The diary entry is a bit older and the Eurasian Eagle Owls Tristan and Isolde are back and busy. Like last year, there's already an Egyptian Goose that also chose the Castle Ruins as her nesting site. Both parties aren't happy about their neighbour.
From EGE OWLS Diary, Feb 11, 2026
Dear eagle owl enthusiasts,
The eagle owl breeding season is now just around the corner. After prolonged periods of frost, there are now regular frost-free nights, and on a few days the sun's rays have even managed to warm up the south-facing eagle owl nesting sites a little.
The breeding site in the castle ruins is located in a milder region, and courtship activities are in full swing. Egg laying could take place within the next ten days. However, there is now great unrest in the ‘castle ruins arena’ almost every evening.
The Egyptian geese
In 2018, I was still rarely able to observe Egyptian geese in the approximately 200 potential eagle owl habitats I monitored in the Eifel region. In the meantime, the population of this invasive species has grown dramatically. Egyptian geese are now ubiquitous in the rock faces of river valleys, on bridge piers and in quarries, gravel pits and clay pits with small bodies of water. Since 2020, I have repeatedly observed eagle owls abandoning their broods due to Egyptian geese. Of the approximately 120 to 180 broods started each year, up to six breeding failures have been proven to be caused by Egyptian geese (+ unreported cases). Some of the breeding niches used by eagle owls for many years are very prominent in the rock faces. Egyptian geese flying past can hardly help but be interested in these ‘luxury apartments’. Even if a female eagle owl is already brooding there, some geese fly to these niches and drive the eagle owls away from their nests. In some cases, the geese later breed there successfully, in other cases they are young, inexperienced geese that are only exploring possible breeding sites without any serious intention of breeding.
In breeding areas with many similarly suitable nesting niches, the two species competing for nesting sites can develop parallel breeding traditions. On other steep walls, eagle owls regularly abandon their broods. How exactly the conflicts between the species play out has hardly been observed before – and never in such detail as in ‘our’ castle ruins. There have been no documented cases of eagle owls successfully driving away Egyptian geese. In this respect, our webcam is doing pioneering work.
There is no doubt that the Egyptian goose population is impacting the eagle owl population. However, I have not yet been able to identify any significant impact on the reproduction rate of large owls. Many other additional factors weigh more heavily as causes of unsuccessful breeding, and the eagle owl population is stable.
Breeding Egyptian geese and their eggs are protected by animal welfare legislation. Any kind of ‘intervention’ during the breeding season is prohibited.
Our observations of events lead us to take sides with one species or the other. An ‘I'm for the geese’ or ‘I'm against the geese’ may trigger heated discussions in our minds and on YouTube in the live stream chat or comments. However, this has no effect on the animals involved or on the processes taking place in the ruins.
The only way to ‘remove’ adult Egyptian geese in North Rhine-Westphalia is for the hunting ground owner to shoot them between 16 October and 31 January. Juvenile Egyptian geese may be shot all year round.
In my opinion, it is questionable to what extent shooting until 31 January in habitats such as our castle ruins would make a difference for the eagle owls. As we have seen, there are other geese that are ready to take over the breeding site. If these are young birds from the previous year that are inexperienced in breeding, they could possibly cause even more disturbance in the ruins. They would be less focused in choosing a niche and more hesitant or even unwilling to breed. As a result, the activities of the geese could cause more disturbance than we are currently experiencing. (...)
There are two cameras allowing you to watch the owls (and the Egyptian Goose).
They have 2 cameras providing livestreams from the ruins:

Also wishing them the best. This situation is interesting from a scientific point of view but if/when it comes down to one of them giving up - I really don't want to see it.
Other than their initial confrontation, there haven't been any further ones, have there? I'm going both groups are busy enough they'll have no need to worry about the other. They ultimately both have to do what they think is best for their families overall, and that can seem quite sad or cruel to us.
I have a good post for sometime this week about a pair of animal ambassadors with dud eggs and how the rehab center still lets them feel like good parents. It involves some sneakiness and trickery, but everyone wins in the end!
I haven't observed any trouble after that.
I'm looking forward to your post. Spring is creeping up on us and all the birds around here are already busy with courtship and looking for real estate.
I keep seeing all the local rescues posting all their various babies coming in. I'm back in action on the 15th to get a head start before the new volunteers come in April.
I'll probably share the egg story on Wed, as we're in the time of year where the chatter feels dead in here. I always get bummed sharing something I think is awesome and it feels like nobody sees it. I get so bored posting all this stuff and nobody comments. At least I know by now it isn't me doing something wrong, Lemmy just seems to go stagnant around this time.
