View allAll Photos Tagged baldness
I did not expect to see a baldy on the afternoon I took this photo. On our way to a park we came upon a large congregation of Black vultures feasting on a deer carcass. Among them was this bald eagle taking part of the carnage. It took some time to wipe the blood from its beak before it flew off.
I can’t wait to get the kayak out again. Here’s a Bald Eagle that let me float right up to it on the Susquehanna River last summer
Captive American Bald Eagle at Boyd-Hill Preserve, St. Petersburg, FL.
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Occasionally, a Bald Eagle or two will hang out at my local regional park. They haven't taken up residence though it would seem this large park would have everything they need to raise a family. They just seem to stop in for a vacation, sometimes in the same tree several days in a row.
This is my first Bald Eagle sighting in the grain terminal area this season.
This was a very close fly by. No crop at all.
Thanks to Keith Huang Photography copy righted for the heads up.
Click to view Large.
Adult Bald Eagles have white heads and tails with dark brown bodies and wings. Their legs and bills are bright yellow. Immature birds have mostly dark heads and tails; their brown wings and bodies are mottled with white in varying amounts. Young birds attain adult plumage in about five years.
You'll find Bald Eagles soaring high in the sky, flapping low over treetops with slow wingbeats, or perched in trees or on the ground. Bald Eagles scavenge many meals by harassing other birds or by eating carrion or garbage. They eat mainly fish, but also hunt mammals, gulls, and waterfowl.
2015-09-24 4217-CR2-L1T3E1
This is one from the archives - September 2015. This Bald Eagle is from the Outdoor Discovery Center in Zeeland/Holland area.
This is not a wildlife shot but one in a controlled environment.
The Bald Eagle is the National Bird of the United States of America. It was chosen as the National Bird by dint of its inclusion in the National Seal of the United States, which happened by act of the Continental Congress on 20th of June 1782. Bald Eagle symbolize nobility, pride. fierceness, freedom, superiority. courage, and powerful intellectual ability. Eagles also indicate self
renewal. Picture taken at the Florida Zoo. The Eagle can't fly anymore, his right wing is broken.
This eagle entertained me for over 40 minutes, so I thought I'd take a look at another of the dozens of shots I got of him.
Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) banking in preparation to make another run at the ball of herring swarming near the water surface in the Pacific Ocean northwest of Prince Rupert, British Columbia, Canada.
23 July, 2019.
Slide # GWB_20190723_8865.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
One of the beautiful Baldies at CRC
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An adult Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) surveys the surrounding marine coastal landscape off Dundas Island near Prince Rupert, British Columbia, Canada.
2 July, 2017.
Slide # GWB_20170702_3433.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
This image is available in hi-res through the Adobe Stock photo agency stock.adobe.com/ca/images/bald-eagle-immature/490849346
This immature Bald Eagle perched regally in a tree at Inglewood Bird Sanctuary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, essentially ignoring the people observing it from below.
A sub-adult bald eagle at Reelfoot Lake.
Newborn bald eagles are covered with gray fuzz, but in about 13 weeks they will leave the nest covered with dark brown feathers from head to tail. As they approach maturity during their first four years, head and tail feathers gradually turn solid white and the eyes will turn from brown to bright yellow, as will the beak.
Reelfoot Lake State Park, Tennessee, USA. Elevation: 300 ft., February 21, 2020.
This portrait of an adult bald eagle was taken at the Forsythe NWR in Oceanville, NJ. They are such majestic looking birds!
Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Two juveniles having some fun out on the ice. No idea why they like to stand in the middle of the lake on the ice. Shot into the sun.
New Britain, PA
Juvenile Bald Eagle
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