Manitoba Peregrines > West Winnipeg Peregrines
West Winnipeg - 2016 / Ty & Faith
burdi:
--- Quote from: photosbydennis on June 30, 2016, 06:57 ---Sneak peak of the kids at West Wpg...banding/flight photos from the day will be added in the coming days.
--- End quote ---
Thanks Dennis. They’re just irresistible!
The Peregrine Chick:
Nice to see at least one nest that isn't too old for a chick pile ...
Kinderchick:
Interesting explanation of the WW nest box, etc., TPC. Thanks! :)
The Peregrine Chick:
1100h - two chicks - female & male - are up on the patio - female is lying down napping, brother is newly up there and looking around. Other boy is sound asleep tucked into a corner of the nestbox,
These guys are between 30 and 32 days old as of today.
The Peregrine Chick:
At the Radisson, the chicks have inside the box, the balcony, the nestledge and the edge of the nestbox at the Radisson is where the chicks perch when they are in the last 7-10 days before fledging and then they are off. Here the chicks have a kind of split level design - have the box where they have spent all their time up until now and then above that, but below the edge of the roof is the patio. From the patio they can sit and look out and see what their parents are up to. They can also stay out of the wind which is a big component of life at this location and it is wide enough that they can all nap on it together or separately. The last feature is a ramp down to the roof itself, not unlike what we have for the Brandon chicks. Brandon chicks don't generally use the ramp except as a toy past the first few days (they jump up after that when they want to get under cover) - here however, the chicks will use the ramp for a week as the box is too high for them to jump up to before they actually start to fly short distances. Once they get to the stage when the Radisson chicks would be hopping up on the box edge, that is when the WW chicks tend to be make short flights across the roof like at McKenzie Seeds and then they may from time to time, hop up on the roof of the nestbox or up onto the roof itself. Because they have lots of vertical things to land on and horizontal space to fly back and forth and still have a measure of protection from the wind, they tend not to hop on the roof wall until they are having some serious thoughts about flying. This is how it generally works, we'll have to see if this crew use it the same way as their predecessors.
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