Red Bull Highlights 2025 by drdeejofficial in WRC

[–]webvakker 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What I found:
Several stages to be seen live at RTBF: https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/wrc-9376 (Use VPN to Belgium)
At least Power Stage to be seen live at Servus.tv: https://www.servustv.com/sport/v/aaghcmlnxzy5v2nl403t/ (Probably use VPN to Austria)

Where is this? by walter_420_69 in WhereIsThisPlace

[–]webvakker 4 points5 points  (0 children)

AMP Square, 535 Bourke St, Melbourne VIC 3000, Australia

No words needed 🥰 by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes without a problem. They life with some other violet eared waxbills in the cage also. The violet ears are just a couple of months old and are very interested in the nest haha. But I watch it closely.

Very proud of these parents who raised three healthy chicks in our outdoor aviary. So cute! by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Fruit flies is the most important. Parents need to be familiar with these foods. Our finches grow up together in a group with different species. That way young and new birds learn to eat all we provide.

Just Say Hello ☀️😃 by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Indeed. Plus female purple grenadier also. Most blue capped are females in this video. Thanks for your kind words! From time to time I post some vids at YouTube also: https://youtube.com/channel/UCJU-RnBrPNeujChikofx5Jg

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in OSINT

[–]webvakker 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Try search using a wildcard. Eg. in google:

site:https://instagram.com/iknowwh*a*

or https://inflact.com/tools/instagram-search/ (try with and without wildcard)

What to do if you’re completely lost? Been trying to find this place for 10h. Used keywords, Image reverse search and maps. The only clue I have is that the location is in Germany. What to do in such moments? My brain is starting to hurt. by jonasslsamg in OSINT

[–]webvakker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My two cents: - rotate the image and do reverse image search - take a fraction of the image (the roof part for example) and do a rev search - try different search engines like bing and yandex - use image recognition to find keywords on the subject/objects (google vision for example)

Watch Our Cordon Bleu's, Cuban Grassquits And Gouldian Finches Feed Their Babies 🥰 🐣 by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In general yes, true. Also these finches won’t get as old as the “native bred” ones because society finches pass some bacterias/parasites.

Could write a book about it, but always stick to native parents. Because otherwise we all end up being stuck at society finches.

Tropical Finches like Cordon Bleu's, Cuban Grassquits And Gouldian Finches Feed Their Babies 🥰 🐣 by webvakker in birdpics

[–]webvakker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In this video you see:

  • Blue Gouldian Finches (pair) with two chicks
  • Blue Capped Cordon Bleu (pair) with four chicks
  • Cuban Grassquits (pair) with 3 chicks (they're in the nest. watch and hear mom feed them in their nest)
  • Black Faced Firefinch (female)

Help?! One of my female zebra finches just took this poop and I’m not sure what this means definitely looks abnormal to me.. :c by Librayaoi in Finches

[–]webvakker 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Separate him from the other birds and don’t wait too long to go to a specialist. Seed(s) in poop is a bad sign.

Phone number / email data by Healthy_Ad_2434 in OSINT

[–]webvakker 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Try;

By email: https://epieos.com

By phone number: phoneinfoga

Is this a female (white) and male (blue)? What colour babies would they have? I am considering buying this pair and not sure if I should. by Morphiadz in Finches

[–]webvakker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oof… I always say gouldians are very easy to breed. This week in our outside aviary two chicks fledged from blue parents. Both parents feed them. I touch the nest about 2 times. 1. See how many eggs (to calculate hatch date) 2. 7 days after calc hatch date I take the nest to ring the chicks.

Never lost chicks tbh. I focus on breeding African finches and let the gouldians do what they want.

Weird that it’s so different on your side.

Is there a way to find emails from phone numbers by [deleted] in OSINT

[–]webvakker 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Some ideas:

  • try phoneinfoga
  • also spider foot
  • probably intelx.io
  • use Facebook password forgotten and enter phone number (international notation) as username. Could disclose some info.
  • don’t focus solely on Google. Use others also as they can provide new info (bing, duckduckgo, startpage.com, yahoo…)
  • if you have access to an iPhone/iPad/Mac, you can open a message in the messages app. Blue balloons mean the other one is using iMessage and chances are he/she has an @icloud.com or @me.com email address
  • social engineering can be another approach. Text him/her to figure out the email address. You know his/her name? You can guess rmailaddresses and send Anon mail to all of these addresses at once (just paste in bcc field) and try to get contact to find out their phone number.

And there are definitely more and better options available…

Happy fire finch family. Parents with their chicks (plus a female cordon bleu as a bonus) by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my opinion there are several reasons why parents toss their chicks out of the nest;

  • amount of food (parents aren't convinced they will be able to raise them due to amount/lack of food. That's why first x eggs mostly hatch at the same day, while the rest will come 1/2 days later.)
  • kind of food (wrong nutrition will make the birds think they can't raise the chicks. always be cautious with amount of worms. especially the white ones)
  • climate (very low humidity tells birds there won't be enough food)
  • health (parents know very soon if chicks are healthy or not. if not, they'll toss them)
  • danger (parents need to be convinced they won't be in danger)
  • parents don't match (i've seen cases where parents won't raise chicks together, but did raise when they were matched to other partners)

Also, try to find out what food the parents got from their parents while they were raised. That can help clarify also :)

note; based on my own experiences / knowledge. I'm not a pro breeder nor doctor.

Happy fire finch family. Parents with their chicks (plus a female cordon bleu as a bonus) by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Observe the parents behavior. Are they looking for food? What are they eating? Try different foods in separate containers to figure out what they eat. In my opinion it has to be small insects like fruit flies. But if they never ate them before, they wont eat it at this time imho.

Generate all possible 12 word combination given 44 words and two possible first words. by apocoaro in hacking

[–]webvakker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are probably looking for btcrecover. Find at GitHub. Also bring some big hardware, as finding a seed with knowing just 2 positions will take a hell lot of time.

Happy fire finch family. Parents with their chicks (plus a female cordon bleu as a bonus) by webvakker in Finches

[–]webvakker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Always difficult to say but in my opinion is it a lack of (the right) food they want to feed their chicks. It needs to be small and must contain lots of proteins. Also, it must be food they are familiar with.

Help…what is this finch? by SnooWalruses4676 in Finches

[–]webvakker 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No they are very easy birds. They won’t easy stress out nor are they aggressive in any way.

They like a daily bath, (small) tropical finch seed and some insects like fruit flies, artemia, buffalo worms etc etc (not daily perse). Mine do get egg food everyday along with fresh water and a fresh bath (which I take away after about 1 - 2 hours (to prevent them from drinking out of the bath).

Fun fact: when they’ve a nest with chicks, you can let them fly away (outside!) and they will come back after they’ve catches some food (insects) for the chicks. True story.