On-time departure for work documented by the Wildview camera.
Photography
Front lawn by day
Automated slideshow of about a dozen shots, Oct 22 and 24, about 5pm both days. Scroll down a bit to see the whole frame. Rapidly left-click the picture to speed things up.
Growing tomatoes
Have you seen the net we put up to keep the humans out of the tomatoes?
Cardinal
at the bluebird nesting box by the well: first two on May 23rd, the rest on May 27th, all early afternoon.
Mouse(?) at midnight
On the bluebird nesting box by the well.
Bluebird at the box
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuiKhQ5mhag”
Our Wildview camera’s video of a bluebird at the bluebird box 21 May 2011, 4:23pm. Only a week ago we though this box was occupied by chickadee chicks. After Youtube starts, you can activate the full-screen option by clicking an icon in lower right which looks like one of these:
Inspecting the quality of the rototilling
Bluebird box: no luck yet
March 27 through April 2, 2011 — 54 pictures in 54 seconds, with the Wildview camera pointed at the bluebird box. Although I saw a chickadee exit the box last weekend, I definitely saw a bluebird peering into the box yesterday, with a partner on a twig nearby. So why didn’t the camera see them?
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TntOoHk8Qys
Evidently the camera needs to be on a pole almost adjacent to the nesting box. A 150% enlargement from one of the chickadee shots: |
Sandy’s Barred Owl Nesting Box: status
Still no owl pictures to show. I got out the big ladder this afternoon for a visit to the Wildcam camera on the tree opposite Sandy’s barred owl nesting box.
Retrieved 36 images from the SD memory card and replaced the four C cells (two corroded). Camera was displaying the low-battery indicator, but the correct date. The images were dated January 8-21, 2011. As you can see above, from the location of the camera I could see twigs and even green leaves in the opening of the nesting box. We’ve read that barred owls do not add materials to a nesting place — but sometimes squirrels render an owl box uninhabitable to owls by filling it with debris. I moved the ladder from the camera to the nesting box and knocked on the door, but heard no response, and so began reaching in and removing a quantity of twigs. A grey furry blur flew out so fast that I couldn’t really know it was a squirrel until it hit the forest floor 15 feet below. I realized there was another one in there too, so opened the trap door rather than insert my hand again. Number two disappeared just as fast, with no apparent injury from the fall.
Here’s a video clip from the six color photos dated January 8th. The four-second pause on each corresponds to the camera’s four-second pause between each shot. Warning: there’s not much to see here: Squirrels briefly visible, coming or going
Conclusions:
1. Clearly at 15 feet distant, the camera is too far away from the nesting box. There is a tree five feet closer, but it would have the camera pointing west instead of north.
2. The camera’s infra-red functionality seems inadequate for the current 15-foot distance. The early morning and late afternoon shots in black-and-white aren’t of much use.
2. The camera’s motion-detector seems to be tripped by the motion of the trees in the wind. (When we trained the camera last fall on bird feeders hung from wires, we got many pictures of swinging but unattended feeders.)
About the nesting box itself, see Projects, above.