Saying Goodbye for the Season
Posted by Lisa in Eagle Cam, Eagle Cam Video, Eaglets, FledgingEaglets thirteen weeks old
We have a few last videos to share of our 2009 eaglets — Chesapeake and Choptank — and we’ll use this post to wrap up our web log for the 2009 season, since the eaglets are now rarely at the nest. Please note that although we’re ending the web log, the cam will be staying online for the time being, and the gallery will remain open as long as the cam is online. Also, we might have one or two more videos from the last batch of tapes from the Refuge — if we do, we’ll put them on our Blackwater YouTube Channel and post a note on the cam page.
But before we get to the videos, I wanted to share a photo that we came across recently that gives a unique perspective to our eagle fans. For those who watched our Eagle Cam during the last month, you know we often saw the eaglets sitting at the very edge of the nest together, and we wondered what they were doing. Maryland photographer Skip Conover recently took a photo of an eagle nest in Annapolis, Maryland, and his photo shows us what our own eaglets were likely doing. [The nest is a former osprey nest and is in close proximity to a couple homes.] In Skip’s photo we see the two eaglets are sitting near the edge of the nest because the parent is perched nearby on a branch. So when our eaglets seemed fascinated by something near the nest (but out of our view), it was likely one of the adults! Thanks to Skip for this interesting photo from his local nest.
Final Videos
To view the videos below, left-click on the video link to open in Windows Media Player or right-click the link and choose “Save Link As” to download. And remember that these videos are also available on our Blackwater YouTube Channel.
In the first video below we see the eaglets at almost six weeks of age. The father eagle has just flown in with a fish (which was still flapping a bit), and begins to eat it. The mother eagle then flies in and takes the fish from the father. The father (convinced he’s lost his meal) flies off, and the mother begins feeding Choptank.

In the second video, we see a scene not too long after the first video where the father brings in another fish. This time he offers some food to Chesapeake, but eventually the mother decides she should be in charge of feeding, so she takes the fish and begins feeding Choptank. If you look closely, you can see Choptank already has a bulging crop (on its chest), so the eaglet had already been recently fed. This was a good day for fish. :-)

In the final video, we see the eaglets at almost eight weeks old. In the opening scene, Chesapeake is tearing off some fish by herself while Choptank gets fed by the mother eagle. Then Chesapeake holds out her wings and gives us a great view of her impressive wingspan. And in the final segment, Chesapeake begins exercising her wings, and we can really see how much stronger the eaglets are here, since they’re only a few weeks from flying.

We want to thank all our cam watchers who followed our two chicks from the first day they entered the world (remember the snowstorm when we thought they wouldn’t survive!) up to the time they both successfully fledged. We were lucky to have had another great year here at the Blackwater Eagle Cam, and our streak of at least two healthy fledgling eaglets each year continues.
We also want to thank all those who sent in their photos and questions throughout the season. And finally we want to thank Tom Miller, our ranger, who kindly took on the duty of taping footage from the cam so we could put together these wonderful video clips.
The Eagle Cam will stay online for now, but at some point soon we’ll be taking it offline. As you can see, once the eaglets become airborne, they don’t spend a lot of time at the nest, and soon the only thing to see will be the occasional squirrel or rare eagle visit. But we will be back online in December for a new season, so we hope you’ll make plans to join us again at the end of the year.
Until December,
Lisa - webmaster
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Tags:
eagles, wildlife refuge, eagle cam, Blackwater Refuge, Maryland
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As our regular cam watchers can testify, our two eaglets — Chesapeake and Choptank — are spending less time at the nest now that they’ve become more skilled at flying. Next in line for our eaglets is developing their hunting and fishing skills, which will be the hardest abilities to master but will determine if they survive their first winter.
We hear from our Refuge gift store manager that on Saturday, she saw what definitely looked like an eaglet flying into the nest. We suspect this was Chesapeake, since the older bird was further along in its development than our younger eaglet, Choptank. In the last few days, we had noticed images on the cam showing one eaglet by itself, looking longingly out into the woods. So with Chesapeake and the parents flying, it should provide good motivation for Choptank to join them as soon as the young bird is ready.


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