Yesterday evening, Gail and I were sitting by the window, watching the river, when she said it might be a good idea to look at our duck box camera TV. I replied that I had been checking it every day, and nothing was going on. We looked anyway, and wow, there was a Hooded Merganser tending at least 3 eggs. I had looked several hours earlier and didn't see any. What was happening?
The camera system is a little funky. It is a cheap analog camera inside the ceiling of the duck box. A cable runs from the box next to the river, up a steep bank, to the house where it is connected to an old TV with RCA inputs. In the video, you can hear rain drops landing on the sheet metal of the predator guard.
Sunday Update
April returned to her nest yesterday evening and has been sitting on her eggs since. April 8 marks the first day of incubation. Incubation can last 26 to 41 days. I could see at least 4 eggs at one time, but there could be more that I can't see, as normal clutch size is 5-13 eggs. The night camera image is clearer than the daytime image because it works using infrared light. These videos are night videos.
1 comment:
What a neat setup you have there on your property. It would do David Attenborough proud.
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