It seems people are also busy around this time of year. Please, don't feel sad - we appreciate your work! Unfortunately there seem to be a lot of lurkers who avoid posting/commenting. And even up- and downvotes seem to be worse on Lemmy. I guess people tend to shy away from it, when they realise that some other people can find out who voted and how.
That's great! I bet they love having you there. Still owlthusiastic and coming with so much knOWLedge.
The slowness is a little better now that I know it isn't me. We just don't have a large enough userbase to even out whatever causes the slump for a lot of people here.
I do wish we had a more passionate commenting culture by now. Or at least some more on fun topics. I know people are still here, because they're all over the grumpy news and politics threads! 😅 I don't know if I want that particular crowd in here, but there's always people saying they want politic and US news free spaces, but I like to think we have something for everyone here and very minimal politics, so where are they at?!
I'm still having fun, but I post here to interact with you all. I can read by myself all I want already. Growing the community and learning about you all and where you're all from and your languages and cultures is what I like to get back in exchange for the owl goodness. Nobody needs to be a subject expert to talk with me here. Ask all the noob questions you want, make a joke, make a reference, I like just about all of it as long as you're here to have fun.
I'm excited to be going back to the animals. Still waiting for my rabies titer so I can handle those animals, so hopefully that comes soon so I can hold raccoons and foxes. Also still need to finalize some ideas for my owl station at open house.
I got diagnosed with pretty bad sleep apnea in January. I was falling asleep at work and getting scarily tired while driving, and I just haven't had much energy for my hobbies, so I've been falling behind on my music and planning for the event. Everyone is really dragging their feet on getting me my CPAP so I can actually sleep, so that's been making everything extremely difficult. Hopefully in the next couple weeks that will be handled and I can get back in the swing of things.
Well, I didn't mean to talk so much, but no one else is listening, so apologies on taking it all out on you! 😇
It definitely isn't you! There are so many reasons we don't know or don't think of that might lead to less interaction. For example: I know a few people who observe lent for spiritual reasons. And social media consumption now often is part of things they avoid during lent.
One reason I'm still on Reddit. It allows me to drop hints about the Fediverse and Lemmy on occasion. I know they will f'up even more in the future. Hopefully this will bring some friendly people to this side of the internet.
Even the Germans here aren't reliable. They might not be good at smalltalk and fun conversations (speaking of cultural differences) but usually you can count on them to give their opinion - even if you didn't ask for it 😅 Well, the grumpy news and politics threads are their natural habitat in a way. Germans are World Champion Complainers.
Oopsi 👀
We need to drop proverbial breadcrumps to lead them here... only half joking. I feel that the focus of people in the fediverse is on IT, data security, and politics (of course).
There's been a poll in one of the German communities and it's interesting to see who frequents and especially interacts with the community. It's biased of course, I don't expect that many people to answer questions in a poll who only lurk and don't interact.
Mostly men, IT, often gratuated university, socially "conscious" - meaning more left leaning in their political views, aware of social issues, inclusive.
And you're creating a very friendly, informative, and welcoming group. You can only lay the foundations and you did a good job. I enjoy it.
I do believe that. I'd be looking forward to that too! There's almost no rabies left in Germany. The only wild animals that occasionally can spread it are bats. Like the bat from the rabies copypaste. So of course that's the one animal I found two weeks ago when we still had snow outside. Poor thing was on the ground in broad daylight and I only registered it because it was screaming at the dog and me. I brought in into the garage (yes, wearing protective gloves) to give it some shelter and that led to me learning more about bats and who to contact. The little critter, a common pipistrelle, is fine. Warming up (though not to me 😁) did help.
So good to hear you got diagnosed! That's the first step though it must have been scary - especially becoming so tired while driving. Hopefully it will soon work out and you get your energy back!
Don't underestimate how many people might actually be reading your comments :)
No need to apologise! It's nice to not follow my tendencies to doomscroll and actually communicate with a person about real life stuff.
That was one of the main things that helped someone get through to me one time was someone was saying it was spring break from college, which since I'm long out of school and don't have children, is something that I don't think about. Same with Lent. Taking a 40 day break from social media would be a nice idea for many, even without the religious aspect!
I've occasionally looked at the French community weekly thread when pseudo mentions something about superbowl and it seemed similar, just about 4 or 5 people just saying one sentence. I guess a lot of you are used to communicating online only in English? The more I try to be inclusive with posts here, featuring things from other places or even just making sure things include metric units, it makes me think what it would be like for most of the web to be non-English for me. I've been trying out DeepL at someone's recommendation here to translate things better and I found a new online multilanguage dictionary that seems great at listing owl names in other languages to help me find new international content that been yielding good results, but it's a good reminder how much gets hidden behind not being able to just read or speak things.
