Thursday, October 22, 2015

Harrison Bay Eagles Stick Work & Soft Grass, White-bellied Sea Eagles Day 78

I've got two really great videos for today! The Harrison Bay Eagles were working hard on the nest today. A heavy fog didn't bother them one bit. I know this video is long, but it's the good stuff! These are the Stick Work & Soft Grass highlights that occurred over a three hour period, boiled down into 18:23 minutes:

Mom and Dad (Elliot & Eloise) spent a lot of time and energy working on the nest today. Imagine, each stick is collected one at a time (broken off of a tree), brought into the nest, cleaned up (little side branches get broken off), then moved around until its in the perfect spot. These sticks normally range from about 2 to 5 feet in length! (As a reference, an Eagle is about 3 feet from the top of the head to the tip of the tail.)

They'd rest before taking off to collect another branch.
Sometimes Mom would wait for Dad to bring her another stick. Then she'd hop down into the nest to place it in the right spot.

Sometimes they would discuss the situation. Mom usually wins at this nest...
They are both spending the night in the nest tree tonight.

I brought up the White-bellied Sea Eagle nest, got excited when I saw the view on cam two, and hurried as fast as I could to start recording before they chicks moved or the camera angle was changed. Aren't they beautiful!? We finally get a good look at their faces and I'm amazed by the differences! SE16 on the left has a softer face and sleepy eyes. SE15 on the right has sharper features and more angular eye sockets. Watch the Eaglets Looking Out video (12:19) and comment about what differences do you see.

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