5HAS3543a

The Male Dipper visits the nest to feed his newly hatched chicks.

 

I waited again until the evening to visit the nest, thankfully the water level hadn't risen any further, infact it had brobably gone down an inch or two. I waited for the female to leave the nest before moving down to check the nest.  I am really glad to be able to report that 3 of the eggs have hatched and three healthy chicks are in the nest.  One egg is either infertile, or "dead-in-shell" or more likely incubation started with the 3rd egg and not the 4th.  If this is the case this will contradict everything that I have read previously which seemed to suggest that incubation always commenced when the clutch was complete.  If the 4th egg should hatch tomorrow, then this will confirm that incubation started on Sunday,  when there was only 3 eggs in the nest. I am looking forward to finding the answer tomorrow.  The chicks were pink skinned which was a surprise, I expected them to be dark. 

I watched the male already working hard finding food and delivering it to the nest, even if I had not checked for  myself, I would have known that there were chicks in the nest just by the male's change in behaviour. 

 

5HAS3620a

The male about to fly up to the nest with food.

This morning I took some photographs of Nuthatches and a fine male Greater Spotted Woodpecker.

5HAS3290a

Male Greater Spotted Woodpecker

5HAS3354a

Male Nuthatch

 

 

One response to “Dippers. The eggs hatch on cue!”

  1. Super news Charlie, lets hope nothing untoward happens to them.

    Like

Leave a comment

About the Podcast

Welcome to The Houseplant Podcast, your ultimate guide to houseplants! Join us as we explore the wonders and importance of plants in our lives.

Explore the episodes

Latest posts