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Website will offer bird’s-eye view of Boulder’s long-returning pair of osprey

A webcam, recently installed by the Boulder County Parks and Open Space department, is trained on an osprey nest at Cattail Pond at the Boulder County Fairgrounds. Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera
A webcam, recently installed by the Boulder County Parks and Open Space department, is trained on an osprey nest at Cattail Pond at the Boulder County Fairgrounds. Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera
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LONGMONT — The same two ospreys have been returning to the Boulder County Fairgrounds to nest for more than a decade, and they don’t seem shy of people.

In fact, the pair seem right at home on a nesting platform at the eastern edge of Cattail Pond, despite the fact that it’s near the location where fireworks are set off every Fourth of July and the fact that the fairgrounds are always abuzz with activities during the summer, from equestrian shows to mutton busting.

This made the hawks perfect candidates to become the next Internet bird celebrities. Staffers from the Boulder County Parks and Open Space department recently installed a webcam that peers directly into the ospreys’ nest.

“This gives us an unprecedented view of the real-time breeding of a really charismatic bird,” said Mac Kobza, a wildlife specialist for the open-space department. “I think it’s a great resource for the community.”

Osprey nests — typically built with sticks and lined with bark, sod, vines and even algae — can be enormous, sometimes stretching 6 feet wide and up to 10 feet deep. Local ospreys migrate south during the winter but return to Boulder County around March to nest. They typically stay in the area through the summer.

Kobza said open-space staffers made sure that the camera was installed before the birds returned, and he believes that the camera won’t disturb the birds once they’re back in Longmont.

“This is a very adaptive pair of birds,” Kobza said. “Not to say that all osprey are adapted to people, but this pair is. They put up with a lot of disturbance.”

Despite the bustle of the fairgrounds and the nearby roads, the birds are likely drawn to the area thanks to the pond and the expansive views, which would allow them to see any predators from a great distance, Kobza said.

“They have a ready source of food in the pond,” he said. “The refrigerator is right there.”

Once the open-space department got the idea for a webcam, it took some figuring to work out how to set the thing up. The issues included how to power the camera and how to connect the video feed to the Internet. Staffers solved the issue with a solar panel and some wireless transmitters.

“The pole is 500 yards from a building that has an Internet connection,” said Nik Brockman, Web specialist for the open-space department, “so we had to send the feed wirelessly across the span.”

Coming soon

The Boulder County Parks and Open Space Department’s “Osprey Cam” is working but not yet online. When the website becomes active, it can be viewed at .

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