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2020 Eaglet Information Table

Last Updated February 1, 2021

Please let me know if you see something I missed!

the symbol ~ is used to mean about or approximately; the symbol ≤ is used to mean on or before
times are local time at the nest; gender with a ? means likely but not proven with blood tests

If the cam doesn't look into the nest bowl, the hatch date for the first eaglet is based on the behavior of the parents and that of subsequent eaglets is based partly on an assumption of about 3 days between hatchings and partly on the number of days between sighting of the first chick and sighting of subsequent chicks; nests may only be checked once a week after fledging, so the fledgling may have been around for several days after it was last seen on cam by us.

I use 35 days from the date the egg was laid as a time to begin to look for a hatch; the first egg often hatches 37-39 or even 40 days after it was laid; the middle egg of three is often 36-38 days; and the second of two or third of three is often 35-36 days - but 34-40 days is not unlikely, and 33-41 might be possible.

Please check About the Nests for more information about the history of the various pairs and pictures of the nests.

  Notes

1st egg likely

Eggs Laid Hatchings Fledgings Last Seen
on Cam

Alaska
Glacier Gardens
Juneau

Link

adults Liberty/Momma and Freedom/Poppa

next eaglet will be GG6

Liberty and Freedom are the official names of the adults, but Glacier Gardens uses Momma and Poppa on their website.
Update April 24 - Glacier Gardens announced they would not be streaming the cam because of the safety precautions in place due to covid-19; we wish the eagles - and people - well.

late Apr        

Alaska
Kenai

Link

Aurora (F) and Redoubt (M)

Denali
Spurr

The Kenai eagles used another nest in 2019, but happily this year they are back online!

Sad news - male Redoubt hasn't been seen since June 18, and on June 20, younger eaglet Spurr slipped from the nest, and sadly did not survive the fall. Rest in peace, little one.
As of July 3, Aurora and Denali are doing fine; there is a male in the area and Aurora is keeping him away from the nest.
August 19 - Denali slipped from a branch above the nest and landed on a branch 20 feet below the nest at 6:43 am; s/he fledged from that branch a few hours later.
Denali did not return to the nest, but local observers saw her with Aurora on August 20 and 21, so all appears to be well.

mid-Apr

Apr 22
6:03 pm

Apr 25
?

May 31
8:28 am
(39 days)

Jun 2
6:48 am
(38 days)

Aug 19
10:12 am
(80 days)

Denali
in nest
Aug 19
flying by
Aug 23

Aurora
Aug 18

British Columbia
Delta 2

Link

Ma Delta and Trooper

Sunny
Shadow

This is the first time Ma has laid 3 eggs; we've been watching them since 2011
Update July 2 - Sunny had an accidental fledge on July 1 - he was on a branch and and attempted to hop back to the nest and slipped, and ended up on the ground; experienced local observers found Sunny later that evening, and he was able to fly away from them but was not getting much height; unfortunately they were not able to catch him - and as of mid-afternoon on July 2, he has not returned to the nest and there have been no confirmed sightings by the zoomers or reports from rescuers who are out looking; keeping fingers crossed.
Update July 9 - Shadow had a similar slip on July 4, but was able to fly to a nearby tree, where s/he spent the night, returning to the nest the following day; sadly there has been no sign of Sunny, and knowing there are coyotes in the area, that story may not have a happy ending.
An interesting thought - one of the neighboring nests in the direction Sunny was heading was thought to have only one chick, and observers started seeing two youngsters there shortly after Sunny left the nest - so maybe...?

~Mar 3-28

Mar 1
5.39 pm

Mar 4
2:26 pm

Mar 7
7:04 pm

didn't hatch

Apr 11
4:00 am
(38 days)

Apr 12
4:12 am
(36 days)

accidental
Jul 1
7:09 pm
81 days

accidental
Jul 4
8:16 pm
83 days

Sunny
Jul 1

Shadow
Aug 1
10:11 am
111 days

Ma
Aug 2
5:53 am

Trooper
Aug 2
7:30 am

British Columbia
Harrison Mills

Link

Dad (2018's New Dad) and Lady
(official names Duffer & Dimple, or Mr & Mrs D)

The pair prepared a lovely nest, and spent time there, but didn't lay any eggs.

Mar 24 - Apr 4
(mid-April in 2018)
     

Lady
Jul 25
5:23 am

Dad
Aug 6
6:10 am

British Columbia
Hornby Island

Link

Mr Em and Em

Frankie
Zen

The second chick probably hatched a couple of days before it was seen - May 6 would be 36 days, May 9 is 39 days.

Update - October 6, 2020 - the nest tree was cut down October 5; there apparently was a permit, and parts of it may have been in danger of coming down; one of the adults was believed to be in the area a few days earlier.

new pair
Apr 11-21

Mar 28
5.13 pm

maybe
Mar 31
8:13 pm

May 5
<7:54 am
(37 days)

seen
May 9
3:21 pm

July 28
8:08 am
84 days

Aug 4
12:05 pm

 

British Columbia
Lafarge

no cam

Pa and Lady Lafarge
Pa and new female

Sadly, Lady disappeared during the 2019 nesting season (Pa did a great job and both of their chicks fledged successfully); local observers report seeing a new female with Pa in October - so keeping fingers crossed.

Mar 7-30?   2 chicks! both between
Jul 6 & 12
no one seen after
Jul 12

British Columbia
Sidney

back to
former nest in 2015, then another nest in 2016

no cam since 2011

Pa and Missy

This was a hard year for observers to get out to check on their nests; happily it looks as if the Sidney pair was successful.

Mar 1-22   2 chicks likely
mid-July
 

British Columbia
Surrey Reserve

Link

Sur (M) & Res (F)
(short for Surrey and Reserve)

SR3/Thor
SR4/Loki (F?)

By July 1st, both fledglings were coming and going from the nest; Loki flew off at 8:12 am, and may have done a quick fly-by at 12:40 pm - and then did not return for the night, and did not appear in the morning when the adults brought food; we learned that Loki was found the evening of July 1 danging from a power line about 300 yards from the nest, and the people who found him/her called OWL; they were able to capture Loki (after he demonstrated that he could still run and make hopping flights); they did not find any obvious injuries but will keep him/her for observation for 5-10 days in case he got a jolt from the power line since that can cause internal damage that is not immediately visible.
Loki was found to be healthy (and likely female, based on weight), and was released from OWL in Peace Arch Park (near the nest) on July 17; she did not return to the nest - but she was banded (blue band on her left leg with silver D over 3), and she was equipped with a tracker; her tracker code is BETA04 and you can follow here travels here. As of August 26, she was exploring the islands off the Alaskan Panhandle.

