One Bald Eagle Carrries Another

Photo of one bald eagle carrying another with a fish in its talons.
Food Fight!

I think that most everyone who has an interest in wildlife knows that when a bald eagle sees an osprey flying with a fish the bald eagle will chase and harass the osprey and get it to drop the fish (which the eagle then dives for and catches).  The osprey gives up at this point so it can live and fish another day.

What people may not be as aware of is that bald eagles do this to each other too and if one loses the fish it doesn’t give up.  The aerial dog fights can go on for a long time and they can be quite spectacular.  Changes of possession can become numerous because when one dives on the other the one with the fish usually opens its talons to defend itself and loses the fish in the process. This results in a dive by both eagles to be the first to catch the falling fish.  It gets even ore interesting when the fight takes place where numerous eagles gather.  They all get involved.

I’ve seen some interesting things happen in these dogfights. I’ve seen one or both crash into the water.  Sometimes they can get airborne from the water, but sometimes they can’t and they then try to get to land.  If they don’t make it to land before hypothermia, they die.

This is one of the more unusual photos I’ve taken of bald eagles fighting.  One eagle has his talons into the upper tail of the other and is flying along carrying the other, but they are losing altitude.  Sorry, I don’t remember how it ended.

Bald Eagle Grabs a Fish

Photo of a bald eagle grabbing a fish from the water.
A bald eagle grabs a fish from Kachemak Bay, Alaska.

About this time each year I think of the trips I used to make in March to photograph bald eagles around Homer, Alaska.   It was always a fantastic experience.  This photo was taken in Sadie Cove which is on the far side of Kachemak Bay from Homer.

Independence Day and Our Nation’s Symbol

Photo of a bald eagle perched on a broken branch.
Bald Eagle on Snag

A bald eagle perches on a driftwood limb on the shore of Kachemak Bay, Alaska.

There was a nice article in our paper today about a man here in Marin County who collects all things relating to the bald eagle.  His name is Preston Cook.  In addition to collecting, Preston has given much time to helping the bald eagle.  Among his efforts were many years spent on the board of the American Bald Eagle Foundation.  You can see the story here.

Bald Eagle Recovery Anniverary

Photo of a bald eagle soaring over Kachemak Bay, Alaska.
A bald eagle soars over Kachemak Bay.

Today is the fourth anniversary of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service’s announcement that the bald eagle had recovered and would be removed from the list of Threatened and Endangered Species.  It had been listed since 1967, first as an endangered species, and later as a threatened species.  The main reason for its listing was the wide-spread use of DDT which had caused thinning of egg shells.