There is a white line under the cere of one of them but E20 does not seem to be that much different in size from its older sibling, E20. Did you know that Bald Eagles fish in both fresh and salt water?Į19 and E20 are also having fish. There have been several other varieties of prey items including a parrot and a coot. R2 and R3 really seem to enjoy the fresh fish that Dad brings in. Can you see her by the camera, perched on the pipe?įor other baby eaglets, it looks like it is fish dinners in Miami-Dade County and over in Fort Myers. The interloper has not been seen for a month! Yeah!!!!!!!Īnnie is still there several hours later. Cal Falcons posted this on their Twitter site today. Their scrape box is ready and waiting for those precious eggs in a couple of months. Just like Milda and Mr L, Annie and Grinnell are hanging out on The Campanile. So happy to have been a small part of this success story! Today they were joyful in sending out a short video on its release. Our local clinic, Wildlife Haven, put out a call for donations to help a Snowy Owl in December. Wildlife Rehabilitation Clinics work on donations and the sweat, tears, and love of volunteers. This will only improve as Anna remembers and the little one figures out its part in the feeding-eating process. She gets closer and the little one takes its first bite. The little one is ready to eat and opens its beak wide and tries the grass in the nest! It has its back to Anna who is trying to feed it. Anna and this little one are struggling too. Last year I almost had a sore throat yelling at Anna to get closer to Kisatchie to feed him and for Kisatchie to turn around, face Mum (or Dad, Louis feeds his babies), and open that beak wide. There isn’t a manual on eagle parenting tucked under the nest. So precious.īald Eagle parents work on instinct. Oh, the fluff balls grow too quick and get pin feathers in a blink. Anna and Louis’s 15-hour-old chick is adorable. What spells Bald Eagle Fluff Ball better than cute? Be prepared to melt. If you want to see thee action on hatch, I think the camera closer to the nest is the best. Speaking of cameras, Berry College has three – an approach one, one above the nest, and one closer to the nest. That arrow just shows up when you try to take a screen shot on their camera. The chick is making good progress! That is not a video. I just took this image a few minutes ago. The announcement of the pip was posted on FB this morning. Just when you think the day is going to be quiet, Missy at the Berry College Bald Eagle Nest in Mt Berry, Georgia, has a pip.
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