Mar 7

Feb 27
5:11 pm

Mar 1
6:19 pm

Apr 5
1:24 am
(38 days)

Apr 6
9:23 pm
(36 days)

Jun 28
10:18 am
84 days

Jun 28
8:15 am
83 days

Loki
Jul 17
heading north
Jul 20
105 days

Thor
Jul 19
9:07 pm
105 days

Res
Aug 14
5:30 am

Sur
Aug 14
5:39 am

British Columbia
White Rock

Link

Quebec

Only one egg hatched - no way to tell if it was the first or second. This may be the most unusual fledge I've ever seen; from the rollback on the cam, Quebec was sound asleep in the middle of the nest when he or she jumped up, ran to the edge and left; my guess is that something startled him/her - maybe a raccoon climbing the tree? We didn't hear anything on the cam, the adult who was probably nearby didn't call, no one subsequently came to the nest. Local observers have been looking for Quebec, but it's rough terrain with lots of trees - more suited to eagles than humans. The zoomers did see a young eagle at the beach who had similar coloring - so maybe....
Happy news - Quebec returned to the nest five days later, at 9:16 am on July 7! As of July 9, s/he is flying well, and has had several lovely meals delivered to the nest by the adults.

~Mar 6-25

Mar 10
6:10 pm

Mar 13
7:58 pm

Apr 18
10:52 am
(39 or 36 days)

other egg didn't hatch

Jul 2
3:07 am
75 days

Quebec
Jul 31
12:38 pm
104 days

Dad
Aug 1
6:20 am

Mom
in nest
Aug 2
1:47 pm
in area
Aug 5
11:14 am

California
Anacapa Island
Oak Canyon

no cam

A21(M) & A11(F)

They didn't nest at either of the known nests this year; the IWS team confirmed that the female is still A11 and what they could see of the male's leg band matched that of A21.

early March

       

California
Big Bear

Link

Shadow & Mrs BB ("Jackie")

Update March 14 - this very dedicated pair finally stopped incubating the evening of March 13 (day 65 & day 62), the day after a major snowstorm; Shadow returned to the nest around 11 am on March 14 and sat on the eggs for a few minutes before leaving; Mom Jackie was in a little later with a stick; I'm sorry there won't be chicks - but happy they are moving on.

early Jan

new pair
Mar 6

Jan 8
~5:34 pm

Jan 11
5:07 pm

no hatch    

California
Catalina Island
Empire Quarry

no cam

new pair - unknown male & K18/Solitaire(F)

The territory wasn't being used for a couple of years, and the former pair wasn't seen, and K18/Solitaire (Two Harbors 2011, nicknamed "Sassy") and her mate seemed to be settling there in 2019, though no chicks.

~Mar 17

 

     

California
Catalina Island
Middle Ranch

no cam

K08/Scout (M) & A37(F)

Concord (not banded)

2/18/20 - K08 seen on nest; lying on nest, but no egg rolls so likely no eggs yet;
chick looked pretty tiny in March 30 video

Feb 8 - mid-March

incubation confirmed Feb 21

one by
Mar 30
by
Jun 18
 

California
Catalina Island
Pinnacle Rock

no cam

adults K88/Muir (M) & maybe K56(F) (no tags visible)

Joraine (not banded)

2/18/20 - pair seen; no trail cam; chick on nest June 17, no one there July 2, so they assume successful fledge.

Feb 14 - Mar 3 2 eggs on
Mar 6
only 1 on
Apr 1
1 chick
early Apr?
by
Jul 2
 

California
Catalina Island
Rattlesnake Canyon

no cam

adults K80(M) and K47/Rae(F)
female K47 named Rae in 2020

2/18/20 - nest from last year partially collapsed and no birds seen, so they probably have a new nest
End of season report says they laid and lost 3 eggs, one in a first clutch, two in the second.

Feb 16 - Mar 17 3 eggs
(2 clutches)
no hatches    

California
Catalina Island
Seal Rocks

no cam

adults K25(M) ? & K32(F)/Shasta
(no wing tags after 2011)

young unbanded male & K32(F)/Shasta

2/18/20 update - nest with trail cam looks ready but not nesting yet
9/20/20 update - the pair used a different nest, but the trail cam confirmed that the female is still K32, and the male is a young, unbanded bird, maybe one of the 2016 Bald Canyon chicks from San Clemente

Feb 3? - Mar 5

late Mar

incubating 2 weeks past hatch date so
no hatches
   

California
Catalina Island
Twin Rocks

no cam

adults K00/Darwin(M) & K95(F)
male K00 named Darwin in 2020

Sam (not banded)

2/23/20 update - confirmed pair and seemed to be using nest with trail cam; no eggs yet;
7/27/20 - guess they had a chick because it was named in the Nest Adoption Contest

Feb 19 - Mar 6

Feb 19

Feb 23

1 chick
Mar 29
1 fledged
~Jun 14
 

California
Catalina Island
Two Harbors

Link

adults K81/Chase(M) and K82/Cholyn(F)

Champion

March 20 - sad news - one of the eggs broke; it looks as if it was non-viable or stopped developing early; no way to know which egg broke.
The hatch date doesn't help us know which egg was lost; I don't have statistics to prove it, but it's my impression that 38 days for a first egg is more frequent than 35 days for a second egg.
A quick review of the Channel Islands Eagle Lovers Facebook page shows that Champion visited the nest on August 22, and the adults had an undisturbed meal on the 28th; I didn't find any visits after the 22nd but may have missed one.

Feb 15 - Mar 2

Feb 27
10:12 pm

Mar 1
9:02 pm

Apr 5
1:58 pm
(38 or 35 days)
Jun 26
1:26 pm
82 days
Champion
Aug 21
138 days

California
Catalina Island
West End

Link

adults K01/"Superman"(M) & K91/Thunder(F)
adults A61/Akecheta(M) & K91/Thunder(F)

update January 1 - we may be seeing a change in adults - K01/Superman hasn't returned and K91/Thunder is being courted by A61/Akecheta (hatched in 2016 from the Los Pinos nest on Santa Cruz); when he first appeared in late November, K91 would immediately chase him away quite aggressively, but recently she has seemed more open to his advances - and K01 hasn't been seen since around Thanksgiving; K01 hatched in 2000, so will be 20 this year; something similar did happen in 2011 when K01 didn't return until January 13 and his mate had begun to accept a new male - and that time, K01 quickly chased off his young rival once he returned. So we shall see....
update February 21 - there's been no sign of K01/Superman, and Thunder and her new mate now have their first egg.
February 24 - sad news - new male A61 has not yet figured out the Dad thing - and because he hasn't learned to incubate yet, ravens ate both eggs while Mom Thunder was off the nest.
March 20 - more sad news - the new egg was left alone, and a raven got it; new Dad Akecheta arrived right afterwards, and may have seen the raven take it - but he is not quite 4 years old, so it's hard to say if this will trigger some protective instincts to kick in, or if he's just too young for that.
March 29 - drat - a raven got the final egg; young Dad had done a little incubating, but was not staying on the nest when Mom was away.
He has promise - and I'm hoping next year will be much better.

