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By: JudyB (offline) on Monday, April 11 2011 @ 07:01 PM EDT (Read 31148 times)
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Africam.com, in partnership with the Black Eagle Project Roodekrans, will again be watching as Emoyeni (Upon the wind) and her 3rd husband Thulani (The shy one) prepare for the upcoming nesting season - and we will again bringing the camera to you on our Live Cams page.
www.africam.com
www.blackeagles.co.za
Click HERE for the CAM
The time there is GMT (UTC)
And the Cam seems to go off at nightfall - which comes early in the tropics!
The time in Johannesburg has been put above the cam - for easy reference!
Be aware that these birds practise Cainism - or Siblicide!
Excellent Article to be found HERE
Join the Africam Twitter Alert and get up to the minute real time alerts - www.twitter.com/africam will alert you when the eggs start hatching so you don’t miss the hatchings LIVE
For more information on the Black Eagle Project Roodekrans go to www.facebook.com/blackeagleproject
# # #
Contact May 18, 2010
Jon Oliver - Africam CEO
+27 (0) 83 6000 719
jono@africam.com
May 18, 2010
This pair laid two eggs in 2010, one of which hatched. The chick was injured after banding, perhaps because a parent thought his new wing tags were endangering her chick and attacked them. The eaglet, known as Bafana, was removed for rehabilitation and was successfully released to the wild. (Link to the 2010 thread for this cam.)
2011 Timeline
- Cam On: April 10
- eggs laid: April 17, April 21
- hatched: June 4 (44 days for 2nd egg; 1st egg didn't hatch)
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Registered: 07/12/06 Posts: 15211
Midcoast Maine, USA
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By: JudyB (offline) on Monday, April 11 2011 @ 07:01 PM EDT
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Africam.com, who was the first to bring you live streaming full motion video of African
wildlife over the internet (lions, rhinos, giraffes etc.) is set to bring you another first. In
partnership with the Black Eagle Project Roodekrans, they are proud to announce the
launch of the new Black Eagle live streaming webcam at www.africam.com

A Black Eagle coming in to land
We wish to thank and acknowledge Garth Heydenrych - BEPR photographer
for his wonderful photographs.
The brainchild of Project Coordinator, Libby Woodcock and her team at Black Eagle Project, they are dedicated to the conservation of these threatened raptors and will use the live streaming webcam to view the hatching of the chicks in real time.
The first egg is expected to hatch around the 22nd of May. The second egg should follow four to five days after.
The project will also monitor and obtain vital research on their breeding cycle, which in conjunction with Wits Zoology Department, will help to conserve the Eagles within their habitat and educate viewers worldwide.
So A Very Warm Welcome, For The Second Year, to the Black Eagle Project - Roodekrans
About the Project:
The Black Eagle Cam is situated in the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Gardens, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The camera is a joint project supported by a number of sponsors including Africam.
The project's aims are to create awareness and support for the Black Eagle Project, which was set up in 1998 as an affiliate to the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden and was registered as an independent, Section 21, non-profit organization.
The project consists of a 7 member committee and approximately 30 dedicated volunteer members.
What is so significant about this project is that these eagles are the last of a once much larger population that inhabited the mountain ridges of Johannesburg. Due to the expansion of the city of Johannesburg their habitat and food source has come under threat.
This specific nesting site has been documented as far back as the early 1940’s and it is estimated that the current mating pair are the third or fourth descendants from the first documented nesting pair.
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Registered: 07/12/06 Posts: 15211
Midcoast Maine, USA
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By: JudyB (offline) on Monday, April 11 2011 @ 07:02 PM EDT
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The Black Eagle is the finest of the genus Aquilla - a truly magnificent coal black bird with a white back and V on the shoulders.
The handsome plumage is enhanced by consummate grace in flight ... When perched, the small head and tapering neck gives the eagle an almost regal appearance.
The juvenile Black Eagle, unlike the adult, is cryptically coloured and its plumage blends with broken rock, bush and trees of the surroundings.
Feathered nestlings and juveniles are mottled brown, with a pale gold crown and nape, russet - brown mantle and neck, black cheeks and throat, cream forehead variously flecked with brown; the feathered legs, cream with light brown flecks; cere and toes, creamy yellow; bill grey, darker at tip; eye brown.
Rump feathers are cream, edged brown; tail and flight feathers barred light and dark brown and with light fawn tips.
In flight the young eagle shows the emerging pattern of ‘windows’ in the wing, the characteristic but less pronounced leaf - shaped wing and an indistinctly margined light rump.
There is some excellent information on these eagles - their history - their nest and where the cam is at Hedgiesjoy Blogspot
Visit The project's website for more fascinating details about the eagles - photos of the area - breeding history etc.
And Click Here For a good report on Bafana, the eaglet from 2010. And more on their Facebook page.
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Midcoast Maine, USA
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By: Pat B (offline) on Monday, April 11 2011 @ 07:29 PM EDT
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Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden
Malcolm Rd, Poortview
Nr Johannesburg
Using the natural terrain as well as some landscaped areas, the Walter Sisulu Botanical Garden (formerly the Witwatersrand Botanical Garden) features indigenous plants, rare species and themed displays for visitors to enjoy.
Set in the picturesque foothills of the Witwatersrand range, this botanical garden unites native species with rare and beautiful ones. A semi-wild area replicates the rocky Highveld grassland terrain of the Witwatersrand, complete with a small pond. This is especially beautiful in late spring and early summer when the wild flowers are in full bloom.
Other areas include a herb garden, a succulent garden and a "waterwise garden", which shows visitors how to make the most of their gardens without using excess water (a bonus in an area where it can be rare).
Although only designated a National Botanical Garden in July 1982 - the youngest of the South Africa National Botanical Garden's eight gardens throughout the country - and first opened to the public five years' later, it took its current name from Walter Sisulu (1912-2003), one of the leaders of South Africa's democratic struggle.
The gardens also attract a variety of wildlife and feature the only known nesting place in Gauteng of the endangered Black Eagle (aka Verreaux's Eagle), by the dramatic Witpoortjie waterfall.
Article
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Registered: 04/13/07 Posts: 6692
Plymouth, England
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By: JudyB (offline) on Friday, April 15 2011 @ 10:06 AM EDT
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It looks as if the cam is up - though I haven't seen anyone at home yet.

They were hoping to have night vision this year, but unfortunately that didn't work out. Maybe next year....
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Midcoast Maine, USA
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By: yalitldevl (offline) on Sunday, April 17 2011 @ 12:49 PM EDT
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Thanks Judy and Pat
this is the parents

I would rather spend my life close to the birds than wishing I had wings
We are by nature observers, and thereby learners. That is our permanent state. ~ Emerson
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Registered: 05/12/09 Posts: 12519
On Lake Huron, Ontario
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By: yalitldevl (offline) on Sunday, April 17 2011 @ 12:50 PM EDT
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This is what we see as prey on the nest the most but there is other animals such as jackals and caracals and more. These are very big and powerful eagles

I would rather spend my life close to the birds than wishing I had wings
We are by nature observers, and thereby learners. That is our permanent state. ~ Emerson
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Registered: 05/12/09 Posts: 12519
On Lake Huron, Ontario
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By: yalitldevl (offline) on Sunday, April 17 2011 @ 12:53 PM EDT
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this is how they look in flight, they're beautiful

from Hedgie's Blogspot
I would rather spend my life close to the birds than wishing I had wings
We are by nature observers, and thereby learners. That is our permanent state. ~ Emerson
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Registered: 05/12/09 Posts: 12519
On Lake Huron, Ontario
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