Flooding has been a huge problem for many people through overflowing
rivers and streams, along with high tides and huge waves battering the
coastline.
But a number of people have been affected by the rising water table and
simply only realised the flooding was happening at their property when it
started to come through the floors, not the doors.
In my garden and house we’ve been lucky so far, as we just have a very
soggy lawn and borders, but this week it could have been so different following
the most vicious storm of the winter so far.
We were subject to 100mph winds and heavy rain, which didn’t lead to
massive flooding, but did lead to many trees, power cables and roof tiles down.
Having briefly assessed the damage it’s hard to tell if the house has suffered
significantly or not, but luckily the trees and bushes emerged relatively
unscathed.
The bird feeders have taken some damage, but I’ve now fixed them. The
nestboxes must be more securely tied down than I imagined as they all were in
situ after the winds died down.
It enabled me to do stage two of the sparrow nestbox camera
construction.
The camera has now been fitted (see below) with a battery and now I’m hoping it’ll
work and link up with the wireless receiver and show the inside of the nestbox
on my TV, just like the single great/blue tit nestbox.
Next weekend I’ll be testing it and hoping that the wired version isn’t required as that’ll need an order putting in and an extra delay.
The tit nestbox camera isn’t revealing much yet, which I think shows
that the roosting sites around the garden are still good enough due to the mild
conditions.
It could also mean that the nesting instinct hasn’t yet kicked in,
possibly due to the mild winter and the birds unsure of when spring is actually
going to start. Hopefully the increase in daylight will start that breeding
urge soon and the battle for nestboxes will start.
The spring bulbs are continuing to emerge and the later it goes in
February, the closer it gets to spring actually starting to push winter away;
whether the weather is any different is anyone’s guess!
How long are you expecting the battery to last on the camera?
ReplyDeleteI have recently purchased a wireless camera myself - looks like yours - and was considering a battery, but have read that they only last about 1.5hrs with the infrared LED cameras.
My cameras are plugged in to the mains as I didn't want to worry about battery life. They work great and have no disturbance to the birds, but I did have to buy and extension cable as the nearest power point was about ten metres away.
ReplyDeleteHope this feedback is useful.