Feb 7 - Mar 14

Feb 20
4:15 pm

Feb 23
6:13 pm

2nd Clutch

Mar 18
2:52 pm

Mar 21
7:38 pm

     

California
Lake Casitas
Ojai

no cam

Note - I am adding this nest because what happened here this year was very unusual - the female was injured in an attempted nest takeover shortly before their eaglet hatched; the intruding female disappeared the day after the hatch - and a young female appeared a few hours later and became a foster mom to the eaglet.
Big thanks to the Lake Casitas Eagles facebook group for the great documentation!

original adults CF1 & CM1
first seen in fall 2010; tried to breed in 2012 but may have been too young; fledged 2 chicks in 2013 (C1 & C2) and 1 in 2014 (C3).

In 2015, a female intruder took over the nest from CF1 and removed the two hatchlings (C4 & C5); the female who became CF2 was K97/Joy, a 2009 eaglet from the IWS West End nest; this was a very bittersweet year as observers mourned the loss of CF1 and her chicks, while those of use who had watched Joy grow on cam were pleased to know she survived and was successfully doing what eagles do.

adults CF2 (K97/Joy) and CM1
The new pair fledged 2 chicks in 2016, 1 in 2017, 2 in 2018, and 1 in 2019 (C6 - C11)

2020 was another year of change. CF2/K97 and CM1 produced at least 1 egg, but as time for hatching approached, another female tried to take over the nest and was identified as A54, a 2015 eaglet from the IWS Fraser Point nest. The two females were seen fighting on March 23rd and K97 was seen for the last time at the nest on March 24; she was rescued March 30, but her wounds were too serious, and she died on April 5. In the meantime, a second female without tags was seen around 4 pm on March 28; A54 had been at the nest a few hours earlier, and has not been seen since then.
Eaglet C12 hatched on March 27, and we feared the intruding female would kill the chick - but there was a bit of a miracle - on April 2, the young female without tags (estimated to be 4 years old) was seen on the nest while the male fed a chick - and ate some food but did not threaten the chick. They began acting like a bonded pair - and the new female became a foster mother to the eaglet. The observers named the new female Hannah in honor of photographer John Hannah, a member of the observer group who died of cancer on April 2, and named eaglet C12 Bundle of Joy in honor of his/her mother K97/Joy. Within a week or so Hannah was bringing food, feeding and brooding the eaglet, and apparently spending the night on the nest, as females usually do.

    Mar 27 Jun 29
94 days
Bundle and Foster Mom Hannah still there as of August 29
(154 days/
22 weeks)

California
San Clemente Island
Bald Canyon

Link

adults K76/Tuqan(M) & A32/Chinook(F)

Quinn (unbanded)
Dakota (unbanded)

New nest this year; the usual IWS team can't visit the island, but a boat survey team saw an adult on the nest April 27, so they are likely incubating or have young chicks; as of June 1st there were two fairly large chicks.

Mar 7 - 12 incubating 2 chicks    

California
Santa Cruz Island
Baby's Harbor
(aka Lady's Harbor)

no cam

adults A68/Braveheart(M) & A27/Meemaw(F)
female A27 named Meemaw in 2020

as of 2/27/20, both seen in territory but not nesting yet; there was a trail cam but it couldn't be recovered in 2020 so no additional info at end of year.

         

California
Santa Cruz Island
Cueva Valdez
(aka Hazards or North Shore pair)

no cam

adult M(untagged/banded - maybe A00 lost his?) & A98(F)
(Malibu/Pelican Harbor or Glory/Fraser Point - both tagged A98 in 2014)

as of 2/27/20, old nest not being used; no report of new nest

 

~Mar 13-17        

California
Santa Cruz Island
Fraser Point

Link

adults A64(M)/Spirit & A49(F)/Cruz

The pair moved to a new nest, so no cam for 2020, just occasional reports from the IWS team.

Feb 1-28 incubating as of
Feb 29
     

California
Santa Cruz Island
Fry's Harbor

no cam

adults A46(M)/Stephen Jr. & unbanded female

new nest close to the coastline for 2020 - unfortunately not the one with a trail cam so no additional info.

early Mar likely
incubating as of
Feb 27
     

California
Santa Cruz Island
Los Piños

no cam

unknown male & A51(F)
A-45 was with A51 at Willows so it might be him

 

This territory was previously known as Smugglers Harbor or Cove - but there's now a pair nesting nearer the actual harbor, so it's been renamed as Los Piños
As of 2/26/20, no activity in former nest, and trail cam images showed the nest wasn't used in 2020; no new nest was found before the surveys ended.

 

Feb 4 - early Mar        

California
Santa Cruz Island
Malva Real
(aka
Carl Peak,
Carl/Maggie, Grasslands)

no cam

adults
A71(M)/Sauces Canyon 2010 & A35(F)
K11(M)/Xman & A71(F)/Sauces Canyon 2010

2/25/20 update - no activity at nest with trail cam; he found the pair so they're not nesting yet - usually nest mid-March
12/15/20 update - IWS has recovered the trail cam they placed on this nest - and they successfully raised a chick! But the bigger news is that A71 is indeed one of the adults here - and the blood test was wrong - she is a female (as Dr. Sharpe originally thought), not a large male! So she likely replaced female A35 in late 2016 or early 2017 - and the male here is K11, who we thought had been replaced by A71 - what a wild ride!
From the IWS summary for 2021 - K-11, aka Xman, hatched at the Avian Conservation Center at the San Francisco Zoo and was fostered into the West End nest on Catalina in 2001. He was originally paired with A-04 (2005-2008) then with A-17 in 2010 (nest failed.) Paired with A-35 (2011-2017) then with A-71 ( 2017-2020)

Feb 5 - Apr 5

Mar 9

Mar 13

(one egg disappeared
~Mar 27)

1 chick
confirmed
Apr 18
fledged
~July 11
 

California
Santa Cruz Island
Pelican Harbor

no cam

adults K10(M) & K26/Nakoma(F)

12/15/20 update - when the IWS team recovered the trail cam, they found that the nest had been partially destroyed - which is why the pair moved to a new nest - and we don't know if they were successful there.

