Jordan Lake Dam, Haw River: It was an outright attack. The upper bald eagle, a 3-year-old, attacked the lower eagle, a 4-year-old. In all the years I have watched bald eagles, I have never seen more than a feather or two pulled loose during an attack, whether the disagreement was over a fish that one of the birds was carrying or during an attempt to raid an eagle nest. This morning I watched several eagles chasing other eagles, trying to get the eagle with the fish to drop it so the chaser could catch the fish and have a meal it had not caught. In this sequence, the lower bird did not have a fish, it had simply left its perch and headed towards the river. I have no idea why the 3-year-old got so angry except to say that all three-year-old bald eagles are brats and at all times seem more on edge than at other stages of life. The 4-year-old flew off, and I saw it later, back trying to fish and flying well. Whew! What a cloud of feathers.


Maybe the full moon plus winter weather had the three year old super on edge?
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On Tue, Dec 29, 2020 at 6:33 PM doc ellen’s journey wrote:
> neighdoctor posted: ” Jordan Lake Dam, Haw River: It was an outright > attack. The upper bald eagle, a 3-year-old, attacked the lower eagle, a > 4-year-old. In all the years I have watched bald eagles, I have never seen > more than a feather or two pulled loose during an attack, w” >
Winter weather always stirs eagles into action. Three-year-old bald eagles really are the brats of the bald eagle world. They are just like say a human teenager at about 16. So I’m not sure what got underneath the feathers of that one this morning but he was acting as a typical three-year-old bald would do. I just don’t know what the inciting incident was.