Webcam Video From April 19 2015

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Webcam video from april 19 2015 part 2

Where did the Decorah Eagles go? They built a new nest at a location that is out of range of our cameras. We will report on them but, depending on where they nest, we may not be able to watch them live. However, Mr. North and DNF are very busy preparing for eggs at the Decorah North nest. You can watch and chat here and we'll keep everyone posted. https://www.raptorresource.org/birdcams/decorah-north-nest/.

The opportunities to engage with Central Park are as diverse as the City it calls home. The Conservancy's year-round lineup includes daily programs, seasonal and holiday events, educational opportunities, and ways to give back to your 843-acre backyard. Webcam Network EarthCam. The EarthCam Network of live webcams offers views of city skylines, local landmarks, beaches, ski resorts, zoos, sunrises and sunsets, mountain ranges, and landscapes from popular tourist destinations located throughout the world. I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor).


Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights in Asia are limited in comparison to many other areas of the world. Same-sex sexual activity is outlawed in at least twenty Asian countries. Camfrog offers free video chat rooms, online group chat, video conference, and live webcams for all. Browse through the multilingual video chat platform to meet new people.

About the Decorah Eagles

The Decorah eagles are nesting near the Decorah Trout Hatchery, located at 2325 Siewers Spring Rd in Decorah, IA. The female is known as Mom and the male is known as DM2. In general, the eagles begin courtship in October, productive mating in late January or early February, and egg-laying in mid to late February. Hatching usually begins in late March to early April, and the eaglets fledge in mid-to-late June. While young usually disperse between August and October, the adults remain on territory year round. They eat live and dead fish, squirrels, other birds, rabbit, muskrat, deer, possum and anything else they can catch or find. To learn more about bald eagles, please follow this link to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology website. Visiting Decorah to see the eagles? Please read through our guide to eagle etiquette >> Bald Eagle Etiquette.

Click here for a live map

Female eagles are larger than male eagles, with slightly darker heads and more pronounced brows. The image below shows the differences in appearance between Mom and DM2 and should help in ID'ing them. Media manager bluestacks apk.

History of the Decorah Eagles

Dad, Mom's original mate, disappeared in April of 2018. Based on plumage color, Mom was four years old in 2007, making her eighteen years old in 2021. Click here for a guide to aging bald eagles based on plumage color and patterns.

After two other males came and went (you can read more about that here), Mom accepted a third suitor in the fall of 2018. She and DM2 are entering their third season together.

Nest Territory and Locations

Four nests (N0, N1, N2, and N2B) have been built on the Decorah territory. N0 was destroyed in a storm, the eagles left N1 on their own, and N2 was also destroyed in a storm. Fourth nest N2B is a little more complicated. Humans Neil Rettig and Kike Arnal built N2B in August of 2015. We hoped the starter nest would encourage the eagles to adopt it and keep building, which they did! Footage of the build can be seen here: https://youtu.be/2-xRSBBeIYs. A blog about the nest build can be read here.

  • 2018: Dad disappears in April of 2018. He is last seen at N2B on April 18, 2018. After two male eagles come and go, Mom accepts new mate DM2, for Decorah Male 2. The two begin working on N2B in October.
  • 2015: N2 is destroyed during a storm the morning of July 18. In August, humans build a nest (N2B) to encourage the eagles to begin building near the former location of N2. Mom and Dad adopt N2B in October of 2015.
  • 2012: Mom and Dad begin a new nest (N2) in mid-October on the north bank of Trout Creek about 700 feet from N1, which is still standing
  • 2007: N0 is destroyed during a storm. Dad and OM begin building a new nest (N1) in the yard of a home just north of the hatchery. OM disappears in early fall. 2007: A four-year old female (Mom) joins Dad at N1 in early December.
  • 2002'ish: the male eagle (Dad) and his original mate (OM) build a nest (N0) in the hills to the east of the hatchery
Common name: Bald Eagle

Webcam Video From April 19 2015 Part 2

Scientific name: Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Length: 2.3–3.1 feet | 71–96 cm
Wingspan: 5.9 – 7.5 feet | 1.7-2.2 meters
Weight: 6.5 – 13.8 pounds | 3–6.3 kilograms
Lifespan: Up to 40 years in the wild
Bald Eagle Vocalization

Peregrine Falcons: Great Spirit Bluff, lifestyles of the fast and furious!

A blog about peregrine falcons, especially the Great Spirit Bluff falcons. Watch them here: https://www.raptorresource.org/birdcams/gsb-falcons/

Your Questions, Answered: New eagles appear on N2B!