Feb 24 - Mar 8        

California
Santa Cruz Island
Sauces

Link

adults A40/Jak(M) & A48/Audacity(F)

A sad start to the season - their first egg broke immediately after Audacity laid it. No clue why, but this pair seems to have more issues with soft-shelled eggs than other pairs on Santa Cruz - maybe more contamination in their hunting territory?
More sad news - the second egg broke about 3 hours after it was laid. And the third egg broke between midnight and 1:30 am, so 9-10 hours after it was laid.
Fourth egg lasted about 3-1/2 days - but also broke/collapsed early on March 11.

Jan 31-
Mar 2

Feb 21
4:47 pm

Feb 29
3:38 pm

Mar 4
3:04 pm

Mar 7
~1:30 pm

     

California
Santa Cruz Island
Smuggler's Harbor

no cam

A58(M) & ?

new territory for 2018 - closer to the harbor than the territory that was called Smugglers and is now being called Los Piños
2/26/20 update - last year's nest fell from tree; no activity seen there during survery

 

Feb 4 - early Mar

 

     

California
Santa Cruz Island

new pairs

no cam

possible pairs - haven't nested yet
adding them here to keep track of who is who

Yellowbanks - A21(M) is now at Anacapa and A48(F) is at Sauces) - so this may be an open territory

 

       

California
Santa Rosa Island
Lopez

no cam

adults A69(M)/Malik & A43(F)(lost wing tags)

Justice (not banded)

Feb 6 2021 trail cam update - there were two chicks but both died, one at one month old (Apr 15) and the other at two months old (May 4), both from unknown causes.

Feb 8 - early March

Feb 2

Feb 6

Mar 10

Mar 13

   

California
Santa Rosa Island
Sandy Point
Mud Tank

no cam

New pair found nesting on the ground; one has wing tags, but not identified as of 2/12/20; male might have hatched from Grasslands/Malva Real nest in 2006 - which was a ground nest (my records show the 2006 chick was A60)
The territory originally known as Sandy Point was renamed as Mud Tank in 2020.

Feb 8 - early March

  the park service saw a chick
June 8
   

California
Santa Rosa Island
Trap Canyon
(aka Verde)

no cam

adults A08(M) & A22(F)

Erin (not banded)

The pair used a new nest for 2020; initial reports said there were two chicks but end of the year summary only mentioned one.

Feb 17 - early March

  1 chick
seen
Apr 12
seen on July 20 so likely fledged  

California
Turtle Bay
Redding
(aka CalTrans)

working on cam

adults Guardian (M) & Liberty (F)

Hope

Incubation switch seen February 12; feeding seen March 22
A second eaglet was clearly seen peeking out of the nest on April 12 - and hasn't been seen again; we suspect it hatched a couple of days after the first chick, and have no idea what happened; rest in peace, little one.
Because there isn't a camera and the eagles move around, it's hard to be sure when exactly they left; by July 16 it was very hot, and local observers thought it likely that they had left.

Feb 3 - Feb 15

≤Feb 12

≤Mar 22
(~39 days)

?Mar 25?

Jun 17
87 days
all 3
July 7;
maybe another week?

Colorado
Fort St. Vrain

Link

male has one band, female has two bands

FSV41
FSV42

Xcel stopped streaming the cams to conserve bandwidth for essential functions - but they can still see the cam in their breakroom, and they shared a picture of two tiny chicks and an egg on March 31; that would be day 39 for the third egg - so it's likely there will only be two chicks. Based on hatch dates provided by the utility, I am guessing it's the first egg that didn't hatch.
Sad news - there was a bad spring snowstorm, and as of April 21, there is only one chick (there were still two as of April 15); I'm guessing it's the younger who was lost, though we have no way of knowing.
The last picture I found was June 1, with the remaining eaglet looking great! I found a post saying the eaglet fledged successfully, but could not find the pictures that might have provided an approximate date.

Feb 12 - Mar 6

Feb 14
5:55 pm

Feb 17
5:41 pm

Feb 21
6:39 pm

(cams off)

no hatch

Mar 26
(38 days)

Mar 29
(37 days)

yes  

Colorado
Standley Lake

Link

Dad and Mom (thru 4/6/20)
Dad and F420 (4/22/20 - )

This is turning into a challenging year here - a female intruder began attacking the nest on the afternoon of April 6 (day 36 for the first egg); an adult with injuries was seen on the morning of April 7 but it's not clear if it was the resident female or the intruder; as of April 12 the resident female has not been seen or found and the male is incubating the eggs by himself and defending the nest as best he can from the "floater" (a more polite name for a nestless eagle who is trying to find a nest and mate). We weren't sure if the eggs were damaged by the series of fights at the nest - but at least one has now hatched; the male brought food to the nest and ate some (too soon to feed the chick) - and the floater female came in and claimed the rest of it.
Sad but not unexpected news - the chick died on April 14, probably in its sleep from a combination of cold and lack of food; rest in peace, little one.
Dad stopped incubating the remaining eggs shortly after the chick died, and he and the new female began to become comfortable with each other; they mated on April 22 and then did some work on the nest, beginning to develop a pair bond; park staff are calling the new female F420.

Feb 24

Mar 1
4:17 pm

Mar 4
~6:40 pm

Mar 7
11:30 pm

no hatch

seen
Apr 12
2:02 pm
(39 or 36 days)

   

Dist of Columbia
Nat'l Arboretum
Washington

Link

adults Mr President (M) & The First Lady (F)
an American Eagle Foundation nest

Need more research - No eggs this year; there's a detailed event log for this nest (link) but I have not found a summary and have not made the time to read through the daily diary; I believe The First Lady was not seen for part of the nesting season (and I know they were pestered by other eagles from time to time). While Mr P was back by mid-August (on and off), the first reasonably confirmed sighting of TFL was October 7.

Feb 10-19

Mar 25 in 2018

 

   

TFL
May 24

MrP
Jun 30

Dist of Columbia
Police Academy
Washington

Link

adults Justice (M) & Liberty (F)
adults ? (M) & Liberty (F)
sponsored by Earth Conservation Corps and MPDC

Justice disappeared in 2019; other males were seen in the area, so we'll have to wait to see who is there when the cam comes back on.
There were cam issues in 2020, but it sounds from reports on Facebook that Liberty did not use the nest at the Police Academy

Feb 7-18

 

     

Florida
Eagle Country

Link

adults Nicholas (M) and Victoria (F)
aka Nic & Vic

EC3/Hickory
EC4/Mossy

The eaglets were named by the cam sponsor for the hickory trees and spanish moss that are abundant in the area.

