Egg #2 (Cam 1 Nest)
Egg #3 (Cam 2 Nest)
Quick recap (two nests, two cams)
- Cam 2 nest: The resident female laid Egg #3 on camera—an intimate, real-time view of egg-laying behavior.
- Cam 1 nest: The resident female laid Egg #2 on camera at a separate nest box.
- Both cams document wild, unmanipulated behavior for education/research; no staging or intervention.
Nest timelines (separate trackers)
Cam 2 — (Egg #3 just laid)
- Status: At least three eggs now in the clutch.
- Pacing: Barn owls typically lay at 1–3 day intervals; incubation usually begins with the first egg, so hatching will be asynchronous.
- Watch for: Tight brooding posture, gentle egg turning, and early prey deliveries to support the female.
Cam 1 — (Egg #2 just laid)
- Status: Two-egg clutch so far.
- Pacing: Expect another egg within 1–3 days if conditions remain favorable.
- Watch for: Male provisioning (mice/voles), short recesses, and the start/continuation of incubation.
Why these events matter
- Conservation & education: Barn owls are key rodent controllers; successful clutches reduce reliance on rodenticides.
- Behavioral insights: Viewers can compare two separate nests—courtship, lay intervals, incubation rhythms, and provisioning rates.
What’s next (for both nests)
- Provisioning: Track prey deliveries and caches in box corners.
- Hatch ETA: First hatch ~29–34 days after each nest’s first egg; siblings follow in staggered fashion.
- Feeding sequences: Rapid, bite-sized feedings for hatchlings; watch size differences due to asynchronous hatching.
FAQs
Are these the same owls?
No. Cam 1 and Cam 2 show two separate nest boxes (two nests).
Why different egg counts?
Each nest has its own clutch timeline. Cam 2 is at Egg #3; Cam 1 is at Egg #2.
Will humans step in?
These are wild cams used for research/education. The policy is non-intervention unless authorized and necessary.
Don’t forget to sign up for nest updates if you haven’t already done so! 🦉