How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? Is the female old enough to lay eggs? Will Mom and DM2 object? We've left the Confusion Couch for the Decorah Tilt-A-Whirl, but we'll answer your questions as best as we can! How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? The male eagle is over five years old, although we aren't sure how old he is. Eagles complete their transition to adult colors (white head and

Peek inside a bald eagle egg: 11 days!

What do embyronic eagles look they look like as they develop and grow inside their eggs? Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While not all bald eagle eggs hatch in 35 days, the stages of development look something like this… What happens between the third and the 11th day? When we last touched on the topic, our embryonic eagle had inner

Eagles, ‘menopause', and a new mate at Xcel Energy's Fort St. Vrain plant

Has Ma FSV entered ‘menopause'? This blog was going to be focused on eagles and ova, but Elfruler, our original DE lead mod and a long-time chronicler of bald eagle nests, noticed that the male had a band on his right leg, not his left. A new eagle has replaced Pa FSV. If you'd like to learn more about eagles and ova, please read on (TLDR: Ma FSV has not entered menopause). Thanks to Elfruler for her observations and Donna

Peek inside a bald eagle egg: 4 days!

As of this writing, we're still waiting for eggs at Fort St. Vrain. The second Decorah North egg is three days and 22 hours old. What do embyronic eagles look they look like as they develop and grow inside their eggs? Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While not all bald eagle eggs hatch in 35 days, the stages of development

Click for More About Bald Eagles
News

Click a title to read more

News and NestFlix from around our nests!

What's going on around our sites? Mr. North and DNF are incubating their eggs as we count down to the beginning of hatch in roughly 20 days. The embryonic eagles are a little over halfway through development right now, growing leg scales, tiny talons, and plantar foot pads in the cozy darkness of their shells. We haven't seen any new eagles in Decorah, although the nest attracted a hungry squirrel this morning, we saw Northern Shoveler ducks in the retention

March 4, 2021: Midnight Movies!

Put your feet up and get ready for tonight's midnight movie madness! While the Decorah North eagles incubated their two eggs in peaceful splendor (countdown: 24 days), Decorah and Great Spirit Bluff kept us all on the Tilt-o-Whirl! Will a new eagle couple take over N2B? Is Mom warning them away? Who was that banded female falcon at Great Spirit Bluff? Grab your drinks and snacks and get ready for nestflix, information, and a little #musing as we review a

Your Questions, Answered: New eagles appear on N2B!

How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? Is the female old enough to lay eggs? Will Mom and DM2 object? We've left the Confusion Couch for the Decorah Tilt-A-Whirl, but we'll answer your questions as best as we can! How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? The male eagle is over five years old, although we aren't sure how old he is. Eagles complete their transition to adult colors (white head and

March 4, 2021: Two eagles on N2B

We saw two eagles on N2B this morning. The female is around four years old and the male is an adult. This makes multiple nest building even more interesting: It's one thing to build a nest for yourself and another entirely to let someone else take over! Well, we built N2B, but the concept is the same. If these eagles move in, we'll get to see how two eagle power couples respond to one another. We hadn't considered multiple nests

Webcam Video From April 19 2015

Where did the Decorah Eagles go? They built a new nest at a location that is out of range of our cameras. We will report on them but, depending on where they nest, we may not be able to watch them live. However, Mr. North and DNF are very busy preparing for eggs at the Decorah North nest. You can watch and chat here and we'll keep everyone posted. https://www.raptorresource.org/birdcams/decorah-north-nest/.

The opportunities to engage with Central Park are as diverse as the City it calls home. The Conservancy's year-round lineup includes daily programs, seasonal and holiday events, educational opportunities, and ways to give back to your 843-acre backyard. Webcam Network EarthCam. The EarthCam Network of live webcams offers views of city skylines, local landmarks, beaches, ski resorts, zoos, sunrises and sunsets, mountain ranges, and landscapes from popular tourist destinations located throughout the world. I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor).


Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights in Asia are limited in comparison to many other areas of the world. Same-sex sexual activity is outlawed in at least twenty Asian countries. Camfrog offers free video chat rooms, online group chat, video conference, and live webcams for all. Browse through the multilingual video chat platform to meet new people.

About the Decorah Eagles

The Decorah eagles are nesting near the Decorah Trout Hatchery, located at 2325 Siewers Spring Rd in Decorah, IA. The female is known as Mom and the male is known as DM2. In general, the eagles begin courtship in October, productive mating in late January or early February, and egg-laying in mid to late February. Hatching usually begins in late March to early April, and the eaglets fledge in mid-to-late June. While young usually disperse between August and October, the adults remain on territory year round. They eat live and dead fish, squirrels, other birds, rabbit, muskrat, deer, possum and anything else they can catch or find. To learn more about bald eagles, please follow this link to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology website. Visiting Decorah to see the eagles? Please read through our guide to eagle etiquette >> Bald Eagle Etiquette.

