Sunday, April 14, 2019

PIP-WATCH -- POWER and WIND



Big Bear Bald Eagles – Up Date -- Eaglet’s egg hatching?   

(Read Jackie's and Shadow's history for background by scrolling down to preceding posts.)

An external pip appeared to be visible at dusk Saturday night when I viewed Jackie rising frequently to turn her eggs – then after a later glimpse I wasn’t sure I had seen a pip!   Jackie seemed fixated on listening -- is it pip activity of the hatching eaglet she hears or feels?   Probably she will settle down to broken sleep through the night as she periodically rouses to continue turning  her eggs. 

Fascinating Bald Eagle egg hatching facts describe the complex process with photos at this Journey North link.  There’s a second egg to hatch yet that was laid three days after this first one.

You can continue to take a peek at these Big Bear Bald Eagles live camera link here:                                                                         
http://www.iws.org/bigbear_youtube.html

The camera was inoperative for a period of time earlier the past week probably due to high winds there -- also strong winds in the valley 65 miles west causing power outage at my house.   Jennifer Iyer recaps the Big Bear Eagle activities with videos and accounts from those keeping the live camera operational in her Redlands Press-Enterprise newspaper article.

The power outage was quite abrupt here, ultimately with fluctuating on/off periods just as I was planning to heat some chicken soup for dinner.   Naturally, all the important household areas were affected including my stove, microwave, refrigerator and garage door.   I was glad my car wasn’t in there.   I reported the outage to my electric company.  Finally, I chose to get some food from a drive thru.  When I returned home I discovered all my power was on.    Only later did I note power in some other less significant house areas.    

The next morning the electric company man checked the lines.  He concluded strong winds the night before had tree branches swaying in the wind with lines probably contacting each other that shouldn’t.   He scheduled the electric company’s big truck, likely with the cherry-picker for tree trimming to prevent future problems.   

A couple weeks ago I had a similar outage when there was no wind, but the power had stayed off. Since it was Friday I had visions of being without power the whole weekend.   I made an intuitive phone call to an electrician I had never used before rather than some I had.   Amazingly he had just finished a job a mile or so from my house, was on his way home and said he could come right then.  Ten minutes later he arrived, then after due diligence testing determined the problem was not mine, but that of the electric company. 

He was able to establish full power to my house suggesting the likelihood was a squirrel may have been chewing on the line.   I knew squirrels did sometimes cause short circuits with a more permanent short to the offender as well.   He added if I needed to call him due to a similar problem in the future he would immediately contact the electric company coordinating all that for me if I wanted.  
He explained quite likely there could be a delay in my receiving electric company service, that he could setup a line to my refrigerator for food preservation.   Since my spare long-lived refrigerator in the garage died a year or so ago this seemed a wise solution to preserve food contents should such a need develop.   Subsequently, the electric company man said if I lost power as a result of a company problem I could submit a bill for any food lost. 

So....my house has power.  I hope no more strong winds before the tree is trimmed.  No offending squirrel sacrificed themself.   The ridiculous situation continues in Washington D.C.   The latest excuse I heard given for our leader’s prolific persistent prevarications is “He made a mistake” -- the understatement of the year.   Pip-watch is proving to be a much more uplifting focus.

Up Date:  Sunday Afternoon

Just saw the nest contents when the birds switched positions. There’s a little fuzz ball — one egg has hatched!  Other egg was laid 3 days after this one.  


Up Date:  Monday

The second egg has hatched!


25 comments:

  1. I would hate that. Our lines are all underground so mishaps are usually due to roadworks as in a loss of phone and internet cable connection after some enthusiastic digging by the local water supplier.
    But we have martins - distant relatives of the squirrel - who love to chew through cables inside the car.
    I have watched some if the bald eagle activity but my heart is with the live cam albatross family on the south island of New Zealand.

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    1. Chewing car cables would really be upsetting.
      Oh, is there a link to a live cam for the albatross?

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    2. I found this albatross link:
      https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/native-animals/birds/birds-a-z/albatrosses/royal-albatross-toroa/royal-cam

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  2. Pip watching is definitely better for our mental health than watching the meltdown in D.C.

    I don't get how you can a line to your refrigerator if the power is off from the company. Wouldn't you have to buy an expensive generator to do that? I had to throw out all the food in my refrigerator in last winter's power outrage and I didn't bother filing for the loss. The entire state was effected.

