Happy New Year to all our blog readers and webcam watchers. We've had snow, ice and much wet weather in recent months but, as usual, the mighty peregrine falcon can take all this in its stride. Its mountain habitats are far wilder than anything they might experience in Derby, here in the centre of England.
We've turned a corner, and soon the days will soon start to become noticeably longer, and our pair of pergrine falcons will become more active on the nest platform. Occasionally they visit the nest ledge on the side of Derby Cathedral to maintain their claim on their nest site and to get ready for the next breeding season.
Last night we took a screenshot of the nest from Cam 1 and took another this morning. There has clearly been activity and some nest-scraping between these shots.You may notice a small, spiked piece of plastic in the nighttime shot. This is a fragment of a bird spike that must have come loose and fallen from one of our cameras. They were placed there some years ago to discourage any bird from perching directly on top of the cameras. It's nothing to be worried about. They're very light and this fragment is easily moved. So, although we'll remove this when we do a pre-breeding maintenance abseil, it won't hinder the birds in any way. As we see in the daytime shot a few hours later, it will simply be pushed aside as if a twig had fallen into the scape and ignored.
We have reset our visitor counter for 2025, noting a significant increase in unique visits to our blog and webcams last year. We ended December with 321,000 such visits - up some 90,000 on 2023), and we look forward to welcoming many of you again over the coming twelve months.
1 comment:
Great to have a new blog page for 2025 with evidence that one/or other/or both of our Peregrines have visited the scrape as the spike has been moved from yesterday's position ... will be good to actually see them ... Happy New Year to all๐ค๐
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