SNAP*Shot: Surprised by Bald Eagles

It started the other morning as I opened my kitchen curtains. At least 12 pair of Mallards frantically taking off out of the creek right by my home. I know curtain movement can scare them, but they were at the wrong angle to see these curtains. Ah . . .suddenly a Bald Eagle flew low over my house. That will definitely scare them! But now the geese are acting up and leaving too.

Poured my coffee, settled in my chair for a nice early morning wide-open back yard view. WOW, I did not expect to see this!

Although Bald Eagles’ nature is to mate for life, they perform courtship rituals annually to stimulate their bonding hormones reinforcing their lifelong bond. Both mom and pop eagle incubate the one to three eggs which hatch in about 35 days. Eaglets leave the nest when 10-12 weeks old, but depend on and learn from their parents for another 6 weeks.

Female eagles are larger than the males. This allows them to better protect their nests and young. It takes about five years for a juvenile eagle to be fully mature with adult coloring of white head and tail.

Eagles build nests larger than most any bird, up to 8-feet wide and 13-feet deep. The pair will build the nest or repair one they built in the past. Nests are often repaired and reused for many years, some ultimately weighing 2 tons.

Of the two visitors, the eagle sitting higher in the cottonwood is larger, the female. She stayed about two hours!

Eagles are excellent fishers and that is their preferred food, but will eat almost anything including carrion. I watched an eagle flying around a lake full of small diving ducks. Eagle would swoop down, ducks would dive, but 40 minutes into the action the eagle made a catch. They also steal fish from the talons of osprey and other eagles in flight. One reason Benjamin Franklin did NOT want the eagle to be the U.S. emblem. “He is a Bird of bad moral Character. He does not get his Living honestly.” These days the eagle may be the perfect emblem . . . . sigh. Well, I still like the bird, not so much the rest.

There is something about being watched by an eagle that’s a bit unsettling. This male left after about 45 minutes but certainly had me pegged through the picture window!

This is one special way to start the day! Until next time my friend, slow down and look up . . .

Beauty, Diversity, Partnerships Commingle at Ninepipes

We only have one day to explore Ninepipes National Wildlife Refuge. The weather is not too promising, but such is spring in Montana. Over the course of the day we may see sun, then rain, then sun, then clouds. An ever-changing landscape, but the birds are consistent. Waterfowl, songbirds, and raptors alike are nesting and beginning to raise their next generation.

We are 18 miles south of Flathead Lake, the largest natural freshwater lake west of the Mississippi in the lower 48 states, with over 200 square miles of water and 185 miles of shoreline. The refuge sits in the Mission Valley with the Mission Mountains east and the Salish Mountains west, but the center of our attention is the 1,672 acre lake in the middle of the refuge surrounded by many smaller ponds.

Entrance to Ninepipes is right across the road from the Lodge. You can see a bit of light above the grass line which is the lobby/restaurant entrance. Let’s explore a while before breakfast. It is a bit before 6am and the birds are calling as the sky brightens. Let’s see what surprises we find at sunrise!

Mission Mnts sunrise

So much to see . . .