2 or 3
The Fifth Avenue nest’s eyasses are still a bit too small to see clearly. It may well turn out that there are only two. This evening’s meal was gray squirrel.
Update 5/10/18: It looks like we have only two eyasses this year.
The Fifth Avenue nest’s eyasses are still a bit too small to see clearly. It may well turn out that there are only two. This evening’s meal was gray squirrel.
Update 5/10/18: It looks like we have only two eyasses this year.
Pale Male and Octavia’s nest was very active this afternoon. Two eyasses (nestlings) were visible at one point. A feeding lasted a very, very long time, so there is a chance we have an unseen younger eyass that remains too small to be seen.
I’ve uploaded two videos, a short one that lets you see the two eyasses if you look closely, and a standard lengthy one.
Reports from the hawk bench are there at least two eyasses this year. They saw the oldest briefly in the afternoon, while another eyass was being fed. I hope to be able to capture “baby pictures” this weekend.
When the eggs hatch, which takes place one egg at a time, it takes about a week more to see the eyasses on the Fifth Avenue nest. The only clue that they’ve hatched are feedings and changes in behavior of both Pale Male and Octavia.
Today, an hour and a half apart, it appeared that Octavia was feeding an eyass. I’ll let you judge the video for yourself, but it looks like we may have good news.
I arrived at the Fifth Avenue nest to the sounds of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Pale Male was just leaving the nest. At first I thought it was empty but then I saw Octavia’s tail in the wind. It looks like she’s either getting ready to or has already laid an egg. Pale Male made another visit to the nest before perching on the Carlyle Hotel.
Hints of spring are in the air. The park has some Snowdrops and Forsythia in bloom and the city’s Red-tails have begun to copulate. Today, I caught up with a Cooper’s Hawk, and both of the Fifth Avenue Hawks, Octavia and Pale Male.