Click here for a live map

Female eagles are larger than male eagles, with slightly darker heads and more pronounced brows. The image below shows the differences in appearance between Mom and DM2 and should help in ID'ing them. Media manager bluestacks apk.

History of the Decorah Eagles

Dad, Mom's original mate, disappeared in April of 2018. Based on plumage color, Mom was four years old in 2007, making her eighteen years old in 2021. Click here for a guide to aging bald eagles based on plumage color and patterns.

After two other males came and went (you can read more about that here), Mom accepted a third suitor in the fall of 2018. She and DM2 are entering their third season together.

Nest Territory and Locations

Four nests (N0, N1, N2, and N2B) have been built on the Decorah territory. N0 was destroyed in a storm, the eagles left N1 on their own, and N2 was also destroyed in a storm. Fourth nest N2B is a little more complicated. Humans Neil Rettig and Kike Arnal built N2B in August of 2015. We hoped the starter nest would encourage the eagles to adopt it and keep building, which they did! Footage of the build can be seen here: https://youtu.be/2-xRSBBeIYs. A blog about the nest build can be read here.

  • 2018: Dad disappears in April of 2018. He is last seen at N2B on April 18, 2018. After two male eagles come and go, Mom accepts new mate DM2, for Decorah Male 2. The two begin working on N2B in October.
  • 2015: N2 is destroyed during a storm the morning of July 18. In August, humans build a nest (N2B) to encourage the eagles to begin building near the former location of N2. Mom and Dad adopt N2B in October of 2015.
  • 2012: Mom and Dad begin a new nest (N2) in mid-October on the north bank of Trout Creek about 700 feet from N1, which is still standing
  • 2007: N0 is destroyed during a storm. Dad and OM begin building a new nest (N1) in the yard of a home just north of the hatchery. OM disappears in early fall. 2007: A four-year old female (Mom) joins Dad at N1 in early December.
  • 2002'ish: the male eagle (Dad) and his original mate (OM) build a nest (N0) in the hills to the east of the hatchery
Common name: Bald Eagle

Webcam Video From April 19 2015 Part 2

Scientific name: Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Length: 2.3–3.1 feet | 71–96 cm
Wingspan: 5.9 – 7.5 feet | 1.7-2.2 meters
Weight: 6.5 – 13.8 pounds | 3–6.3 kilograms
Lifespan: Up to 40 years in the wild
Bald Eagle Vocalization

Peregrine Falcons: Great Spirit Bluff, lifestyles of the fast and furious!

A blog about peregrine falcons, especially the Great Spirit Bluff falcons. Watch them here: https://www.raptorresource.org/birdcams/gsb-falcons/

Your Questions, Answered: New eagles appear on N2B!

How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? Is the female old enough to lay eggs? Will Mom and DM2 object? We've left the Confusion Couch for the Decorah Tilt-A-Whirl, but we'll answer your questions as best as we can! How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? The male eagle is over five years old, although we aren't sure how old he is. Eagles complete their transition to adult colors (white head and

Peek inside a bald eagle egg: 11 days!

What do embyronic eagles look they look like as they develop and grow inside their eggs? Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While not all bald eagle eggs hatch in 35 days, the stages of development look something like this… What happens between the third and the 11th day? When we last touched on the topic, our embryonic eagle had inner

Eagles, ‘menopause', and a new mate at Xcel Energy's Fort St. Vrain plant

Has Ma FSV entered ‘menopause'? This blog was going to be focused on eagles and ova, but Elfruler, our original DE lead mod and a long-time chronicler of bald eagle nests, noticed that the male had a band on his right leg, not his left. A new eagle has replaced Pa FSV. If you'd like to learn more about eagles and ova, please read on (TLDR: Ma FSV has not entered menopause). Thanks to Elfruler for her observations and Donna

Peek inside a bald eagle egg: 4 days!

As of this writing, we're still waiting for eggs at Fort St. Vrain. The second Decorah North egg is three days and 22 hours old. What do embyronic eagles look they look like as they develop and grow inside their eggs? Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While not all bald eagle eggs hatch in 35 days, the stages of development

Click for More About Bald Eagles
News

Click a title to read more

News and NestFlix from around our nests!

What's going on around our sites? Mr. North and DNF are incubating their eggs as we count down to the beginning of hatch in roughly 20 days. The embryonic eagles are a little over halfway through development right now, growing leg scales, tiny talons, and plantar foot pads in the cozy darkness of their shells. We haven't seen any new eagles in Decorah, although the nest attracted a hungry squirrel this morning, we saw Northern Shoveler ducks in the retention

March 4, 2021: Midnight Movies!

