Red-tails and the box (and no more perch)

To my relatively untrained eye, it now appears that the local red-tailed hawks are no longer interested in the nestbox, since we've removed the perch.  They're still around, although from my observations, they're just using the nestbox hill as one of many local hills that are available for ridge soaring and hunting.  I'm reaching the conclusion that they are pair bonding and probably getting ready to build a nest, but it doesn't appear that it's nearby (I've scouted out the area immediately around our house and hillside, and found nothing).  One of the pair, presumably the male, was observed yesterday flying around with a couple of sticks in his talons.  My understanding is that this is not necessarily nest-building per se, but preparatory activity as their hormones start to kick in with the lengthening days.

We often see 2, 3 or even 4 red-tails (the local pair perhaps included) hunting and hovering above a very large hill a bit further away to the northeast of us, and several are often seen in and around the greenbelt area and park to the south of us.  I don't know what the average red-tail territory is here in SoCal, but it must be quite large.

I still think that there shouldn't be an issue between any red-tails around here and any kestrels, as the two species have lived in this area near each other for many years now (indeed, perhaps for thousands of years), sharing territory and occupying different ecological niches.  As long as the RTHs don't get it in their heads to try and eat any kestrels, we should be okay.  Keep the good vibes coming for a pair of kestrels this year...

Red-tails on the box

While I was gone on a trip to Yellowstone, it seems our local red-tails have started using the perch a lot.  That means that perch will have to come down.  Alex and I will take it down this weekend if possible.  As a consequence of having the perch there, though, I think they tried standing on top of the box, despite the pigeon spikes.  I really don't think the top of the box is anywhere near big enough for a red-tail nest, though.  Yes, Pale Male and Lola used pigeon spikes to secure their nest in NYC, but they had a much larger area on which to nest.

We'll keep an eye on this, and see what happens.  If the RTHs do indeed try to nest there, we can't legally do anything about it...their nests (and indeed, the RTHs) are protected by federal law.

Streaming audio?

I've been experimenting with streaming audio lately.  It seems a fairly simple thing to do, and internal network tests appear okay, but for this year, we'll probably not provide it as I'm a bit leery of opening my network to the outside world.  What I'd prefer is to do something like a relay or multicast or something, so if anyone knows of a good/cheap service provider for this kind of stuff, let me know.

Stupid stinkin' cables

Okay, next year (assuming we're successful this year and our enthusiasm remains high enough), we're going to run real power cables to a real junction box on the hill, distribute power the right way, and use better video cable for the return signal.  This "monkey motion" thing we've got going now with a big wad of cables strung up the hillside is getting tiresome!  For now, we've managed a workaround for the bad power portion of the cable to the exterior camera (and the company that made these cheesy things is damned lucky it wasn't one of the cables on the interior cameras that went bad, because putting that box up and taking it down is no mean feat!), and we should have a replacement cable on its way within a day or so (preferably at a discount).  This is the second one of these types of cables that failed on me (one failed last year, right out of the box), so there is a manufacturing process somewhere that is not up to ISO 9001 standards, I think.  BTW, kudos to Richard at American Artifacts last year for rushing me a replacement cable at no cost, even thought it wasn't his fault, but rather the supplier's.

Anyway, it seems we're finally "all engines running" for this year!  I saw what may have been a kestrel winging its way across the freeway on my way home tonight (long wings, correct body shape, but too quick to really identify positively), so we'll take that as a good omen for this year...