On Wednesday I visited Occoquan Bay National Wildlife Refuge to check on the eaglets in the nests there. As the leaves continue to grow, it is becoming harder and harder to observe activity at several of the nests of the Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus). In one of them, though, I managed to find a small visual tunnel and was fortunate to capture the first two images that show some sweet little moments between an eaglet and one of its parents.
The third image shows an eaglet in a different nest. As you can see, the leaves on the sycamore tree hid most of the nest. Previously I spotted two eaglets in this nest, so there may be another hiding out of view.
The final two shots shows the largest eagle nest at the refuge. The nest is so big and so high in the trees that it is difficult to tell what is going on inside of the nest. One eagle was keeping watch and the other adult appears to be in the nest. If you look closely at the nest right below the tree on which the eagle is perched, you can just make out the yellow beak of an adult eagle. The final image is a close-up shot of the nest that I cropped to show more clearly the eagle’s beak. The adult eagle is perched so high in the nest that it is possible that there is an eaglet or two in the nest as well—when an eagle is incubating eggs it tend to hunker down really low to keep the eggs warm.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.
Nice observations of the eagles nest !
Wonderful to see the little eaglet popping up!
They seem to be getting bigger too. From what I have read, it takes the baby eagles fledge about 10 to 12 weeks after they are born. My guess is that these ones are already at least several weeks old.
Sweet moments!
Very nice series of images on the Eagles at the nest Mike! Enjoyed seeing your images of them!
Thanks, Reed. I know that you are a fan of eagle photos, so I do not worry about oversaturating my blog with shots of these majestic birds (thought the eaglets are not quite “majestic” at that young an age). 🙂