Jan 28

Dec 28
4:20 pm

Dec 31
~5:00 pm

Feb 3
~9 am
(37 days)

Feb 5
7:34 am
(36 days)

May 1
12:01 pm
(88 days)

May 7
7:07 am
(92 days)

cams off
May 29
(all 4 still being seen)
Florida
Northeast FL Eagle Cam

Link

adults Samson (M) and Gabrielle (F)

NE22/Jules
NE23/Romy

First Juliet and then Romeo disappeared during the 2019 nesting season - and interestingly, one of the eagles showing an interest in this nest was identified by long-time observers as Samson, one of Romeo & Juliet's chicks from 2013; one of the adults stepped on one of Samson's toes when he was a chick - and the same toe on this adult seems flattened a bit, as did the toe of the chick after the incident (it works fine - just looks a bit odd). By late spring Samson seemed to be bonding with a female - and she was named Gabrielle in the fall of 2019. Keeping fingers crossed for them in 2020.
Update - the new pair's first eaglets have been named Jules and Romy, in honor of the original pair here, who are also their grandparents.
Update - May 22 - Jules never returned to the nest after fledging, which is unusual with a sibling on the nest being fed; Gabrielle was away from the nest for a few days after Jules fledged, so they may have been together, though Jules didn't follow her when she returned to the nest. Romy has been coming and going since s/he started flying.

Nov 2-16

Jan 13
6:34 pm

Jan 16
10:41 pm

Feb 19
1:24 am
(37 days)

Feb 21
4:30 pm
(36 days)

May 7
7:50 am
(78 days)

May 17
6:52 am
(86 days)

Jules
May 7

Romy
June 7

Gabrielle
June 24

Samson
July 13

Florida
Southwest FL Eagle Cam

Link

adults M15 (M) & Harriet

E14
E15
E16

Sad news - little E14 was seen with bleeding under his/her left wing; there was something that appeared to be a fishhook stuck there, and it's possible an adult broke one of the eaglet's blood feathers while tryng to remove the hook; the little one died in the early hours of January 15, at 27 days old. Rest in peace, little one.
The necropsy results on E14 were released, and he (they did a gender check) died from ingesting anticoagulant rat poison, probably from a rat that was brought to the nest a few days earlier. They said the adults probably had some in their system, but are not currently suffering any ill effects because of their larger body size. I'm hoping the news stories about this will discourage people from using these poisons which kill the predators like hawks that could help keep the rat population down naturally.

WOW - this is one for the record books - Harriet has begun a second clutch, laying her third egg for the year on February 22, 5-1/2 weeks after the death of E14, and more than 3 months after she laid her first egg of the season. She and M15 are amazing, and I wish them well.
Hatch of the E15 took longer than some, and was scary at the start as blood was seen when the egg pipped - but was ultimately successful; not sure, but it looked as if the chick may have come out through the side of the shell rather than pecking round and splitting the shell - but it worked!

Nov 12-26

Nov 12
4:57 pm

Nov 16
5:58 pm

2nd clutch

Feb 22
~2:05 pm

Feb 25
6:45 pm

Dec 19
12:03 pm
(37 days)

didn't hatch

2nd clutch

Mar 31
5:29 am
(38 days)

Apr 2
6:48 pm
(37 days)

accidental
Jun 15
6:41 pm
76 days

Jul 1
9:18 am
90 days

E16
Aug 8
10:12 am
128 days

E15
Sep 16
8:06 am
169 days

E15
returns
Sep 23
7:30 pm

last seen
Nov 2
9:13 am
216 days

Georgia
Berry College

Link

next eaglet will be B14

The cam was down because of a bad wind storm from around 4 pm on January 11 until 11:02 am on the 12th because of a bad windstorm; the egg was there when the cams came back up - and it looks as if Mom's leg may be bothering more since the storm; she had appeared to be putting some weight on it before, and I'm not sure she can do that now; hoping for the best....
February 22 - one of the eggs collapsed; there did not seem to be a chick inside, so it was likely either infertile or stopped developing very early in the process; today is day 41 or 42 for the first egg and day 39 for the second - late for a hatch, but last year both eggs hatched at day 41, possibly because Mom's injury may have delayed incubation a bit.
March 11 - the remaining egg collapsed or possibly exploded around 1 am, 56 days after it was laid; Dad had been incubating regularly and was on the egg (and appeared startled) when it happened; Mom stopped incubating shortly after the collapse of the first egg; there did not appear to be a chick inside

~Dec 25? - Jan 14

seen
Jan 12
10:47 am

Jan 14
7:37 pm

no hatch  

 

Illinois
Upper Mississippi River Refuge
("Trio Nest")

Link

adults Starr(F), Valor I & Valor II

Snowy (HWF)/Sky (Facebook)
Spring (HWF)/Abraham (Facebook)

The nest and public cam were blown down in a powerful storm known as a derecho on August 10; the adults have been seen, and the fledglings had likely left the area (and would be experienced fliers by then); we don't expect a cam in 2021 but maybe 2022.

Feb 1 - 18

Feb 14
5:18 pm

Feb 17
5:50 pm

Mar 23
seen
5:48 pm
(38 days)

seen
Mar 24
7:42 am
(36 days)

Jun 10
9:28 am
79 days

Jun 16
11:16 am
84 days

cam off
Jun 25

fledglings
in area
July 12

Indiana
Notre Dame
South Bend

Link

sponsored by Notre Dame Linked Experimental Ecosystem Facility (ND-LEEF)

ND10
ND11
ND12

The cam doesn't show the whole nest so hard to know if someone has fledged or is on one of the edges.
Sad news - youngest eaglet ND12 died around 3 pm on May 14; food was sometimes scarce, the young one was quite a bit smaller and often bullied and denied a chance to eat by the middle chick; s/he was 5 weeks old; rest in peace, little one, and fly free.

Feb 21 - 22

Feb 26
9:13 pm

seen
Mar 1
5:35 am

seen
Mar 5
7:55 am

Apr 4
seen
11:12 am
(38 days)

Apr 6
seen
12:41 pm
(36 days)

Apr 9
6:48 am
(35 days)

Jun 23
?
80 days

Jun 26
?
81 days

2 fledglings
Jul 12

Mom
Jul 14

1 fledgling
on nest
Jul 18

Dad
Jul 21

fledglings
in area
Jul 26

Iowa
Arconic (was Alcoa)
Davenport

Link

adults Liberty (F) & Justice (M)

Analiese
Terry

The first egg was gone on March 7; no idea why.
The eaglets were named in honor of Riverdale Firefighter Analiese Chapman and Hampton Police Chief Terry Engle.