Put your feet up and get ready for tonight's midnight movie madness! While the Decorah North eagles incubated their two eggs in peaceful splendor (countdown: 24 days), Decorah and Great Spirit Bluff kept us all on the Tilt-o-Whirl! Will a new eagle couple take over N2B? Is Mom warning them away? Who was that banded female falcon at Great Spirit Bluff? Grab your drinks and snacks and get ready for nestflix, information, and a little #musing as we review a

Your Questions, Answered: New eagles appear on N2B!

How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? Is the female old enough to lay eggs? Will Mom and DM2 object? We've left the Confusion Couch for the Decorah Tilt-A-Whirl, but we'll answer your questions as best as we can! How old are the eagles we saw at N2B this morning? The male eagle is over five years old, although we aren't sure how old he is. Eagles complete their transition to adult colors (white head and

March 4, 2021: Two eagles on N2B

We saw two eagles on N2B this morning. The female is around four years old and the male is an adult. This makes multiple nest building even more interesting: It's one thing to build a nest for yourself and another entirely to let someone else take over! Well, we built N2B, but the concept is the same. If these eagles move in, we'll get to see how two eagle power couples respond to one another. We hadn't considered multiple nests

Peek inside a bald eagle egg: 11 days!

What do embyronic eagles look they look like as they develop and grow inside their eggs? Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While not all bald eagle eggs hatch in 35 days, the stages of development look something like this… What happens between the third and the 11th day? When we last touched on the topic, our embryonic eagle had inner

>> More News
Decorah Eagles 2020 Nesting Record
Egg-Laying
Egg #1: February 26, 2020 @ 5:44 PM CT
Egg #2: February 29, 2020 @ 6:28 PM CT
Egg #3: March 4, 2020 @ 5:59 PM CT
Hatching

D34: April 5, 2020 @ 9:45 AM CDT
D35: April 5, 2020 @ 4:07 PM CDT
D36: April 8, 2020 @ 6:50 PM CDT

Fledging

D34: June 18 @ 8:40 AM
D35: June 21 @ 8:44 AM – fall turned fledge!
D36: June 21 @ 6:09 PM

YearNestEagletsOutcomes
2020N2B3 – D34, D35, D36All three eaglets fledged successfully. We are following D35 and D36 via satellite.
2019N2B2 – D32, D33Both eaglets abandoned the nest early
following an intense blackfly swarm.
Both were cared for at SOAR and have since been released.
2018N2B3 – D29, D30, D31All fledged.
2017N2B3 – D26, D27, D28All fledged. We are following D27 via satellite.
2016N2B2 – D24, D25D25 was struck by a car and died.
We are following D24 via satellite.
2015N23 – D21, D22, D23All fledged
2014N23 – D20, D19, D18All fledged. D18 and D19 were electrocuted.
D20 is still alive and living at SOAR.
2013N23 – D17, D16, D15All fledged
2012N13 – D14, D13, D12All fledged. D12 and D14 were electrocuted.
2011N13 – E1, E2, E3All fledged. We last saw D1 in July of 2014.
Her current status is unknown
2010N13 – Not namedAll fledged
2009N13 – Not namedAll fledged
2008N12 – Not namedAll fledged

We often get questions about where the eaglets go after they disperse. We tracked eaglets in 2011, 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2017 to try to answer this question. For more information, visit our eagle maps.

Decorah Eagles Video Playlist

Webcam Video From April 19 2015 Holiday

Click the icon on the top left of the stream to view a full list of videos from our 2021 playlist, or visit our our YouTube channel.
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DVIDS_-_Video_-_Coalition_Airstrike_on_a_Daesh_Mortar_Position_April_19_2015_near_Kobani_Syria.webm ‎(WebM audio/video file, VP8/Vorbis, length 49 s, 655 × 480 pixels, 2.17 Mbps overall) Must have plugins for fl studio 12.

Summary

Description
English: Coalition Airstrike on a Daesh Mortar Position April 19, 2015 near Kobani, Syria.
Date
Sourcehttps://www.dvidshub.net/video/400855/coalition-airstrike-daesh-mortar-position-april-19-2015-near-kobani-syria
AuthorU.S. Central Command Public Affairs

Webcam Video From April 19 2015 Full

Licensing

This image is a work of a U.S. military or Department of Defense employee, taken or made as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain in the United States.

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Captions

English
[[CJTF-OIR]] airstrike on an ISIL mortar position near Kobani, 19 April 2015
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current06:29, 23 January 201949 s, 655 × 480 (12.68 MB)RopeTricksUser created page with UploadWizard

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