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    1. The electrician said it would entail a connection he could make using just a type of heavy duty extension cord was all I needed. I didn’t pursue further details including cost with him figuring time enough for that if I needed to consider that service. Perhaps it was because I still had partial power with only “one leg down”. I think if electric company reimburses for food outage it would be more cost effective for me to go that route than pay for connection and the electrician’s time. I have nothing in my refrig. that couldn’t be replaced.

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  3. Power outages are no fun. I have a friend from high school that lives in Pioneer in Norcal and she gets hammered every winter, with multiple days being common. I know the one long one here - over 24 hours - made me crazy. Glad to hear you have things under control.

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    1. I do appreciate not having frequent or lengthy power outages but know some areas have them. Sorry about your friend in Pioneer.

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  4. I thought that living in the heart of a small city (Eugene, Oregon) would spare me power outages that I had dealt with in the country for much of my life, but twice in the last three decades, storms have left me without power for nearly a week, which is especially problematic for me because I have such severe sleep apnea that even one night without my BiPap puts me in danger.

    I'm sorry for your outage, and I'm also sorry when animals have to pay the ultimate price so that out species might live as we do. I read recently a vet's account of what chewing through an electric cord did to a cat (that actually survived)m, and it inspired me to take even more seriously my need to protect my four indoor kitties from such things.

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    1. I had a power outage over a long weekend during the height of an excessively high summer heat wave one year, but am also familiar with what long outages can be like in other climates. My most recent experience is a minor annoyance by comparison, but then everything is relative. Regret you have such outages. Perhaps if your power company is told of your O2 needs they could expedite your receiving power as my electric company man told me they do if someone is using oxygen, though I didn't have such a requirement. Don't know if they consider BiPap, which my husband used, on the same level as needing an oxygen tank as we never had occasion to find out.

      I have found squirrel carcasses in the backyard and know that's been a problem for others in So Cal. The coyotes have pretty much eliminated feral cats and most owners know to keep close watch on their small pets including when they let them out at night for brief periods of time to do their business, even if they have fences.

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    2. I don't use oxygen. During the second outage, I learned that I could get service restored sooner by telling the power company that I had severe sleep apnea. I don't tell others about this because I know there are those who would lie in order to get their service restored sooner. I've lived in this house for 29 years, and the outage has only happened twice, both times during ice storms. I don't know why the power company doesn't keep the limbs cleared from above the lines so this doesn't happen, but it isn't for a lack of me complaining.

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  5. I had a pet squirrel for eight years, and believe me: they adore chewing on lines. Not only will they chew on power lines, they'll chew on computer cables, light cords, refrigerator plugs: you get the picture. Squirrel proofing a house is as much a chore as child proofing one.

    Exciting about the hatch! I found a pretty, almost turquose egg on the sidewalk the other day. It showed evidence of a few early attempts to "break out," and then the actual exit. I haven't checked yet to see what kind of bird it belongs to. It's clearly too small for a water bird, and I know it's not dove. But I have it on my desk now -- a lovely sign of spring.

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    1. Sounds like your pet squirrel made life interesting. I have vivid memories of a house on the corner of our street when I was preschool age. They had a giant hamster-like wheel with a pet squirrel caged inside in their side yard. He/she would run on that wheel spinning it like crazy. Will be curious as to what bird emerged from such a colorful egg that you found.

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    2. Here in Belfast we hardly ever have power outages, in fact I can't remember the last time we had one. It sounds like they're a regular occurrence in the States. I must say I've never heard of squirrels chewing the power lines! But it's a bit of a worry if you have a lot of perishable food that's in danger of rotting.

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    3. Nick, glad you don’t have power outages. With so much technology dependent on power including charging batteries, electric vehicles losing it could really create havoc here.

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  6. Wonderful eagle things.. Not so wonderful power issues. It was so exciting to see the baby.

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  7. Oh those precious eagles. I am currently watching Our Planet and it is fascinating seeing the albatrosses. The babies sit on the nest for a year because of developing their 3 metre wingspans. So sorry about your power issues, I had those when living around the bay, but miraculously in the last few years none at all apart from brief flickers after a storm.

    XO
    WWW

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    1. Yes, these birds are fascinating to watch and they have such dedication under challenging circumstances. The view the albatross has is spectacular in New Zealand!

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  8. It's nice to watch eggs hatch, but not nice when the power fails.

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  9. I love checking the bird cams. So much better than the "news." Glad you got the power restored.

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  10. Remember back when we thought the bald eagles were all gone? I'm so happy to follow their progress and thanks for the info.

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    1. Yes, the Bald Eagles are not as endangered a species as they once were.

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  11. It's fantastic to watch the chick being fed!

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