The University of Arizona is hosting the tiniest guests imaginable—two baby hummingbirds and their mother, nested precariously at the end of a wire dangling from a ceiling. Some guys in the IT department had the genius idea of mounting a security camera a foot away, creating an amazing live stream that is currently at 160,000 views from around the world.

If you’re have trouble viewing the stream above, you can also watch it here. If you’re still having trouble, please be patient as the stream is very popular.

The nest and two eggs, each smaller than a pea, was discovered on the fifth floor of the new Environment and Natural Resources Building Two on July 21. The mother, believed to be a black-chinned hummingbird, built the wee little abode at the end of a CAT6 networking cable. Everyone at the school is watching the feed obsessively, and have offered some nicknames for the birds (so far, Jack and Jill have been the most trending baby names). “It’s special to have the first inhabitants of a new environmental sciences building be a hummingbird,” says Peter Dourlein, assistant vice president of the university.

On the live feed you can watch the babies sleep, eat, and flap their ruffled wings in a nest about the size of a walnut. Although there are many bird cams out there, there’s something special about seeing the hummingbirds.

“We’ve never had a camera on a hummingbird nest, but I have seen a few,” says Dr. Kevin McGowan, researcher at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. “It’s an exciting thing when you can look into parts of birds’ lives that we normally don’t see. Especially hummingbirds.”

McGowan says desert hummingbirds tend to nest under branches to retain the heat during the night, so it makes sense that this mother made a balcony her home. He also noted that hummingbirds frequently use silk taken from spider webs as nesting material, which explains how she was able to build on something so precarious as a wire.

The nestlings are expected to fledge within days, and definitely look a bit cramped in the tiny nest. Everyone is waiting for Jack and Jill to venture out into the big world, but until then, we’re all enjoying the show. “Hummingbirds are very different little birds,” McGowan says. “Being able to see them up close is a real privilege.”