My family is Pennsylvania Dutch, and my grandparents could speak their language and I got to see them do business with the Amish people here, and it felt so alien to see them speaking a whole other language when we can't. We do have the difficulty making smalltalk other than grumbling, so we did inherit that!
I have been surprised over the years to see more of the commentors here are women than I expected. Probably not an equal portion of overall subscribers, but as far as people that actually leave comments, it might be fairly close. I'm always curious what our overall demographics are.
Oh, that looks so cute! We do get bats in, but I don't normally get to see them. I'm not sure what we do to care for them, so I'm curious if there will be anything for me to do involving them this year. Usually I only see them at events, and I can barely tell they are there through the crowd of children and the person holding it. I have been on a lot of cave tours and have seen them there in the wild, which is fun.
Our bat populations were getting hit very hard with White Nose Syndrome, a fungal infection, that killed millions of bats, but I think the situation is gradually improving last I heard. A relative used to be a park ranger at one of our national parks and would give bat lectures for all the crowds of tourists. We got to know bats are harmless early on.
The driving thing was scary, but at least that felt like a somewhat normal thing, basically just being too tired. What had me scared was for about the last year I've felt a real mental and physical decline, and especially the mental fog had me worried I was getting dementia or something like that. I had also been feeling depressed because I haven't had enough attention or energy to engage in my hobbies, so I felt like a bad student at my music class and I felt like a failure at the rescue because I haven't been able to commit or participate as much as I've wanted during the off season. So I'm really relieved I'm not dying or losing my mind and am just severely sleep deprived. I hear it can take a few weeks-months to bounce back, so I can't wait to start sleep therapy even if it is a bit of a hassle at first. Everyone else I know that has the CPAP says it is amazing once you get used to all the gear.
I have enjoyed talking with you and anyone else that may be interested in my life. We do have a rather active Dull Mens Club, so there may actually be others that find all this interesting!
I'm glad you and everyone else finds some happiness here every day. It is a lot of fun for me as well.
My home instance is feddit.org and it depends on the community. Some posts in bigger communities draw a lot of attention, others have barely an upvote. Admins/Mods are volunteers with limited time and had to place some boundaries. One main rule is that only English and German should be used. Most people are from German speaking countries and it's expected that they at least are able to read and understand English. While some of our communities favour English most posts and comments are indeed in German.
Do you mind sharing? While I have a mild interest in languages, I have a (language teacher) friend who is very much into birding and plants. Including learning the Latin names. She would be thrilled to find such a tool.
In Germany it's kind of similar with strong local dialects. Frisian and "Plattdüütsch" seem to have fallen out of favour with time. A lot of younger people simply haven't learned to speak them.
We will get along just great! 😁
A lot of women simply don't disclose being female. Women experience a great deal of harrassment on the internet when they are recognizable as women. Compared to men they are attacked with a higher frequency and a level of hatred that most men never experience.
It's a good sign that women feel save enough to be so open.
No time for better pictures. It's been grumpy enough.
Glosbe.com is the dictionary. When I typed in German, it even has a few dialects. Searching owl in English > German gives me eule and uhu, but then a little further down it lists about 80 related words, which are different owls around the world, even down to the super oddballs like the Cinnamon Island Scops (Gelbschnabeleule).
I just tried it with some German bird words (vogel, meise, spatz, kohlmeise) and it's giving me more English slang/idioms than other bird species, but perhaps I'm not searching the most useful terms. Using Rotkehlchen though, it does give me suggestions to also check out Japanese Robin and Siberian Rubythroat, so success may vary.
It's funny coming from a family that once spoke a different German dialect that I've never thought much about Germany still having different dialects. We learned so little European history, most of what I have learned is just from Youtube. We never discussed the unification or any of that. I don't even know if we really ever discussed much about the Berlin Wall or why it was there. I remember seeing it on a newspaper and adults seeming interested at the time, but never had much context until much later as an adult. Just pretty much Archduke Ferdinand was mentioned, not who he was or anything, just that he got shot, then a quick mention of the Treaty of Versailles, and then the typical stuff.
I definitely get women not being always so open about their gender online. I've listened to many explain the things they get subjected to. People can be so ridiculous to strangers. I like keeping this a peaceful place in the Fediverse, and I appreciate that people seem comfortable here. It's been a real embarrassment that ongoing politics around the world and especially the US have done a lot to make a lot of other communities here a decent bit less friendly. Every day makes me more grateful we can just chat about cool birds and their support staff here and crack some jokes,
Your bat friend is very ferocious and cute looking. Do you still have it or did you release it or take it somewhere?