Dale Matson
Click On Photographs To Enlarge
This is the second year that I have
followed this adult pair of Golden Eagles. The chicks hatched in early April
and I was there to photograph and video the adults and chicks until June 13th
when there was no more evidence of any activity in or around the nest. I am
happy to report that both chicks fledged again this year.
I was there on a weekly basis to
follow the development of the chicks and to photograph the adults who had a
perch site nearby where they could observe the nest when they were not there or
were not out hunting.
Game seems plentiful in the area
and I would often see a rabbit or squirrel near the nest.
Much is made of the fact that some
birds will push the competition out of the nest yet I have not observed this
behavior watching three different Golden Eagle offspring pairs, and one pair
was raised with a Red-Tailed Hawk!
I
titled this “Empty Nest Syndrome” mainly because I am sad to see the birds
depart. I have noticed however that there is no such thing as an empty nest since
smaller birds also make their homes in eagle nests. You can see the smaller
birds darting in and out of the eagle nest in the videos. Perhaps the eagle
nests also serve as a kind of protection for the smaller birds.
This
year I used both a Sony A7R3 and a Sony A9 with my 100-400mm GM lens. Most of
my photos are shot in cropped (APS-C) mode which gives me more reach (560mm). I
am such an old man that I lost my 1.4X Teleconverter in Alaska filming Bald
Eagles there last Fall and did not realize until this week that it was not on
my lens. Need a new one. There are new long Sony lenses available this week and
I will probably get the more affordable 200-600 mm Lens if funds become
available.
This
time of year, however the Sierra Nevada Bighorn Sheep and eagles are scarcer
and my attention is turned more toward landscape photos especially with the
amazing flow of rivers and waterfalls filled to the brim with snowmelt from a
bigger than usual snowpack. Fresno County is blessed with two major rivers that
flow west down the Sierra slopes. The Kings River and the San Joaquin make for
wonderful wild sections and reservoirs abundant with wildlife and beauty.
I
made a YouTube movie combining the video clips and photographs and it can be
seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5s22BcF6uo&feature=youtu.be
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