Wabasha, MN
651-565-4989
Eagle Blog
The Bald Eagle blog for the best EagleCam on the net!
Wabasha, MN
651-565-4989
While walking by the National Eagle Center classroom the other day I overheard two older ladies discussing where they were going to sit for the educational and eagle feeding program. The one was adamant that they sit in the front row so they could see everything so much more closely, but the other lady shook her head and said something that I just had to chuckle at. She said that she had been watching the bald eagle web cam one day and that while watching she saw one of the birds stand up in the middle of the nest, cock it’s tail straight up and then it SHOT out it’s poop! That poop must have been projected like twelve feet, so there is no way that I am sitting in a front row where they will be bringing in one of those eagle s into the classroom!!!
It is true! Eagles and many species of raptors are able to shoot their poop, maybe not 12 feet as the lady suggested, but I have firsthand seen it shot (falconers use the word “slice” and what is sliced, they call a mute) over six feet. I suppose that I should not have used the word poop in this blog writing, with a wide variety of people reading this (possibly) that I should have instead said, poop and pee! We all must realize that when a bird poops it also pees. I remember that not too long ago there was a very popular kid’s book that was titled “Everyone Poops”, but for little birdies the correct tittle of their book would have to be “Everyone Poops and Pees at the Same Time”.
You see we mammals have a spot or opening for our poop (fecal material) and a spot for our pee (urine), but birds (and some other creatures, try to think who they may be) have just one opening called the cloaca. You may hear the term vent used occasionally, but it is basically the spot where the concentrated uric acid and the fecal material leave the body as waste at the same time. You may have occasionally heard the term “whitewash” being used and this refers to the rather viscous white fluid that makes up the urine portion of the mute and the dark stuff in the middle is the fecal material. Birds excrete far less urine than do mammals which helps to conserve water so what is released is concentrated uric acid and when it dries it forms a chalky white substance that we tend to see on our cars.

Yeah, why is it that the birds tend to poop and pee on our cars? When many species of birds such as an American Robin brings back food to the nest, they will first distribute the food that they brought with them to their young, they will then take their beaks and put it near the babies vent, the nestling will then excrete a fecal sac which the parent bird will gently place in their beak and fly away with it. They will then drop it on any one of the following things: your car, bird bath, bald man’s head, driveway or sidewalk!! Before we talk about why they choose those locations when there are lots of other good places to drop those bombs, we need to first understand what a fecal sac is. A fecal sac is a gelatinous sac filled with the poop and pee; it is kind of like a water balloon, but not filled with water. So why do they choose those locations? Is it because they can? The main reason that the bird wants to remove the fecal sac from the nest and the nest area is so that it does not build up and let predators know that there are vulnerable young near by to snack on. Ideally the parent bird wants to drop the fecal sac into water because the water will literally “flush” it away and it will not then build up in one location near the nest. Well most all those things look shimmery and look like water (remember the bald mans head) so appear to be the aquatic place to drop the bomb. Most people can see the connection with the shimmery thing like the car but what about the sidewalk, it does not necessarily shimmer in the sun. To understand, we have to think like a bird and imagine ourselves flying over a sidewalk, a sidewalk that has grass or trees on either side. To the bird about to drop the bomb, this looks like a stream coursing through the forest. It may not be a stream, but to the bird that may be in a hurry to get the bomb out of its mouth it is a good enough spot. We all may have had an experience when we had something in our mouth that we did not want in there and were very quick to disperse that from our mouths, I can only imagine that it would not be very great to have a fecal sac in your mouth, even if it did come from your own child! Now that you all know of this, you now understand why that lady did not want to sit in the front row when they were going into the education room at the National Eagle Center, and you now know where you will not sit when you visit the National Eagle Center! Seriously though, the shooting of the mute is primarily done at the nest site, so please do not let what you now know prevent you from visiting the National Eagle Center, your safe, but if you still don’t trust me, just bring your raincoat.
