Watch Nesting Red-tailed Hawks Live on Bird Cams


A new nest camera high above a Cornell University athletic field is streaming up-close views of a Red-tailed Hawk nest via the Cornell Lab’s All About Birds website. The new camera stream puts viewers 80 feet off the ground and right beside the nest, where they can watch the hawks arrive, see them taking turns incubating the eggs, and compare notes on the two birds—the male has a more golden-tawny face and is slightly smaller than the female, which has been nicknamed “Big Red” for her alma mater.

The nest should be active for at least the next two months, and we hope you’ll join us as we watch the young birds hatch and grow. The parents have raised young here for at least the last four years. They began to make brief return visits to the nest site in late January. In February we started to see them arriving with dead sticks and green pine boughs to augment the nest materials left over from last year. As signs of spring began to show the pair began spending more time at the nest, and the male started bringing prey  such as squirrels and pigeons to the nest to offer the female.

Last Friday (March 16) at about 2:10 p.m., the female laid her first egg of the season, and the pair took turns incubating it over the weekend. She added a second egg on Monday (March 19), and we’re now waiting to see if they lay a third. (The typical clutch size for Red-tailed Hawks is 2–3 eggs.) It takes 28–35 days of incubation for the eggs to hatch.

To make sure no one misses out on the early stages of this Red-tailed Hawk story, we’ve put together a temporary Bird Cam site where we invite you to watch these magnificent birds. Meanwhile we’re building a full-featured Bird Cams site that will launch in late April. It will feature many more species, including long-running streams from our NestCams project as well as new species such as Osprey, Black Vulture, and Great Horned Owl.

(Images via Bird Cams from the Red-tailed Hawk nest on Cornell University Campus. See live stream.)

10 Comments

  1. Bill Seman
    Posted March 23, 2012 at 7:37 pm | Permalink

    Is the Red-Tailed hawk nest cam down? I haven’t been able to view it today.

  2. Posted April 6, 2012 at 3:52 pm | Permalink

    Thanks for a wonderful service. Please cut off some of the participants for their irresponsible and inappropiate comments. Quite childish for sure and unpleasant reading locker room chatter on such a terrific site.

  3. Catharine S.Reisch
    Posted April 8, 2012 at 11:09 pm | Permalink

    Thank you so much Cornell. This is wonderful to be able to watch these beautiful birds at such close quarters

  4. Posted April 10, 2012 at 2:38 pm | Permalink

    Have not been able to see the video for a couple of days. It just flickers so we can see only parts of it and then it goes off.

  5. Peter Stucker
    Posted April 24, 2012 at 4:11 pm | Permalink

    I think the Cam is down i cant view the live stream

  6. Liza
    Posted April 24, 2012 at 9:13 pm | Permalink

    Just enthralled this bird family! Thank you!

  7. m abbate
    Posted April 24, 2012 at 9:19 pm | Permalink

    wow, this is great! thanks for the intimate view, something one rarely sees in a lifetime!

  8. Posted September 28, 2012 at 7:01 pm | Permalink

    THEY ARE SO CUTE TOGETHER WHEN MOM AND DAD ARE TOGETHER

  9. Lyn Marchman
    Posted April 28, 2013 at 10:43 am | Permalink

    Than you Cornell for this amazing opportunity to view these gorgeous birds up close and personal. Fantastic!

  10. jake
    Posted May 3, 2013 at 1:58 pm | Permalink

    they are very mature and seareous birds and i hope thay take good care of there yong

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