An Avon Gorge CONE? Perhaps? Sowing An Idea!
Back in April New Scientist ran a brief article about the Cone Sutro Forest online bird watching game. I joined in and started watching the birds over in California, it was addictive like all online games, but with this I learned to recognise birds that I could never see in the Avon Gorge! To quote from their "About" page:
CONE Sutro Forest allows players to earn points by taking live photos and classifying wild birds. CONE Sutro Forest (CONE-SF) combines a remotely controllable robotic pan-tilt-zoom video camera with live streaming video, image database, and point system.
Conceived by Ken Goldberg, artist and professor of engineering at UC Berkeley, and Dez Song, professor of computer science at Texas A&M, and funded by the National Science Foundation, CONE-SF automatically computes the optimal camera viewpoint that satisfies dozens or hundreds of simultaneous players, including both experts and amateurs. Managing large communities is the specialty of craigslist founder Craig Newmark, who will host the camera from his San Francisco residence overlooking the Sutro Forest.
CONE-SF is free and open to the public. To play, visit: http://cone.berkeley.edu.
This is an inspirational project which now has some thousands of watchers. Try it! Not only can you see new Californian birds, but more sparrows and pigeons (rock doves), and gray squirrels.
I would mount one of these Panasonic cameras on top of one of the lamp posts down on the Portway, providing it with a radio link to some suitable gateway onto the internet. Down there it would enable visitors to see our all our estuary birds, not only the Peregrines and the Ravens. It would also not be so intrusive as the camera (which had its cable cut), which was mounted close to the Peregrine nest.
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