Friday, May 15, 2026

Crows displaced the ospreys?

 Life is so interesting in the osprey world….and I am always so curious. Today I was checking nests and went to this cell tower where ospreys have nested sucessfully for several years. Earlier in the spring when I visited for the first time, they were not there! The nest was intact, but there were two crows on the tower. I quickly found the ospreys had moved a short distance away and had built a new nest on a large transmission tower. I checked them, incubating, all is well. Then I got curious…..why did they move? They had successfully fledged chicks last year…..and the nest seemed fine. So I went back there to look again…..I looked from all angles. There was still a crow perched on top….but seriously, ospreys are not afraid of crows! There was nothing in the osprey nest. Hmmmmmm. I looked a little closer and started to notice movement….and I realized the crows are nesting on the cell tower, but not IN the ospreys nest, but below it in kind of a weird spot! There looked like there were three crows in there! The adult was perched above and then she finally did not down into the nest, and then flew out….but I was wondering g how those chicks were gonna fledge out of there! It was hard to get a photo cause they are black! I watched this situation for way too long….

I have seen crows nesting normally in a pine tree….and in all my years I have never seen anything like this. Maybe it’s common….i dont know. But apparently the crows scared the ospreys off!
First photo is the new osprey neat and then is the photo of the cell tower, with the osprey nest visible and the crow nest below it is circled in red. I notice so many interesting things…..

I have been corrected! It’s a raven not a crow! I wondered about that big beak!!!! Ain’t life interesting?






Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Polygynous males…

A few weeks ago I posted about following a male as he flew away from his nest, because he was not headed to his usual fishing spot. He headed to a cell tower to copulate with another female! Well, I have caught him doing it again….and there is no nest on that cell tower. It seems to just be their rendezvous site. I am not sure where she goes and what she does the rest of the time. And just when I was thinking negative thoughts about this male, I caught him feeding his #1 female as she incubated….very attentive. Caring for his mate is also a strong instinct. It’s an investment in those eggs, those chicks. 


We also have another female that’s in a pickle. I told you about her last year. Two years ago her mate disappeared mid season when she already had chicks that were at least a few weeks old. He must have met some tragic fate and she managed to finish raising the chicks alone. Last year she returned and waited for a new male to show up. Unfortunately, the male that showed up was a banded male from a nest down the road, where he had another female. He stayed with our girl just until she layed eggs and then he abandoned her. His mate at the other nest laid eggs much later and he remained with her. We watched our girl as she incubated alone….leaving for five minutes to catch a fish and return to eat it quickly on the nest edge before she resumed incubation.  Most females in this situation tend to abandon eggs to care for themselves. But our girl hung in there and hatched two beautiful chicks on her own! She would leave them alone for short periods to go get food for them. Of course as they grow, they need more and more food…and sadly one of them didn’t make it. But she successfully fledged one chick, which is rather miraculous! She did it all alone. Ironically his other nest failed, and in spite of getting his full attention, those chicks did not survive. 

We had hoped for a new mate and better situation for our girl this year. It’s been very frustrating to watch the whole scenario repeat itself this year. The same male was there, copulating with her, even bringing sticks….until she laid eggs. Now we are only seeing her incubating alone. He is at his other nest with his other mate, who is now incubating as well. he did show up briefly today when several other males were flying around, he came to chase them off, not to care for the female. He sees it as his territory.

