The camera is still being tested, and from time to time you may see sudden changes and maybe wonder why the links aren't correctly labelled. Please bear with us whilst we consider the best way of supplying three video feeds via two webcamera pages. Of course, we could easily arrange for a third video page, but first we would need to find a sponsor willing to offer us £150 for a three month webhosting contract.
Of course, acknowledging sponsorship or donors gifts is very important, and right now we would like to thank Acam Technology Ltd of Prime Enterprise Park in Derby for donating this little dome camera to our project. It meant we only had to purchase the special cabling we needed, and this support has helped us spread our limited resources much more effectively. We recently purchased a new video recorder with some of the donations made on Cathedral Green last summer, and I hope we can soon bring you the first video clips.
The camera looks northwards across two of the three gargoyles. In daylight we can see towards Rivermead House, thankfully one of only two tall residential buildings in our city. Immediately beyond it we see Darley Park, and in the far distance the undulating countryside around Crich. In the extreme lower right-hand corner we catch a glimpse of St Alkmund's Way, part of the busy inner ring road that skirts the city centre. The night-time view is not so clear, and the picture unfortunately contains a lot of flare from the infra-red illuminator bouncing back into the camera lens. We'll see if we can make this better just as soon as we're able, but there may not be much we can do owing to its close proximity to the stonework. The horizonatal line of bright lights you see is highway lighting along the A38 - the outer ring-road that runs northwards around Derby.
Finally, although this really deserves a diary entry in its own right, we would like to draw your attention to a fantastic new peregrine blog run by a Dutch enthusiast called Froona. Her site seems to be unique in that it compares the progress of a number of peregrine webcams around the world, and her use of captured images from their webcams is brilliant for seeing what other pairs of birds are up to. In Rome for example, they already have eggs, whereas we don't expect ours until the end of March/early April. (I just wish I had the time to watch them all!)
(New visitors to this blog may wish to read an overview of the peregrine project, or have their names added to our mailing list.)
This pudding cam was a brilliant idea! well done, the pictures are incredibly addictive!!!
ReplyDeleteAshley Sims
Thanks Ashley - as you're the film producer who is putting together the new DVD on our birds, I know you'll be looking forward to seeing the video footage we've captured just as much as I am!
ReplyDelete(I've taken the liberty of reposting your comment, as it was made to an earlier entry which is easily missed. Nick M.)
It's really excellent being able to see all three images on one page without flipping back and forth.
ReplyDeleteBird on that ledge thing below the nest box.
Fantastic! Thanks for all the hard work, and new info. and pictures on latest blog entry.
ReplyDeleteFascinating day for all we lazy stay-at-homes to see what is happening with the third camera.
Despite the flare bouncing into the lens, was thrilled to see even the faint image of the peregrine late last night
Even more exciting this morning.
13.10, just looked in to find both birds on the platform, one on each side,they almost landed down at the same time....mustve been racing eachother to get home.....
ReplyDeletecan clearly see the size difference of the male and female with the split screen , its great.
the male was also looking to be cowering as the female was over looking him, maybe a part of courtship????
lyndsey, chesterfield
There's a falcon in the nestbox, originally actually in the center of one side. Only there an instant before being on the edge, so I couldn't see if that side was being prepared for eggs?
ReplyDeleteSomething very interesting must be going on further up, because he or she is constantly looking upwards.
This blog is excellent but to-day I managed to do something even better...I went along to the launch of the WildDerby 2008 programme and actually saw our birds in flight. They did a couple of loops of the Cathedral Tower as though they were putting on an aerobatics display for the crowd..which indeed they were.
ReplyDeleteInteresting thing happening as I watch the nestbox camera. Last night your time when I checked, the nestbox was a black abyss, this time it started out that way, but then changed to a very clear photo. Sometimes there is a slightly reddish photo. It seems to be cycling, but not in a pattern I can determine.
ReplyDeleteIs this part of the experimenting you're doing, or is some light going off and on?
p.s. There was a peregrine in the nest box for a bit.
ReplyDeletefroona's web site is amazing. She must spend an enormous amount of time on it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment on my blog. Have the peregrines decided to breed again at Derby this year then?
ReplyDeleteHi Anna S. - yes, it looks like it they're going to breed again. There have been some amazing scenes outside Derby Cathedral recently with a pair of ravens (which until a week or so ago had never set foot in Derby) have decided they'd like to settle on the top of the tower, and have tried to nest. This rather upsets the peregrines! Tonight at 5pm, in glorious sunshine, both adult peregrines were swooping high in the sky above the tower and were trying unsuccessfully to dislodge the ravens. These are such special things to see, even in the mountains, let alone in the middle of our city. Of course, I stood there in the street, like some dummy, staring up into the sky whilst people walked past me, oblivious to what was going on. Did I care? You bet I didn't!
ReplyDeleteMay I take the chance to recommend your blog to others, as it's unusual to have a Derbyshire schoolgirl write such interesting blogs as yours?
It's at http://wildenvironmentalist.blogspot.com
Hi Karen Anne: It might have been me fiddling late last night in the dark that caused changing images you saw! I tried to reset the iris of our camera so that the tower floodnights didn't fool the camera into thinking it was still daylight. It appears to have settled down, whereas the third camera doesn't seem to be tripping over into b&w mode at all at night. Hence the poor picture, I think.
11.00p.m. (UK time) lovely view of falcon. Love the new setup!!
ReplyDeletefantastic very moody shot over the gargoils, female up there now and the male in the box...brilliant i,m almost tempted to sponser a forth cam..cheers mark
ReplyDeletere. sponsorship and/or donations. the project is seriously in need of funds with very little left now in the kitty from donations made last year....despite us being very frugal!
ReplyDeleteSo if you wished to send us a donation, however small, please do so. We are exploring having a direct link for donors but for now the easiest way may be to phone the wildlife trust on 01773 881188 and ask how to donate over the phone using a debit/credit card or where to send a cheque to.
Cheers
Nick B
Thanks for mentioning my Peregrine Falcon Blog. I'm very honored.
ReplyDeleteLove the new camera position, the images are spectacular. I'm looking forward for both peregrines to start breeding this year. I was wondering: did you name both peregrines?
Peregrine on the pudding cam.
ReplyDeleteagain male on the box female on the gargoyle....must get over soon with my meade telescope, thanks for the info nick...i'm doing a walk in may around the south coast path and may raise sponsorship..email me with any ideas..i'm on the mailing list
ReplyDeleteHi, froona,
ReplyDeleteI don't think they name the Derby peregrines.
I like last year's San Jose, CA names, Jose Fernando and Clara de Guadalupe.
we should name them....???
ReplyDelete