It's an opportunity to watch a newly hatched California Condor chick in real-time, through a live streaming video.
It's located at a cliff-side nest in a canyon near the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Hopper Mountain National Wildlife Refuge in Ventura County, California.
The chick hatched on April 10.
The birds were all but extinct in the wild, thirty years ago, but now there are around 500 of them worldwide.
Dr Estelle Sandhaus is Santa Barbara Zoo’s Director of Conservation and Science.
"It used to be that very few people could see a condor in the wild, or a condor nesting," she told KCLU.
"They spend about six months tending to their chick, " she said. "And there's equality in the Condor world! They take turns about equally, tending to the chick."