If some of you have watched the Hellgate Osprey Cam  in Montana, you may be familiar with Iris who faced the same scenario, year after year…..when Louis, her former mate, kept coming back from his new nest and new mate, to copulate with Iris. although the outcome was different there since every time Iris would leave her eggs to feed herself, crows would take her eggs. So her nest failed every year. So it’s miraculous that our female pulled it off alone and fledged one chick. Will she be able to do it again? And how many years will this go on….Iris went thru this cycle at least five times….wasting precious breeding years. I hate to admit it, but I hope this male doesnt return next year….because as long as the situation remains the same, I fear her fate will repeat. This other male now thinks this is his territory too. She deserves better. Will she ever happen to find a new mate who will fight for her and the territory and chase the other male away? Iris has herself a new mate and they are incubating eggs now. That gives us hope that our girl will be able to break the curse next year. In the meantime, we will see how this year goes for her. She is an amazing osprey with awesome fortitude. We must refrain from anthropomorphizing and projecting human morality upon ospreys. These polygynous males are just following their  instincts. The two driving forces for ospreys are surviving and reproducing….so when presented with the opportunity to spread his DNA, he takes it. It was ironic that the nest he gave his attention to ended up failing and the one he abandoned, was successful. And raising chicks alone is our girls normal now…..she knows how to do it. We are rooting for her.

Polygyny is something we have observed many times over the years. One amazing male had two nests, three years  in a row, and he successfully fledged 3 chicks at each nest for two of those years. He fed six chicks and two females! Most of the time one nest fails in this kind of situation, but he did nothing but fish…and he pulled it off. Of course those females had to pitch in too when the chicks got older and needed more food. 

There is actually a lot more I could say about these behaviors….but maybe we will return to this to this topic again later! There are a lot of interesting aspects to it.



Sunday, May 10, 2026

Wayzata nest on highway sign….

 For all the people contacting me about the nest on the Highway sign in Wayzata…..yes we knew about it. We watched those ospreys build the nest last summer…tho they didn’t lay eggs. The nest was removed over the winter. When the ospreys returned this spring, they rebuilt a large nest and it was removed again. The DOT put a cone and some flags up there to deter them, but apparently the people in power do not understand that ospreys are very philopatric…..very loyal to their nest site. They are stubborn. So the ospreys rebuilt their nest AGAIN. I caught the male perched on top of the cone they installed to scare them away. They laid eggs on April 29…..so now they are protected under federal law as well as state law. Our attempts to communicate with the DNR earlier were ignored. We are watching all known nests in 8 counties…..and I am often frustrated because I know a lot about osprey behavior. I see what is going in the metro. Our population is exploding. We have found 21 new nests already this year. A few were not new, but we didn’t know about them so thanks to everyone who has reported their observations to me. It is deeply appreciated. I have also seen sad mistakes made, when the DNR issued permits for a nest removal and someone built a new nest, set a new nestpole….all admirable and appreciated efforts…but because they didn’t consult with someone who has knowledge about ospreys, poles were placed too close to tall trees, which may eventually result in the osprey returning to the lightpoles which created problems. Nest boxes were built wrong, with solid wood bottoms that provide no drainage, no way for the nest to breath. Chicks have died uneccessarily in a heavy rain In the past in similar situations. I do my best, am happy to share my knowledge, I even sometimes have a nestbox to donate.

We are trying to continue to monitor all known nests but we sure need help, if anyone wants to volunteer to help monitor these nests. And with the cost of gas, I also need financial support.
If anyone has questions or concerns, or sees a new nest being built, wants to volunteer, or needs advice about where to place a new nest or how to build a new nestbox, I have 33 years of experience with all this…please contact me…osprey.mn@





Sunday, May 3, 2026

Egg #3 at the Arb!

 Egg number three has arrived at the Arboretum! Hard to determine exactly when, but looks like between 3:00-4:00 pm. on May 3!


Thursday, April 30, 2026

2nd egg at the Arb!

 Shortly before 9:30 p.m. Thursday evening the second egg arrived at the Arboretum Cam nest!


Tuesday, April 28, 2026

First egg at the Arb

 We have the first egg at the Arboretum Cam nest! It was laid shortly before 5 am this morning, April 28. Ospreys typically lay their eggs about 2-3 days apart so we will watch for another egg Thursday or Friday.


Thursday, April 23, 2026

Females at the Arb…..

 So these are the photos of the female ospreys I have seen at the Arboretum cam nest….first I will post the female I saw early in 2026….I did not get enough pictures of her….but the back of her head looks different to me that the female that is currently on this nest (2nd photo)….and the final photo is the female from last year. I believe we have the same female now. See what you think….