Finally managed to record some video of the hedgehog feeding inside the hedgehog house:
The light spilling out of the hedgehog house is IR which looks bright when seen by the trail camera. I tried my first camera attempt with the 12V supply from a battery. The video was still suffering interference so I obtained a tp-link tapo TC-60 wifi video camera to try. Bingo!
All went well, slightly out of focus as the hedgehog house was too small to move the camera well away but still a fair result. The camera has a microSD card to save the videos. It can be programmed to record only when motion is detected. The video clips can be downloaded by wifi to the makers app on a smart phone ot tablet. This is an indoor camera so should be OK in the hedgehog house but is not waterproof for exterior use. The 9V supply is in a nearby shed.
The feast .....
..... is a mixture of bought hedgehog food and dried mealworms. Water is available elsewhere in the garden.
Some more video clips from the trail cameras with a cameo appearance from the four legged boss.
I set up a camera inside the hedgehog house to video one feeding. It worked - but - suddenly the interference, video distortion, I was having last Summer has started again. It seems to be a 100Hz constant signal of some sort. Very puzzling. It is affecting three out of five cameras which are powered from 12V power supply wall warts. I will try running the 'feeding' camera from a 12V battery to see whether that clears things up. If it does then there is a fair chance the problem is transmitted through the mains supply. Strange that it hasn't shown up at all throughout the Winter.
A while ago I put the waterfall from the old pond to one side as the wooden frame which was holding it up was rotting. Even laid almost flat the pools in the waterfall filled with rain water which attracted birds to bathe and drink. I set up my old trail camera nearby to see what it could capture. It is timed to be working mainly at night with a bit of early and late daylight as the days get longer. A few results so far:
Recent night time wildlife video clips have been taken using a ToGuard H100 trail camera. I am slowly finding the best settings to achieve the results I want. I think this morning's capture is about right. One of three hedgehog visits in the early hours this morning to their feeding station in the hedgehog house:
Previously I found that full IR lighting from the camera resulted in over exposed close subjects. I now have it on the economy setting. I also increased the maximum length of each clip to 30 seconds. The video quality can be set as high as 4K but I have found 1296 P30 seems good enough to keep some detail when I zoom in, as I did with this one using Wondershare Filmora X video editing software.
Lucky I remembered to check how much food was left in the dish. Previously it had been going down slowly. This morning there were just a few scraps left. Maybe there is more than one visiting to feed. It is also a good recommendation for the Hedgehog food I bought from CJ Wildlife.
A hedgehog visits and enters the hedgehog house where there is a dish of food. (I have added some bought hedgehog food to mix with the crushed peanuts I mentioned in a previous post.) Soon after that another arrives. What appears to be a fight between them is the male trying to persuade the female he is ready to mate. There are short gaps in the filming as the trail camera pauses for a while after each fifteen seconds of video capture.
The camera keep reporting a low battery voltage even though it is connected to a mains six volt power supply. I think the long connecting cable from the PSU is causing the voltage to drop when the IR LEDs switch on so they are automatically switched off again. Something to sort out here.
P.S. Moved things around so an extension cable is no longer needed. Once that was done the reported power went from 75% to the full 100%. The cable I had bought is too thin, with too much resistance causing a voltage drop when a lot of extra power was needed to light the IR LEDs.