Four-tuitous timing: Falcon lays another egg
Peregrine falcons who have nested atop UC Davis Medical Center for at least a decade are back
Updated: Tuesday, March 25 <<View Live Cameras>>
For most of the day Tuesday, three eggs could be seen in the peregrine falcon nest atop UC Davis Medical Center. However, our team decided to take a peek around 3 p.m. the same day and, lo and behold, a fourth egg is now in the nest! You might call that...FOUR-tuitous timing.
The falcon began lying her eggs the week of March 17. Viewers discovered the first egg around 8 a.m. March 18 (though she might have laid the egg at some point overnight). Initially, we believed the second egg was laid on Friday, March 21. In-house falcon expert Bill Corbett said the time between eggs is "usually every 48 hours" so the extended time between the first and second would be considered unusual. However, a UC Davis Health employee emailed that she just happened to catch the falcon laying the second egg.
"I'm fairly certain I watched the falcon lay the second egg on Thursday, March 20 at 3:12 p.m.," the staff member said. "She puffed up all big, chirped and moved, and I noticed two eggs at that time."
Cameras picked up the third egg on Monday, March 24, though that egg could have been laid over the weekend as well.

Last year, the falcon mother laid four eggs. Unfortunately, none were thought to be viable, and our experts believe she removed them from the nest herself.
Every March, almost as regularly as swallows return to Capistrano, UC Davis Health team members begin watching the cameras atop UC Davis Medical Center. They’re hoping to spot our longtime peregrine falcon friends.
On February 27, the first tip came in: The bird was back.
We’ve since taken to the skies — well, the cameras in the skies — to see if we could spot when our peregrine first arrived. Timelapse footage shows one of the birds appeared as early as mid-January to scout out the nest.
<<Watch the UC Davis Health peregrine falcon camera here>>
The visits were sporadic until recently. Now, at least one of the falcons has been a regular at the nest, creating a shallow pit for future eggs — hopefully.
The birds have nested on the medical center roof since at least 2015. Each year, the female lays the eggs in March. They typically hatch around 34 days later.
For now, we’ve officially moved into the egg watch phase.
About peregrine falcons
Peregrine falcons are one of the world's fastest birds. When power-diving from great heights to strike their prey, the falcons can reach speeds of 200 mph. The birds were on the federal list of endangered species at one time. They were among the first birds on California's Endangered Species List. A ban on the insecticide DDT in 1972 helped the species recover enough so that the raptor could be removed from the federal list in 1999. Ten years later, peregrine falcons were removed from the state’s list.
Last year’s falcons
In 2024, the falcon initially laid four eggs. But over the course of a few weeks in April, one by one, the eggs disappeared.
We contacted Michelle Hawkins, the director of the California Raptor Center at UC Davis, to find out more. Hawkins went through our video footage. The belief was that the eggs simply cracked, and the mother bird removed them. Previous years have been more successful.
In 2023, the falcon successfully hatched four eggs. The year prior saw similar triumph.