It is situated in Läänemaa, western Estonia. Local farmers know the nest site already from the Soviet kolkhoz period. The nest is quite far from roads, about 2 kilometres as the crow flies. In 2009 three chicks grew up there. The 2010 nesting failed; in July there were only egg shells under the nest. In 2011 four young grew up in the nest; we could watch, with somewhat varying success, how they grew up and left the nest. In 2012 there were four eggs, three hatched. One injured its beak and had to be taken out of the nest to the veterinary hospital. Unfortunately all attempts to help the storklet failed.
At the end of the last season a young White-tailed Eagle gave us a fright when he visited the nest while the two young storks still spent time on the nest. So we can be curious to see if Tiina and Tiit return or if the nest stays empty or gets new inhabitants.
This year it seems the camera was placed at a different, much lower angle.

I have received a super special photo directly from Urmas, looking at the camera how the breeding storks see it:

Looduskalender article in English: http://www.looduskalender.ee/en/node/19628
Note: The webaddress for the Pontu pictures is presently not working -
we have an alternate address for the time being - sample link:
http://193.40.124.24/2014-kurg-ftp/2014 ... -10-53.jpg
(exchange the date - twice - and the time for the time you want to see)
Information about the nest at:
http://www.looduskalender.ee/en/taxonomy/term/43
Link to camera
JWstream: http://pontu.eenet.ee/player/kurg.html
VLC, Android: rtsp://193.40.133.138/live/kurg
iPhone/iPad: http://193.40.133.138/live/kurg/playlist.m3u8
(we can't guarantee that the Android version of the link is really working!)
A bit about seeing the difference between Tiina and Tiit: viewtopic.php?p=97604#p97604
viewtopic.php?p=97614#p97614 and viewtopic.php?p=97621#p97621
The first meeting:
.