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  1. #31
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Glen Forrest, Western Australia
    Age
    62
    Posts
    80

    Default

    Their colour is starting to come in

    Rick

    Annotation 2020-11-03 170531.jpg

  2. #32
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Frankston south
    Posts
    102

    Default

    Today was the first time that I've seen a carcass of a Blackbird? left for the chicks to demolish without assistance.

  3. #33
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Glen Forrest, Western Australia
    Age
    62
    Posts
    80

  4. #34
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Frankston south
    Posts
    102

    Default

    I'm tipping flight is imminent, fledged and confidence building....

  5. #35
    Join Date
    Oct 2020
    Location
    Greendale Vic. Australia
    Posts
    64

    Default

    Oooh yes, they're close to the edge now... all three just standing there looking over the edge... gotta launch soon!
    If only we could get 'footage' of the maidens, that'd be a blast.

  6. #36
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Mackay North Qld
    Posts
    6,446

    Default

    Yeah! It's got me as well. I am finding I " need" to login a couple of times a day to see if the birds have flown.

    I have a thing for birds and having "raised" quite a few sets of Sunbirds nesting outside my laundry window , the first flight thing attracts me.

    Grahame

  7. #37
    Join Date
    Oct 2020
    Location
    Greendale Vic. Australia
    Posts
    64

    Default It's addictive for sure.

    I've flown aerobatic RC slope soarers for many years. To be good at it, the concentration is so intense that you're not standing on a hilltop with a transmitter in your hands, you're actually in the air flying like a bird, riding the air like surfing a wave. And dog-fighting with wedgies is pretty fun, but a bit hairy!

    Watch out, they're close now. One of them is flying - not off, but up and down the parapet.
    Last edited by joolstacho; 12th Nov 2020 at 08:53 AM. Reason: Addition

  8. #38
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Frankston south
    Posts
    102

    Default

    Flew the coop early this morning...................

  9. #39
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Glen Forrest, Western Australia
    Age
    62
    Posts
    80

    Default

    The last one to leave the nest

    Rick



  10. #40
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Athelstone, SA 5076
    Posts
    4,255

  11. #41
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Glen Forrest, Western Australia
    Age
    62
    Posts
    80

    Default New Family

    They have hatched
    Four healthy chicks
    Rick

    243344585_895156124442483_7891951353981576319_n.png

  12. #42
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Athelstone, SA 5076
    Posts
    4,255

    Default

    they are back and looks like four eggs again.

    https://367collins.mirvac.com/workpl...at-367-collins

  13. #43
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Athelstone, SA 5076
    Posts
    4,255

    Default an intruder

    copied from the Age

    An intruder is threatening Melbourne’s beloved pair of falcons and their future offspring perched on a Collins Street office building, with a looming fight set to determine the raptor king of the CBD.

    Rare peregrine falcons have nested on a ledge high up on 367 Collins Street since 1991, with a livestream of the birds’ shelter developing a legion of followers – particularly during Melbourne’s COVID-19 lockdowns – since it launched five years ago.

    Victorians tuned in to see the raptors incubate, raise chicks and even squawk with puzzlement during last year’s earthquake on the Mirvac-owned building, with the same male and female nesting on the skyscraper for the last five years.

    However, Dr Victor Hurley, the founder of the Victorian Peregrine Project, said a second male is lurking near the current couple, disrupting egg incubation and jeopardising this year’s brood as it tries to kill the resident male and take its place.


    Hurley said falcons are a fiercely territorial bird of prey that eat smaller birds and are usually only lost from a regular nesting site if another adult peregrine arrives and kills a bird of the same sex.
    This year, he says, the regular female falcon did not return when the birds arrived in late August, and volunteers began noticing “odd behaviour” from the resident male at the start of September as it stopped resting on its eggs and wouldn’t provide food to the mother.

    On Thursday, Hurley said a volunteer took photos that showed the distracted resident male had actually been dealing with an intruder, confirming reports that two raptors had fought on the banks of the Yarra River near Federation Square two weeks ago – a tussle that ended in a draw.
    “The incoming male hasn’t been successful, yet, and the resident male, for reasons I don’t understand, hasn’t been able to chase off or kill this intruder,” Hurley said.



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    “But the downside is the female is left with all the incubation duties, and it appears possibly having to get her own food. I think what’s happening is every time her male brings her food, the intruder intercepts him and steals it off him or forces him to drop it.”
    Hurley said this interrupted incubation puts the pair’s eggs at risk of not hatching when they are due at the start of October.



    He added that it was “really unusual” for the incoming bird to arrive after the eggs had been laid and pester so close to the existing bird’s nest, and that others would opportunistically wait well outside the local bird’s territory.
    “In all the years I’ve been looking at it, I’ve not come across something like this, where they’ve tolerated this bird for so long. He’s even landed on the next ledge ... he’s really cheeky and getting away with it,” Hurley said.






    “I suspect by next season we’ll have one male.”

    The looming fight above Melbourne’s streets

    Hurley said the current battle between the two males was a cold war, with the intruder waiting to pounce on the resident male if it drops its guard.
    He said when a previous female was killed by an intruder years ago, their fight lasted more than seven hours, leading concerned building managers to call Hurley after the raptors spent hours screaming and yelling.


    Hurley said he suspects some fights are shorter, but with both falcons using the same dive-bombing runs, sharp talons and neck-snapping beaks to kill smaller prey, they are often evenly matched.
    “That’s really hard if you’ve got another peregrine because they know exactly what you’re trying to do. So, it often ends up as a bit of a grappling match,” Hurley said.


    Almost 40,000 Facebook users are monitoring the falcons at the 367 Collins Falcon Watchers page, with many calling the resident seven-year-old male “Dive Bomb Dad” as he tries to fend off the intruder.
    The winner will claim all of Melbourne’s CBD as its own, alongside the resident mother, with the next closest nest in Altona.


    “That’s why people are all fascinated by the Game of Thrones intrigue that’s going on,” Hurley said.
    When asked to pick a winner, Hurley said the slightly larger and younger three-year-old intruder might have a slight edge.

    “In any sort of wrestling match, you’re going to put your money on the larger bulk to probably succeed ultimately,” he said.

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