Feb 11 - early Mar

Mar 6
1:32 pm

Mar 9
12:31 pm

Mar 12
5:50 pm

Apr 14
<4:48 pm
(39 days)

seen
Apr 17
early
(39 days)

both by
July 4
cam down
Aug 10;
all still there
Iowa
Decorah

Link

Mom Decorah & DM2

D34
D35
D36

D35 and D36 have transmitters - map

Feb 17 - Mar 2

Feb 26
5:44 pm

Feb 29
6:28 pm

Mar 4
5:59 pm

Apr 5
9:45 am
(39 days)

Apr 5
4:07 pm
(36 days)

Apr 8
6:50 pm
(35 days)

Jun 18
8:40 am
74 days

Jun 21
8:44 am
77 days

Jun 21
6:09 pm
74 days

D34
Jul 23

D35
heard
Aug 11

D36
Aug 29

Iowa
Decorah North

Link

Mr North & new mate DNF

DN11
DN12

The Raptor Resource Project asks that the new female not be called Mom North or Mrs. North.
Sad news - DN11 died April 10 at about 5:56 am; according to RRP "He/she appeared to have some sort of obstruction yesterday or looked as if it was attempting to cast a pellet" though they noted that 10 days old is a bit early for pellet casting. Rest in peace, little one.

Feb 19 - Mar 11

Feb 21
3:36 pm

Feb 24
5:13 pm

Mar 30
2:36 pm
(38 days)

Mar 31
<9:55 am
(36 days)

Jun 9
12:11 pm
70 days

DN12
Jul 30

adults by
Aug 4

Maine
Sasanoa River

no cam

This is a pair of eagles that nest near me; even though dates will be approximate, I'm adding them to this table for my own reference purposes. Their nest is a bit unique in that it's on an osprey platform on a small island in the Sasanoa River. My normal viewing point is on a bridge about 3/10 of a mile from the nest.

No activity on the platform nest, though the eagles were in the area; they may have another nest - no easy way to look for it.

?mid March?        

Maryland
Blackwater Refuge

Link

There are two streaming cams - with sound - new for the 2020 nesting season! Friends of Blackwater report the pair raised two fledglings last year - so fingers crossed for a good season. There was a cam at Blackwater starting in 2004, but the eagles abandoned that nest a few years ago, and the group has been looking for a nest to stream since then.

January 1 update - the eagles haven't been around for a couple of days, and a pair of great horned owls seem interested in the nest. Stay tuned!
Friends of Blackwater NWR report that the owls did not use the nest; they also did not see the male eagle this year, so something may have happened to him.

Jan 7 - 30

 

     

Maryland
Port Tobacco

Link

Chandler (M) and Hope (F)

PT3
PT4

I discovered this cam in 2020; according to the website, the pair fledged three eaglets in 2017 and 2018, and laid three eggs in 2019, two of which hatched and PT1 and PT2 fledged successfully (I believe the cam was installed in 2019, and that's when the adults were named and the numbering of offspring began).
The third egg was likely laid after dark on February 9.

Jan 31

Feb 3
4:20 pm

Feb 6
3:32 pm

seen
Feb 10
7:02 am

did not complete hatch

Mar 14
8:37 am
(37 days)

Mar 16
7:07 am
(35-36 days)

Jun 4?
(82 days)

Jun 5?
(81 days)

 

Michigan
Beulah

Link

No cam in 2019; I've found nothing to suggest that there will be a cam in 2020

Mar 12 - 14

       

Minnesota
MNBound

Link

No cam in 2019; they are hoping to return with an upgraded cam in 2020

MNBound announced in January 2020 that they would no longer be streaming the eagle cam, and would be removing the equipment when it was safe to do so

Feb 26 - Mar 7

 

     

Minnesota
DNR
Minn-StPaul

Link

new pair for 2020
adults Sid & Nancy

E1/Bandit
E2/Smokey
E3/Bambino

The resident pair disappeared in late March 2019; a new pair was seen, but didn't nest - and that pair hung around through the summer and have been working hard getting the nest ready, so we're hoping....
Sad news - it was confirmed that the youngest chick died April 12; it was quite a bit smaller so may have had trouble competing for food - and there was a cold front. Rest in peace, little one.
More sad news - E1 died July 3 after flying into a power line; it's considered a successful fledge because on most nests we'd never know.

~Jan 1 - Feb 19

Feb 6
3:47 pm

Feb 9
12:11 pm

Feb 12
2:42 pm

Mar 15
7:42 am
(38 days)

Mar 17
6:32 am
(37 days)

seen
Mar 19
~9 am
(36 days)

Jun 16
9:15 am
93 days

Jun 20
5:53 am
95 days

 

Missouri
Lake of the Ozarks

Link

adults Einstein and new female Esther

Cam is being removed at the end of the 2019 season - the owner has sold the property and is leaving.

Feb 7-23        

Montana
Miles City

Link

adults Martha and George

Two eggs seen March 4 (cam had been offline since 2/27); the angle of the camera makes it challenging to see into the nest, so it was a while before the third egg was confirmed - and also a while before the third chick was seen.

Mar 1 2 by
Mar 4

seen
Apr 5
2:43 pm

seen
Apr 7

Apr 9?
seen
Apr 14
3:19 pm

dates approx

Jun 17

Jun 20?

Jun 27

 

New Jersey
Duke Farms

Link

male is banded A59; new female for 2020

The previous female was apparently replaced after the 2019 nesting season, maybe in September; this is the third female since the nest was first observed in 2004; the male has been there since the beginning

Apparently the link changes frequently; if you get "not found" search on YouTube for Duke Farms Eagle Cam.
The cam went offline in a storm on April 30th, and it was determined it was a hardware issue at the nest tree, so it can't be fixed until August 1st (official end of the nesting season in NJ).

Feb 17-28

Jan 20
4:15 pm

Jan 24
10:28 am

Feb 26
11:15 am
(37 days)

Mar 1
1:15 am
(37 days)

both by
Jun 25
 

Ohio
AACS Lakeside
Ashtabula

Link

Sponsored by Ashtabula Area City Schools
adults Joy (F) and Pride (M)

AACS-1/Raindrop
AACS-2/Nestor

2020 is the first year I've followed this nest.


Mar 1

Mar 1
10:29 pm

Mar 4
11:33 pm

Apr 7
10:56 pm
(37 days)

Apr 10
8:27 am
(37 days)

Jun 24
78 days

Jun 24
75 days

 

Ohio
Avon Lake

Link

adults Stars (F) and Stripes (M)

R14/Freedom
R15
R16/Glory

Sad news - April 26 - there's been some cold wet weather, and one of the eaglets didn't survive; the facebook group admin thinks it was the middle one. Rest in peace, little one.
Update - June 18 - one of the eaglets was knocked off the nest at 3:50 am by an owl; I think it made it safely to the ground and has now made it back up into the tree, but may not be able to get back to the nest; observers think it's the older one, who is 69 days old, so close to flying.

Feb 26 - Mar 1

Mar 1
5:07 pm

Mar 4
2:29 pm

Mar 7
5:49 pm

Apr 10
12:23 pm
(40 days)

Apr 11
8:47 am
(38 days)

Apr 12
3:31 pm
(36 days)

forced
Jun 18
3:50 am
69 days
(owl)

Jun 29
3:06 pm
80 days

 

Ohio
Sandy Ridge

no cam

Sponsored by Lorain County Metro Parks

The eagles moved (maybe in 2019?) and the folks at Lorain County Metro Parks said the new nest was too far for a good cam feed.