We also should note that the cloaca is also where contact is made between the male and female for the transfer of sperm. This is what scientists call a cloacal kiss(it is essentially like two human lips coming together as most male birds do not have a developed penis for insertion), and it is indeed a quick kiss and meeting of the two bird’s cloacas. When this happens with a raptor like an eagle the male must clench his fists together before landing on the females back for the cloacal kiss otherwise he will hurt the female. After fertilization has taken place, the egg will also pass through the vent as well.
Scott A. Mehus
Education and Eagle Research Director
NATIONAL EAGLE CENTER
What on earth are those baby eaglets eating? It sure does look gross and unappetizing, but to those eaglets it is like a gourmet meal.
Bald Eagles are a Fish or Sea Eagle so a big portion of their diet is going to end up being fish. That is why many of these birds are nesting or have a territory near some type of body of water. But these birds are really great at conserving the most energy possible. We really like to call them opportunistic hunters, which means they like to get the easiest meals possible. This can mean they will eat already dead or catch already injured prey. These are raptors though and would have no problem taking live prey, if the opportunity presents itself. So there can be a number of different types of prey getting brought back to this nest to help sustain these little eaglets.
Like you learned last week there is a size difference between the male and female eagle. This will come in handy to help keep the diet for the young very healthy and keep a variety of prey coming into the nest. A smaller, quicker male will be able to catch faster, smaller prey like maybe rabbits and squirrels. The larger female would be able to carry large fish and maybe a variety of waterfowl. These are just some of the many types of prey that the parents can bring back to the nest.
Once the food is brought back to the nest the parent that is feeding the young will carefully ball up their feet to make sure everyone stays safe and then will rip and tear to make small very dainty pieces of food and give it to whatever beak pops up first.
In between feeding the young the parents will also take advantage to taste the days catch every now and then. When eagles eat they generally are eating whole pieces of flesh, bone,scales, and maybe some fur or feathers. These birds have the ability to digest all the bones of what they eat becasue of very strong acidic juices in the stomach. This is how they end up getting a good amount of calcium. The only thing that would be unable to be digested completly would be fur or feathers. If after eating prey with fur or feathers within about 12-18 hours after they are done eating they will cough up or cast what is called a pellet. Pellets are just compacted bundles, shaped into ovals, of indigestable material formed in the stomach and covered with mucus. Owls are another raptor that cast these pellets, but an owl pellet looks just a little different becasue they are unable to digest the bone material of their prey. Pellets from an owl are pretty interesting becasue you are able to actually tear apart owl pellets and put together the bones to get an idea of what that owl had for lunch the day before.
Below are some photos to show the differences between the owl and eagle pellet.
So if you are every asked to have an afternoon lunch with your neighboring eagle family you might want to pass because there will for sure be no salt, pepper, or even ketchup. Also you might find everything a little on the rare side for your liking.
Enjoy!!
Bridget Befort
National Eagle Center
Program Specialist
50 Pembroke Ave
Wabasha, MN 55981
bridget@nationaleaglecenter.org
651-565-4989 ext 105
Wabasha, MN
651-565-4989
Hatch day is coming!! Here at the National Eagle Center we use Earth day to advance the ages of all our eagles. Several or our eagles were hatched in Wisconsin sometime in April, so Earth Day seemed like a good day to utilize for hatch day parties. In fact we have a very special hath day happening at the NEC this year, Harriet the eagle will be turning 30 years old!! We hope to have a nice hatch day party for her with lots of hatch day cake, hatch day cupcakes, and we will all wear hatch day hats and put up lots of hatch day balloons. We will also be sure to give her lots of hatch day presents. If you are interested in giving Harriett a hatch day present you will probably be wondering about her size. Well her favorite size, of fish, is one that is about six inches long and weighs about half a pound, this size typically works for a rat as well. Speaking of hatching let us talk a little about that process.
The eagle egg is very similar in size to a goose’s egg. The egg weighs about 144 grams which is about 5 ounces. Its shape is similar to a chicken egg and it is an off white to ivory in color and occasionally has some faint blotches of brown, but very different from a golden eagles egg, which has many blotches and streaks of ruddy brown. Bald eagles will typically lay two to three eggs and in southern Minnesota and Wisconsin, they are usually laid by the first week of March. Egg laying in the Northern sections of these states will typically take place in mid to late March.
