Eggs, Eggs, and More Eggs

What a great topic to be talking about in the month of April when Easter is just around the corner.
The eagles have now made all the new additions to the nest and the next step is going to be getting those eggs in the nest.  After successful breeding takes place the eggs will appear within about five to ten days.  Females will lay an average of two eggs but can lay up to three or four.  The eggs will not be laid all at the same time; there will be a couple days in between each egg being laid.
Once the eggs have been laid the parents will immediately start incubating them.  Both the male and female will sit on the eggs.  This will be done for a total of about 35 days.  After the 35 days the eggs will start to hatch and than the real fun begins for the parents.
Depending on the region will depend on the time of year the eggs are laid.  Birds from the southern part of the United States already have young that are or close to being full grown and fledging at this time.  Way in the northern extremes of the United States eggs may not have even been laid yet.  In the Midwest eagles will start laying eggs from late February through March, but this is all very weather dependant.
 
Stayed tuned for the next topic…


Bridget Befort
 
National Eagle Center
Program Specialist

How do they make that nest?

One of the most fascinating aspects of this up close and personal view from the nest cam, is the chance to get a good look at the nest itself. From our vantage point on the ground, most of what we see looks like a giant ball of sticks up in the tree. But, a closer look reveals that an eagle’s nest, or eyrie (the word for the high nest of a bird of prey), is actually a complex structure.

The first thing the eagle needs to do when they are ready ---is choose the right tree. Not just any tree can hold up a structure that might weigh several hundred pounds, and in some cases more than a ton! So the eagles need to choose a sturdy tree, and in that tree find just the right spot that will be strong enough to hold the nest for many years.

Here in southern Minnesota, most often bald eagle’s nests are in cottonwood trees. They are the tallest trees in our river valley forests. Up north, where you might see an eagles nest on a lake, eagles prefer the white pines – again the tallest, largest trees in that northern forest. Where ever they choose, eagles are looking for a place with a great view and plenty of food nearby.

Next, the eagles begin building the nest, stick by stick. The first sticks are quite large, as they form the base of what will become a massive structure. Now these aren’t just any old sticks lying around. The eagles actually grab them off the trees, by flying full force, and snapping them off with their powerful talons!  

If that’s not impressive enough, then they often fly with these sticks in their talons, while doing aerial acrobatics. One eagle might drop the stick, and their mate swoops down to catch it in mid-air! So, they’re not just working on the making a nest, they eagles are also getting to know one another. They are showing off their strength and skills. They want to prove that they are fit and ready to provide for the coming eaglets.

They continue weaving in sticks into the crotch of the tree, and into the existing frame of sticks. In the first year, a nest might be 5-6 feet in diameter and 1-2 feet high. But each year as the pair returns to use the nest again, they will go through many of these same displays, and add on a foot or more of sticks, creating a larger and larger nest each year.  The largest eagle’s nest – one that had been used for decades – was more than nine feet across, an more than 20 feet deep!

Once they have created the stick structure, they begin working on the interior. They will line the inside of the nest with smaller twigs and grass. These soft materials to make a nice bed for incubating the eggs. They eagles will continue adding to the nest – both soft material inside and sticks around the outside, until the female is ready to lay eggs.  … Which will bring us to another upcoming blog topic … so stay tuned!

Eileen
Program Specialist

NationalEagleCenter.org

Wabasha, MN

651-565-4989

nationaleaglecenter@gmail.com

Greetings from the National Eagle Center bloggers

Greetings fellow wildlife fanatics, my name is Scott Mehus and I am the Education Director at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha Minnesota.  I will be one of the employees from the National Eagle Center that will be helping to blog about these magnificent bald eagles who we get watch raise thier young. 

 We were asked to do this last year, but many of you probally know about  the Great-horned Owl family who took over the nest, so I asked a good friend of mine named Karla to blog instead, as she is the areas leading authority on owls.  We are thankfull that MN Bound asked us to help out again, and that they recognize us as a leading authority on eagles.   We at the NEC have just finished up on our SOAR festival which took place each of the weekends in March so we will now hopefully have more time to share with you some cool things about eagles.  BUT, we will also rely on you, those that are watching the cam often to get us all engaged in a discussion on what you are observing. Lets have fun and learn some cool stuff, and remember these eagle cams are a new thing and so what we observe is very important to document.  Researcher in the past did not have the kind of technology that we have today, nor was there  funding to have a researcher sit near a nest round the clock such as we are now able to do, so lets have fun being researchers!!

 

NationalEagleCenter.org

Wabasha, MN

651-565-4989

nationaleaglecenter@gmail.com

Love is in the air

Love is definitely in the air for eagles.  To be precise it is probably not love the way we humans and maybe even primates know love, but it is definitely the time to procreate and put your genes into the gene pool, if you are an eagle!  The courtship season actually started over a month ago for many of the eagles in the area.  I usually tell the visitors here at the National Eagle Center in Wabasha that courtship for eagles in our area starts on February 15th, which is a great time to start courtship as there are lots of specials on Valentine cards and chocolates then. Seriously though, that is a great way to remember when bald eagle courtship is usually starting in our area.  For this is when the eagles will be returning to the nests in the southern half of Minnesota and Wisconsin.  If they are returning to an already established nest one of the first things they may do is a courtship behavior called cartwheeling.  Where the pair will fly several hundred feet or more above the nest, when the female is above the male he will then turn on his back in midair and reach up and grab the females talons, lock talons and then they will plummet in cartwheel fashion until almost hitting the ground, then unleash, and then often going up to great heights and doing it again.  Why do this risky (note, risky not frisky) behavior, because it can be fatal for both of them if they do not unleash at the right time.  It is primarily thought to be a pair bond exercise or could it be an engagement in a playful flirtation, a dalliance?

Unfortunately for us voyeurs watching the eagle cams we will miss this part of the eagle courtship, but maybe that is alright as there are something’s that you just have to see in person to really appreciate and understand.  After all, we will be seeing some very cool things right in the nest over the next couple of months and all of us here at the National Eagle Center look forward to answering your questions on what is going on.

Do not to forget to tell your friends about this cool opportunity to watch first hand, our nation’s symbol, continuing to increase in numbers.

Scott Mehus

NationalEagleCenter.org

Wabasha, MN

651-565-4989

nationaleaglecenter@gmail.com

Welcome to the 2011 Bald Eagle Blog!

This blog will be a source of knowleadge regarding everything Bald Eagle related.  The great folks at the National Eagle Center have taken on the role as our expert bloggers for the 2011 Live Eagle Cam.  Their wealth of information is gauranteed to make this an enjoyable experience throughout the entire nesting period.  Please feel free to ask any question or post about a topic you wish for them to discuss.  After all, they are the experts!