Feb 27

 

     

Oklahoma
Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge

Link

February 9 - sad news: it appears that Mom's right leg was injured around 5 pm on February 8 while defending the nest from an intruder; so far she has not been able to move to the nest cup and incubate, and the eggs have been left uncovered for long periods of time, including several hours during the night; today is day 36 for the first egg, and we thought the adults had begun listening, as they do when the preliminary stages of a hatch begin. We're hoping for the best - and don't really know what would be best since we don't know when or if Mom will be able to do more than perch on the nest - as they say, we need to trust the eagles.
February 13 - one of the eggs was damaged in the attacks and the remains were eaten by the female Sunday evening, February 9; the remaining egg has been uncovered for long periods of time, and it's highly unlikely to be viable at this point. We think Mom is doing some of the incubating, and her leg seems better, though it's hard to catch her moving about on the nest (this cam doesn't have an option for dvr). From the actions of the adults, I suspect there are still intruders in the area - and I think the resident pair is winning.
February 18 - the remaining egg was being left alone quite a bit, and I noticed a woodpecker appear to peck at it a few times, though I don't know if the egg was damaged. The egg appeared damaged the morning of February 15, and disappeared by evening; I read that the remains were eaten by one of the adults but haven't found the post where that was observed. In the good news department, Mom seems to be moving well and using the leg that was injured.

Dec 17 - Jan 3

Jan 4
4:33 pm

Jan 7
4:25 pm

     

Pennsylvania
Codorus State Park
Hanover

Link

adults Freedom (M) and Liberty (F)

The second egg broke shortly after being laid; it appeared smaller and darker, and there was some speculation that the shell was either weak or missing.
March 29 update - the remaining egg appeared to collapse early this morning; no sign of a chick inside, and the shell was eaten by one of the adults; a sad end to the season, but this will allow the adults to move on; it was day 45 for the egg.

Feb 14 - 26

Feb 13
6:02 pm

Feb 17
5:48 pm

didn't hatch    

Pennsylvania
Farm Country

Link

new cam - no info yet

One egg broke March 25; based on hatch time, my guess is that it was the first one laid.
From the notes on the Facebook page, I'm not sure which eaglet fledged first - it sounded as if it was the older one, but I didn't see an announcement.

new

Feb 13
~4:26 pm

Feb 16
2:31 pm

Feb 19
3:03 pm

broke

seen
Mar 25
2:04 am
(38 days)

Mar 26
?9:30-11:30 pm
(36 days)

Jun 13
<8:58 am
80 days

Jun 16
<7:55 am
82 days

 

Pennsylvania
Harmar

Link

HR10
HR11

No cam again in 2020;
thanks to Gina G. Gilmore, local observer/photographer, and the Harmar Bald Eagles of Pittsburgh Facebook group for documentation on this nest
It looked as if an adult was feeding a chick on April 1

Feb 24 - Mar 9

Feb 26
1:57 pm

Feb 29
2:38 pm

?Apr 1
(35 days)

?

Jun 16

Jun 17
3:40 pm

all 4 seen
July 18

HR11
Aug 8

Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh Hays

Link

H11
H12

Feb 12-19

Feb 13
6:30 pm

Feb 16
6:30 pm

Mar 21
7:40 am
(37 days)

Mar 23
6:43 am
(36 days)

Jun 8
7:59 am
79 days

Jun 6
8:46 am
75 days

fledglings
July 12

adults in area
July 22

Tennessee
Dale Hollow

Link

adults named Obey (M) and River (F) after the Obey River

DH9
DH10
DH11

The link changes - if you get a "not streaming" message on YouTube, search for Dale Hollow Eagle Cam
Sad news - older chick DH9 fell off the nest at 5:07 am on March 4; s/he was only 4 days old but already out of the nest cup exploring, and the rails weren't adequate in that spot.
The cam went offline April 29 - the site said it had been struck by lightning; it was posted on Facebook that one of the chatters had visited the nest and seen both eaglets; there aren't local observers so all we can do is hope that the rest of the season is going well for Obey, River, DH10 and DH11.
Cam operator reported both were seen flying on June 8 - probably fledged earlier.
Update - June 14 - I've learned that not just the cam went down - the whole tree came down; it was not in good shape, and hopefully they will be able to install a cam wherever the pair nests next.
Update - fall 2020 - no cam until summer 2021.

Jan 17 - 23

Jan 22
1:43 pm

Jan 25
12:30 pm

Jan 28
12:07 pm

Feb 29
11:34 pm
(38 days)

Mar 2
3:08 am
(37 days)

Mar 4
11:36 am
(36 days)

both by
Jun 8
(cam down)
 

Tennessee
East TN State U
Bluff City

Link

adults named Eugene (M) and Frances (F) after the wonderful property owners

BC16
BC17
BC18

(the cam is on the same page as Johnson City - scroll down)

This is the first time Frances has laid three eggs!
BC16 & BC17 fledged accidentally when one bumped into the other while jumping to a branch

Feb 1 - 3

Jan 27
12:08 am

Jan 30
6:28 pm

Feb 3
6:16 pm

Mar 5
3:42 am
(38 days)

Mar 7
12:24 am
(37 days)

seen
Mar 11
5:59 am
(37 days)

May 29
9:33 am
(85 days)

May 29
9:33 am
(83 days)

Jun 5
8:55 am
(86 days)

 

Tennessee
East TN State U
Johnson City

Link

adults named Noshi (M) and Shima (F) (father and mother in Algonquin)

JC15
JC16

One egg didn't hatch - based on the dates, my guess is that it was the first on laid.
Update April 27 - male Noshi hasn't been seen since 5 pm Friday April 24; Shima is bringing food for the eaglet.
Update June 11 - a male has been seen in the area consistently; he'll be named if it becomes clear they have become a pair.

Feb 1 - 10

Feb 4
2:22 pm

Feb 7
12:18 pm

Feb 10
6:19 pm

no hatch

Mar 15
11:50 am
(37 days)

Mar 17
5:11 am
(36 days)

Jun 3
<7:41 am
(80 days)

Jun 5
1:14 pm
(80 days)

fledglings seen
Aug 6

Tennessee
Harrison Bay

Link

adults Elliott (M) and Athena (F)

HB15
HB16

As of October 2019, they are hoping to have the cam repaired/replaced for the 2020 nesting season.

