Sunday, November 17, 2024

A RITUAL OF SPRING: THE NESTING FALCONS ARE BACK

A Sure Sign of Spring! Peregrine Falcons are Nesting High Atop of the Superman Building.

 

Superman Building!

Watch the Peregrine Falcon Nest Close-up via Live Stream

on the Audubon Peregrine Webcam.

 

(March 31, 2022) – A ritual of spring has once again commenced high atop the Superman Building in Providence, Rhode Island. Over ten days, four reddish-brown Peregrine Falcon eggs have been laid in an Audubon nesting box, perched 30 floors up on the city’s most recognizable building. The last egg was laid late in the evening on March 28, 2022.

 

As the female broods over the eggs, the pair of Peregrine Falcons are constantly caught on camera and available for close-up public viewing thanks to the Audubon Society of Rhode Island Peregrine Webcam

The Peregrine Falcon eggs are expected to hatch after approximately 28 to 33 days of incubation. The white fluffy young Peregrines, called eyases, will grow for four to six weeks until they are ready to fledge or learn to fly from the nest.

 

Watch as they spread their wings and take the first step off the ledge when they are approximately 35 days old. Their parents will continue to support them by supplying food for six weeks after they have fledged.

 

At that point, the young Peregrine Falcons are on their own and will disperse to find new homes 300 to 500 miles away from Providence.    

   

All of this activity can be viewed live online due to cameras trained on these magnificent raptors. Pedestrians in the city have an occasional glimpse at these once-endangered falcons, but the unobtrusive nest cameras will allow the public, as well as schoolchildren throughout the state, to have a close-up look at their day-to-day lives as eggs hatch and the young Peregrine Falcons grow.

 

Visit 

www.asri.org 

and click on the 

Peregrine Falcon Webcam 

to get in on the action!

 

Audubon offers a live camera feed of the falcons, updates on developmental milestones, and news of the young Peregrines. Visitors to the site can support this popular camera stream by donating to the Audubon Society of Rhode Island and help to keep our eyes on the sky this spring!

Photo credit Peter Green

Images:

Peregrine Falcon in nesting box with reddish-brown eggs.

Peregrine Falcon with egg and newly hatched eyases.