Eaglets nine weeks old
Chesapeake (our older eaglet) and Choptank (our younger bird) have been doing a lot of branching lately, but we hear from the Refuge staff that there are no clear signs of flying yet. Eaglets normally fledge around 9-13 weeks of age, so if they had flown, it would have been a bit early.
Cam watchers have asked about their gender. We’re not sure because it’s been hard to get a good shot of them side by side (the one on the right is about the best we have), but we do think there is a chance that Chesapeake is a female (she looks longer) and Choptank is a male, but again we’re waiting for a good shot of them lying side by side before we can be sure.
Cam watchers have also asked about what will happen to the eaglets when they do finally fledge. Normally the first flight is a short one — maybe to a nearby tree where a parent is perched and then back to the nest. Very often the landing is the most difficult part of the first few flights. Eaglets may know instinctively how to fly, but landing is a skill that must be perfected. If you visit the wonderful site ARKive, you can see an interesting video of a white-tailed eaglet (a close cousin to our American bald eagle) flapping and then taking its first flight. At the end of the clip, we see the eaglet swimming (something bald eagles can do as well). It’s not clear, but perhaps the swimming was necessary because the eaglet accidentally landed in the water. :-)
In the book The Bald Eagle: Haunts and Habits of a Wilderness Monarch (by Jon Gerrard and Gary Bortolotti) the authors witnessed a bald eaglet’s bad landing near Bernard Lake in Saskatchewan, Canada:
“Flapping slowly but strongly, C2 cruised past the nest, banked toward shore, and crashed into the canopy of a tree. We could hear the slapping of wings against branches all the way to the blind. When it was over, C2 was hanging upside down from a limb and holding on with just one foot. From out of nowhere the adult male flew in, calling excitedly, and soon perched on a spruce directly above his clumsy offspring. The adult female took off from the nest, circled above C2, and joined in the chorus of cackles. C2, rather calmly, just hung there, occasionally looking from side to side. After three minutes, C2 released his grasp and crashed to the ground.”
The authors played the good samaritans and retrieved C2, placing him on a rock near the nest. When they returned the next day, he was perched in a smaller tree near his home nest and he sported a bulging crop, showing that the parents had recently fed him and he was fine.
Once our eaglets have fledged and practiced their landings for a while, they’ll soon be as graceful as their parents. But the eaglets (or new fledglings) won’t be independent just yet. Chesapeake and Choptank will come back to the nest occasionally during the weeks that follow, and we’ll likely see them on occasion into the month of July. The parents might meet them at the nest with a meal, or the eaglets might come back to sleep or just to rest for a bit. But eventually we’ll see less and less of them, and that will mean they’re becoming independent young raptors that no longer need a nest. At that point, Blackwater Refuge — and the Chesapeake Bay area — will be their home.
Immature bald eagles do not settle down right away — they won’t even get their adult plumage (white head and tail) until about 4 years of age — so in the meantime they’ll wander around, learning to hunt and having adventures as single eagles. They might even venture to locales up and down the Mid-Atlantic coast before coming back to the Chesapeake Bay area to seek out a mate and a potential nesting site when they’re about 4 or 5 years old.
If you’ve never been to Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge and you wonder what kind of habitat the eagles have to enjoy, here are four photos that offer a nice look at the Refuge. Blackwater NWR is home to one of the largest breeding populations of bald eagles in the United States, so our eaglets are very lucky that this is where they were born and where they can one day return again to raise their own families.




Until next time,
Lisa - webmaster
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eagles, wildlife refuge, eagle cam, Blackwater Refuge, Maryland
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At this stage, our older eaglet might be only a few weeks from its first flight. Normally eaglets fledge around 9-13 weeks of age, although we expect our younger eaglet won’t fledge until 10 or 11 weeks of age since its development fell a little behind during the bullying period. 


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