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Bald Eagles and Golden Eagles

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By dwilliamson

A bald eagle sitting in an old tree across from my work.
A bald eagle sitting in an old tree across from my work.
A bald eagle sitting in an old tree across from my work.
A bald eagle sitting in an old tree across from my work.
A bald eagle landing on the old tree across from my work.
A bald eagle landing on the old tree across from my work.
A golden eagle sitting in  tree in the Grassland Park.
A golden eagle sitting in tree in the Grassland Park.

The very first time I saw a wild bald eagle was while I was camping in Trail, BC in 2004. We camped along the Columbia River and one morning, we were sitting in our camp chairs. I looked up and was awestruck at seeing a bald eagle circling the river. I could plainly see his white head and his brown body. I have seen bald eagles at zoos but that was the very first one I had ever seen that was wild.

The next year I moved to Kamloops, British Columbia. I work at a call center as a technical support agent and right outside of the building there is an old tree sitting beside the South Thompson River. I don't know how many times I've seen a bald eagle sitting so proud at the top of that tree. I would smile to myself when I saw him and on very rare occasions, I have seen two of them sitting side by side in that old tree.

I have also seen a golden eagle when we took a drive up to the Grassland Park. We saw the golden eagle land in a tree and he had just caught something. On the right hand side of him that there is a feather stuck straight up in the air. This may have already been there but it also may be the remains of what he had brought to the tree with him. This golden eagle sat there for quite sometime before he flew off into another tree across the road.

I have seen quite a few bald eagles sitting in trees by the South Thompson River on the way to Chase, BC. One day I saw at least ten bald eagles sitting on trees by the river, all in one day. The reason the bald eagles like to sit in the trees by the river is because this is the same river that the sockeye salmon travel up to get to Adams Lake.

One day, while driving home from work, I saw a bald eagle just one street up from where I live. I have not seen him around here before that and not since either. I also saw one circling around the bridge that goes from downtown to the north shore district. I have never seen one there either. However, in both of those instances, the river was very close by.

I absolutely love eagles. They are my favourite bird. They are powerful and they rule the air. The sit so proud and soar so freely. I love the fact that I get to see them in their natural environment, the wild.


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gusripper  says:
7 months ago

Well i see your work is very high,because this eagle lives more than 1500 feets height,or am i wrong or you have a strong camera

lxxy profile image

lxxy  says:
7 months ago

Good stuff! Ohio has a lot of bald eagles too! Not too long ago, also, a news crew in California stopped on the roadside just to film one. They're slowly, but surely coming back. =)

dwilliamson profile image

dwilliamson  says:
7 months ago

Thanks for your comments, gusripper and Ixxy. Gusripper, the eagle in the photographs is the eagle I am referring too, not the one in the video. That tree is quite tall that he sits in, which is located right across the street from where I work. I am not sure how tall it is. I don't have a strong camera just a digital camera with 5 megapixels. I consider myself very lucky to have gotten the photographs I have with it. And Ixxy, we are very fortunate here in British Columbia. We seem to have a lot of eagles.

LIZ  says:
5 months ago

It amazes me that you call them American Bald Eagles...it was the Americans that shot and killed most of the Bald Eagle populations in the 1900's. Then in Canada we did not allow the free killing of the eagle, so our population grew, while that of the USA declined. We call them CANADIAN BALD EAGLE'S, because most of them are from eagles born and breed in Canads.

dwilliamson profile image

dwilliamson  says:
5 months ago

Liz, good point and the funny thing is, I didn't call them American Bald Eagles. I referred to them as Bald Eagles. It is the YouTube Video that is referring to American Bald Eagles. That video is not mine. I just linked it from YouTube to this hub.

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