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 24th, 2018, 12:03 am
by Mamicja
:hi:
SE21 and new hatchling SE22 :bounce: :bounce:

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 24th, 2018, 11:03 pm
by Birdfriend
TY, Mamicja for this nice video. :wave:
Fingers are crossed for this season...hopefully the things develop well there.

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 27th, 2018, 8:33 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
Siblings rivalry has already started :puzzled:

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: July 30th, 2018, 11:18 am
by Bawet
Only peaceful chicks today.


Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: August 10th, 2018, 12:00 am
by Mamicja
:hi:
SE21 aggression towards SE22 didn't lessened yet. SE22 head has many bald spots as a result of pecking by sibling.
Image

Often he refuses to eat fearing SE21 atacks. Apparently little one associates food with pain.
Image

Image
Lady is very patient and repets feeding attempts many times. She usually manages to feed SE22 when SE21 is in food coma.
Sometimes little one crawls toward parent out of range of SE21 and then gets food.
Image

There is nice video of this event by Lady Hawk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bo6QSyp6mA

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: August 14th, 2018, 11:16 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
The last day was very bad for SE22 :cry:
He almost did not eat anything because of the aggression of SE21. He has open wounds in the back of his head and under the eye.
Image

Image

Re: White-bellied Sea Eagles in Australia ~ 2014

Posted: August 22nd, 2018, 7:32 pm
by Mamicja
:hi:
Since I started watching this live video (2013), bad luck does not leave the nest. This year, the miracle did not happen either :cry:
From FB https://www.facebook.com/Sea.EagleCAM/p ... 5963522380
UPDATE - 22nd August 2018 - The current situation with Lady and Dad Sea-Eagle and their chicks.

Up until Sunday, everything was progressing normally with this season. Yes, there has been some sibling rivalry (elder chick, SE21 pecking younger SE22), however, with the chicks reaching their one-month milestone, and multiple food items being delivered each day, we were optimistic that they would both survive.
Unfortunately, apart from a brief visit today (no food), dad has not brought any food or visited the nest area since Sunday. This is highly unusual and definitely unexpected. At this critical time, the parents (even when we don't see on camera) are watching the chicks. Generally, at this stage, the lookout duty lies with Lady, with Dad taking the role of the hunter.
Lady has taken time away from the nest to catch one small fish, Monday 20th and Tuesday 21st (August), returning to the nest to feed. As viewers are well aware, with the previously mentioned sibling rivalry, SE22 does not usually get to eat until SE21 is full. Over the past few weeks, that meant that SE21 would always get the first food delivery. Subsequent deliveries were shared between both but only when SE22 made his/her way to the eating area. Even when there were two food deliveries today, SE22 did not attempt to feed. The result is that he/she has not eaten since Sunday. It is very unlikely that SE22 will last another night without food.
What's wrong with Dad? There was a poorly judged landing to the nest in the early hours of Monday 20th August. Was he injured? Cathy, one of our ground observers, saw Dad sitting at the river roost yesterday and again today, not moving around much (not fishing). Unfortunately, while Cathy was at the river today, she observed a sub-adult flying near the reserve and the river. We can only speculate that there may have been an altercation between Dad and the intruder. To be clear, we can't confirm this. Perhaps Dad is staying away to distract the sub-adult? Perhaps he actually was injured? We simply don't know. The fact is, he has not provided any prey items since Sunday. Agewise, we believe that he is at least 16.
So, what do we do now? There is a firm non-intervention policy associated with this nest. We are privileged to be allowed to unobtrusively film the Sea-Eagles during their nesting season. We are NOT allowed to interfere with the nest, breeding/nesting outcomes or the adults who are protected under national and state legislation. In saying all that if an injured bird is "on the ground" we can transport to a vet (or wildlife carer). The 2012 nest, where we were granted permission to intervene (man-made issue with fishing line) was accessible via cherry picker; this nest is not.
Our beloved Dad, what can we say? We want him to be ok. He is flying around, so we can't "rescue" him. All we can do is hope and pray that he recovers soon.
Is there anything positive out of all this?
Well, SE21 is thriving. Lady has proven herself able to provide for at least one chick without assistance from her partner. For that, we are thankful.
Lastly, for those who don't want to watch anymore and are upset by what they've seen? Please don't assume that we are unaffected by these events. This is our tenth season, of course, we become attached! Nature can be awfully cruel sometimes. We've also seen many beautiful things. Did anyone ever think that we'd get to see little Sea-Eagle chicks hatching, all live via the internet? We observed Dad meeting and courting Lady after we lost Mum. Just recently, we've seen Dad feeding Lady while she was brooding her chicks.
We'd like to thank our moderators for looking after chat and Facebook, doing a fantastic job keeping everyone in the loop, also our dedicated viewers for standing by us when things get tough. Thank you to our note takers for documenting all the nest events and camera operators for keeping us on the air. Also a huge thank you to Cathy for standing around at the river roost these past two days to check on Dad and give us all updates.
Thank you, everyone, for your concern, prayers, best wishes during this time.
It is a video of this unsuccessful landing