10th May 2021 - Chicks hatching - Blue tit nest box live camera highlights
2021 ж. 9 Мам.
39 211 Рет қаралды
First there was two, now there's four. Number 3 arrived overnight at around 1am and number 4 was released from it's egg at about 12:50 this afternoon. There's still at least two more eggs to go that have been seen on camera today. During the day our male parent is popping in with food around every four minutes unless the rain (and hail) is heavy. He's doing a stand up job!!
In case you're new around here, firstly, welcome and secondly there is a 24 hour livestream that you can find by clicking on the round logo at the bottom left of the video and then clicking on the 'live nest cam' picture. That way you won't miss a thing!
More tomorrow....
Such wonderful parents. Thanks for this amazing channel
0:51 The way the father gently nudged the mother so he could have a look at the babies
She literally bops him at 1:30 to get back outside this is surreal
what the responsible parents! :)
Amazing mommy & daddy teamwork...we humans should aspire to be even half as amazing as these parents!
Cringe Karen
@@acelix3087 Awww, what’s wrong sweetie? Someone pee in your Cheerios? LMAO!
@CO BE meme or not it is the truth, it was cringe af, now if you don't like out not my problem fam
I had no idea they eat the eggshell after the babies hatch.
It makes sense though, gives them back the calcium they lost and I guess it's also a good idea to not just throw them out so enemies will know there are babies nearby
Some lovely footage...🐣👌
Oh my god❤ the male bird is caring
13:46 the food is too big 😂😂😂
Even animals knows how to not be deadbeat 🙄
Poggers
How do parents know which chick to feed?
Generally the hungriest chick will beg the loudest and most intensely, so the parents will feed that one. The system has its disadvantages- a weak chick might struggle to get fed versus more vigorous ones, and cuckoo chick calls are effectively designed to overload the foster parents' instincts so they get fed more than the parents would normally feed a chick- but in a healthy nest it's a generally-successful system.
@@DawnTyrantEo You are forgetting that this is natural selection at work. Weakest chicks will get sorted out of the genetic pool, so only the strong ones remain. Fastest, strongest, loudest, whatever an environmental niche requires, those specimens that fulfil the requirements better than others will remain.
@@demonmanifesto From a genetics perspective that's true as long as it's genetic factors in play, but from an emotional perspective (be it the birds' or the humans') it's a 'bad outcome' if chicks die nevertheless.
Después que nacen los hijos. Ahí empiezan los peos en la casa con la mujer!! 😂😎