The eggs will hatch in the order they were laid, because as soon as the first egg is laid the eagle will begin incubation of that egg and then a day to several days later she will lay the next egg, but because she began incubation right away, they will hatch at different times. This is very different from the American Robins that our now returning to our area. The female robin will lay an egg, then leave the nest, come back the next day, and lay another egg; she will do this process until the last egg has been laid, it is then that she will begin incubation of the eggs. This will mean that the baby robins will all hatch at approximately the same time. When the parents bring back food to the nest the robin parents will feed the babies equally, this will be very different from the way the eaglets will be fed, but that will deserve another paragraph later on, for now let’s get back to taking about the eggs.
Eaglets break through the shell by using their egg tooth, which is a pointed bump on the top of the beak, this process is called pipping. It can take from twelve to fifty hours to hatch after making the first break in the shell (pipping). During this process, you will observe the parent eagle seem like she is aware that this is going on beneath her. She may be able to feel this process going on but she can also hear some of the pipping process as well. Once the eggs begin to hatch, the female's vigilance becomes nearly constant. When the pipping process starts, food is occasionally brought to the nest as if in preparation for the forthcoming hatching. Newly hatched, eaglets are soft looking and have grayish-white down that covers their small bodies. At this stage, they have small wobbly legs that are too weak to hold their weight. The eyes are partially closed with little vision at this stage, especially compared to what their eyesight will be like as an adult. At this young age the chicks are very vulnerable and will rely on round the clock care from their parents Early on the female will be doing most of the care at the nest while the male will provide most of the food for the rapidly growing family. Eventually the female will take up her share of the hunting.
The Eagles will bring back whole pieces of prey back to the nest and use their sharp beaks like a knife and fork to rip and tear the prey into smaller pieces of meat. The eagle parent will gently coax her tiny chick to take a morsel of meat from her beak. It is amazing how dexterous the eagle can be with this massive beak. She will offer food repeatedly, eating rejected morsels herself, and then tearing off another piece for the eaglet.
I think some of the most fun for us eagle cam watchers will be to see what types of food they will bring back to the nest. We know that the bald eagle belongs to the fish or sea eagle family (Haliaeetus) and most members of this family (8 worldwide) live near aquatic habitats and feed primarily on fish. We at the National Eagle Center like to call bald eagles opportunistic predators, as yes they do feed a lot on fish, but will take advantage of a wide variety of prey. I have seen eagles chase and kill live rabbits, muskrats, snakes, ducks, coots, but I have also seen them feeding on carrion (dead animals) along the river or along the side of the road, so they are going to take advantage of whatever prey they have the “opportunity” to catch. Speaking of whatever opportunities they can catch, a, local family in Kenyon Minnesota reportedly almost lost their seven-pound toy poodle to an opportunistic bald eagle that grabbed the dog from along a creek and lifted the dog high into the air. The excess weight and the struggling of the dog forced the eagle to drop Peanuts the poodle to the ground. After some veterinary care to suture eight puncture wounds, the dog has lived to tell its harrowing tale to all its friends down at the local fire hydrant! I do want to state that this is a very rare event and the reports of bald eagle nests with dozens of cat and dog collars in them are just not true in my opinion. Everyone who has ever told me a story about all the collars found in a nest have not ever been able to back up the stories with photos or any other kind of proof, but it does make for a good story, A STORY.
So let us watch the nest and see what the eagles are bringing back for lunch.
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
Ron Schara, and his trusted black lab, Raven, began sharing stories of the outdoor lifestyle back in 1995. Minnesota Bound is the show that started it all for Ron Schara and he quickly found a passion for putting his words onto the television screen. Today, it remains a trademark program and is now running over 600 episodes strong. We seek characters that have a story to tell. We seek out destinations and find out what makes them special. We share the love of outdoors and those that enjoy it. Yes, it's fishing and hunting, but it's also camping, hiking, canoeing, archery, bird watching, ice climbing and so much more. Minnesota Bound is a fan favorite winning several hundred OWAA awards during its lifespan, including 11 Emmy Awards.
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