Birdie Cam II

Another season, another bird house.

After last year’s first try with a camera in a bird house, here’s the next iteration.

I kept the same camera, but lengthened the house. This gives more entry-to-floor depth and is inline with what’s recommended. This also allowed me to add maybe 3″ of wood shavings. The birds apparently like being able to remove shavings to get the depth they prefer. Further, there is more height to the camera. Last year I noticed birds kept looking up at the camera, so I hope this gives them a bit more breathing room.

Other changes are a roof that overhangs all four sides, as I saw water leaking in the backside last year. There is a bracket allowing it to be installed on a “T” stake.

Umbrella strapped to the side of a birdhouse.

I moved the location to be more in the shade, so we won’t need to set up an umbrella on hot days!

I understand chickadees nest around mid-March in our area and while I had installed the house on the stake, I had not plugged in the camera. The other day, I noticed birds flirting around the opening, so I finished up the job. The next day the camera showed a customer checking out the digs.

No one has moved in yet, but we’ve seen a few beaks peeking in the entry and a few birds have come inside to check things out!

3/19/2024 Update

Over the weekend, checkadees began to visit the box several times an hour in the morning. They’ve been removing the wood shavings and dropping several feet away from the box. It looks to be about 1.5″ – 2″ of material has been removed so far.

3/26/2024 Update

We’ve noticed the chickadees began putting moss in the nest the other day. They’ve also pecked a bit at the interior. Last year there was quite a bit of moss, and then a layer of feathers. I think the’ve got more moss to go.

3/31/2024

When we checked today, it appears that one bird is now more or less staying in the nest.

4/16/2024

We might have an egg or more. One bird is in the nest pretty much all the time. When they leave, they may be covering something. We’ll see if we can get a picture.

4/17/2024

Yup, we have not just one egg but 4! The bird was definetly covering up earlier, but it was warmer today, so maybe the felt okay with leaving them uncovered.

4/19/2024

And then there were eight!

About John

Interested in how information intersects daily life, technology, and art. Digital Marketing - marketing ROI in healthcare Collaboration - working in social and collaborative media. Biomedical Informaticist - focusing on patient/patient, patient/provider communication.
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