Jan 22 - Feb 13 2 eggs

Apr 15
10:57 am

Apr 18
8:55 am

both by
Jul 6
1 fledgling
Aug 18

Tennessee
Pigeon Forge

Link

adults Grant (M) and Glenda (F)

GG3
(tagged H20?)

GG3 moved to a hacking tower June 5 (54 days old), then was taken for release at 7 Islands State Park.

Mar 1- Apr 3

Mar 4
seen
Mar 5
8:00 am

Mar 7
~9:29 pm

Apr 12
11:18 am
(39 days)

no hatch

released
Jul 10
 

Tennessee
Pigeon Forge

Link

adults Isaiah (M) and Mrs. Jefferson (F)
(both are blind in one eye, and therefore non-releasable)

Mrs J has glaucoma and is receiving eye drops; they are hoping she'll recover to the point she doesn't need them, but will keep her in a quiet place where she can be treated if that doesn't happen; Isaiah had a growth near his non-functioning eye that is being treated; they hope the pair will be back together soon.
Update March 2020 - Mrs J still needs special treatment so Isaiah has returned to the Pick-A-Mate enclosure in the hopes he'll find a new partner

Feb 18 - Apr 3        

Tennessee
Pigeon Forge

Link

other news from Dollywood

 

         

Tennessee
Smoky Mountain

Link

adults Sir Hatcher II (M) and Lady Independence (F)
an American Eagle Foundation nest

next eaglet will be SM19

As of November 2020, AEF said the cam isn't streaming and there are no updates but they are still in the area with a new nest.

early March        

Texas
Seagoville

Link

JBS 13

JBS is for John Bunker Sands Wetland Center where the nest is located; no cam for the 2020 nesting season, but they hope to post regular updates on Facebook.
Shift change observed January 4, so at least one egg by then; JBS thinks the egg may have been laid between Christmas and New Year's.
Feeding behavior observed February 3; that's only 30 days from January 4, so it's likely the egg was laid in late December as they thought.
Update - March 11 - JBS has only seen 1 chick; they'd be big enough now that the 2nd would have been seen if there was one
Update May 9 - JBS 13 was observed flying on April 24 and the Center believes the fledge date was April 22; they are calling that 82 days, which would put the hatch on January 31; the fledgling was seen on May 6, and another sighting was reported May 22.

Dec 16 - Jan 30 <Jan 4 ≤Feb 3
(?Jan 31)
?Apr 22
(~82 days)

JBS 13
May 22

Texas
Webster

no cam

cam not streamed but good video coverage on Facebook

Maverick (M?)
Wrangler (F)

Not sure of time of hatch for #1 - may be a couple of hours earlier; #2 hatched during the night.
Wrangler fell from the nest while trying to fly to a branch on April 7, and was captured and taken to rehab, where they discovered she had either an old injury or genetic problem with her back and hip area which made taking flight difficult; by April 12 they reported that Wrangler was responding to medicine to reduce inflammation in the back/hip area. and they had moved her to a flight cage where she was standing more and attempting short flights (gender at that point based on measurements, later confirmed by blood test); she was returned to the nest on April 23, and did a true fledge 4 minutes later, flying farther and stronger than they expected; both fledglings were in the nest tree on April 25 - and there was rivalry. I think both were seen after that, but mostly one fledgling came to the nest the next couple of days - they think Wrangler.

Nov 26 - Dec 15

Dec 12
1:23 pm

Dec 15
5:27 pm

Jan 17
~12:27 pm
(36 days)

seen
Jan 20
morning
(36 days)

Apr 6
7:39 am
(80 days)

fell
Apr 7
9:18 am
(78 days)
rehab
released
Apr 23
(94 days)

2 adults and maybe Wrangler
Apr 30

all 4
Apr 26

Virginia
Norfolk

(formerly in Botanical Garden)

no cam

adults Dad Norfolk (M) and Lady Jane

two eaglets

Jan 31 - Feb 10 ≤Jan 21

feeding seen
Feb 27
(37 days)

2nd confirmed late March

May 20
~83 days

May 25
~86 days

 

West Virginia
NCTC
Shepherdstown

Link

adults Shep (M) and Bella
(the male is known as Smitty on some forums)

Ozzy

Sad news - on March 27 the 2-day-old older eaglet fell into a little hole in the nest and was stuck in a way that the adults couldn't help; rest in peace, tiny one.

Jan 31 - Feb 20

Feb 17
4:11 pm

Feb 20
6:35 pm

Mar 25
1:21 pm
(37 days)

Mar 27
8:41 am
(36 days)

Jun 13
2:29 pm
78 days
 

South African Black Eagles
Johannesburg

Link

Mahlori (M) and Makatsa (F)

Motsumi

2020 will be the first nesting season for new male Mahlori, meaning miracle.
Due to covid lockdown restrictions, dates for egg laying and hatching are approximate, and we don't know if there was more than one egg or one chick.

Apr 9-17 Apr 18-19 Jun 2-3 Aug 31 Dec 7

Australian
Sea-Eagles

Sidney

Link

Dad and Lady

SE-25
SE-26 (F)

EagleCAM Update September 14 - "SE26 has mobility issues, evident since hatch. He has already made significant improvements and has adapted "somewhat" to his situation (how often is 26 second to the dining table?). SE26's development has consistently been about 7-10 days behind SE25 (mobility wise). This also applies to tarsus standing (how they get around for the first 5-6 weeks). Given that SE25 has only started "foot standing/walking" (still wobbling a bit) this past week, we're yet to see how much progress SE26 could make."
EagleCAM Update September 30 - "While acknowledging that SE26 has a definite mobility issue, we are heartened to see both eaglets feeding well, developing their wings and self-feeding. SE26 has adapted his/her mobility somewhat and is able to stand on the left leg for short periods. For a bird this takes time. This has only been a recent development. We are monitoring the situation closely and have taken advice from veterinarians with expertise in treating raptors. However diagnosis is not definite without actual physical examination.
... When SE25 fledges, we shall discuss with NPWS the possibility for intervention for SE26, if required."
EagleCAM Update November 14 - "SE26 has been found on a balcony nearby on Nov 14, is safe and being assessed."
Sad news - SE26 was found to have a poorly healed fracture of the right leg and extensive injuries to the left leg, likely caused by overcompensating to support the right leg; surgery is not possible and the young eagle was in pain so the hard decision was made to humanely euthanize SE26. Rest in peace, free of pain.

Jun 13- July 4

Jun 18
9:35 am

Jun 21
7:25 pm

Jul 28
9:03 am
(40 days)

Jul 30
6:40 am
(39 days)

Oct 11
10:30 am
75 days

Oct 30
8:33 am
92 days

SE-25
Oct 17
possible sighting
Nov 4

SE-26
into care
Nov 14

NOTES

 

Nests with cams above here updated by November 12 - will get to the others soon!

 

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