Sharing a Salmon Lunch with a Bald Eagle

This Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) has something pink like a salmon in its talon

 

This Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) has something pink like a salmon in its talon

Along the salmon spawning creeks and rivers of the west coast, winter is spawning time for salmon and gorging time for eagles. And it is great for us as well to watch them play out their age old sustenance routines in their natural habitat.

Granddaughter Ava and I drove up the Mt. Baker Highway along the Nooksack River where chum salmon were still spawning and steelhead abound. We started at the Nooksack River Salmon hatchery at Kendall Creek adjacent to the river. There are typically salmon around the nearby spawning streams this time of year, especially those close to the Nooksack River. Where there are salmon spawning, there are spent carcasses and where there are salmon carcasses, there are Bald Eagles. Who can blame them?

These relationships were crystal clear to Northwest Coast Indians who featured these two icons in much of their art and totem creations.

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Glen Rabena, Artist


Salmon is a near perfect food for humans, and from what I see of eagles around here, it is pretty nutritious for them too. A salmon a day is good for keeping the eagle feathers glossy.

Salmon provides omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins B and D, Selenium, Protein, potassium, phosphorus, iodine, choline, pantothenic acid,  among other nutrients.

 

 

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A salmon carcass after spawning caught on downed branch in Kendall creek

Walking past the hatchery fish ponds we followed some paths through saplings that took us to  Kendall Creek.  Close to the creek we came up on this eagle. It was up quite close and we were able to observed it partaking of a fine seafood lunch. It was maybe 20 yards away and about at our eye level. Typically they are high up in the trees. This bird however was quite intent on finishing its lunch and paid us no mind. At first we saw him picking away at something that turned out to the salmon that he nailed to the limb by its talon.

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As we watched it picking away it came up with a mouth full. Oh yes and he was enjoying a big gulp of salmon.

 

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And finally, he decides to take the rest of it in one final big gulp with the tail sticking out of his mouth.

 

IMG_3147 (2)He ate the whole thing!

 

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He got most of it down but you can still see some in his mouth and some pinkish left overs on the side of his beak

 

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     Then he hunched over trying to choke it all down.

 

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After finally devouring the whole salmon and getting it down his gullet, he decides to go in search of a roost to let it all settle and digest and to make room for dinner.

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   Off he goes, but not too far.

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He finds a nice dead branch in a mossy tree.

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And immediately he starts with whistling vocalizations directed at something in the distance.

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Clearly the noise was warning a juvenile coming his way. Wisely, the juvi just kept going.

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The local aerie a short way down river.

 

Before we left I had to see one of my favorite birds, the American Dipper (Cinclus mexicanus). They are always found along Kendall Creek as it matches perfectly the description of the Dipper’s typical habitat. They are found solely along rushing streams of the west, including some in mountainous Mexico. They forage in rocky streams with overhanging banks and brush.  They perch on a rock or branch at stream level and periodically dip their head in the stream looking for food. When they see something, they dive in to get their food by swimming and walking on the rocky bottom. They are the only song bird that is truly aquatic.

 

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American Dipper waiting for his next dive into the creek.

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American Dippers feed on aquatic insects and their larvae, including mayflies, mosquitoes, and midges. They also eat dragonflies, stream-dwelling prey, worms, small fish, fish eggs, or flying insects. American Dippers rapidly duck their heads in and out of water when when looking for their stream-dwelling prey.

 

To be able to survive in cold waters during the winter, the American Dipper has a low metabolic rate, extra oxygen-carrying capacity in its blood, and a thick coat of feathers.

 

I hope you enjoyed our lunch with this majestic critter. I am sure he enjoyed it. I wonder how many more he would eat that day.

 

9 Comments

  1. Hello Moose people. Here is a little salmon luncheon that I attended last week and it was much nicer that any spread in DC these days or in Mar-a-lago for that matter. I hope you enjoy a glimpse of our glorious natural environment.

    • But did you have mother-of-pearl spoons?!

      Thank you for this; it’s a glimpse into a world I wouldn’t see otherwise.

      • Thanks Do Re Me,

        I seem to have been fortunate of late to run onto some pretty amazing things in nature. But they are going on all the time and it is fun to get a glimpse of them from time to time.

  2. {{{RonK}}} – thank you so much for the expedition, the photos, and the information. So nice to see the cycle of nature going smoothly and not disrupted by the “hand of man” as it were. The Bald Eagle and salmon cycle I knew about but the American Dipper is new to me. Probably because I grew up in south Texas. LOL – thanks again.

    • Thanks bfitz,

      The Dipper is fun to watch as it dips in the stream. It reminds be of some old novelty tooth pick holders of a bird that would bob up and down.

  3. This was such a pleasure to read and look at! Thank you, Ron. I’m sorry I didn’t have a chance to read it when it first appeared, but life here at Barky Manor has been insane, lately.

    Bald eagles are among my favorite birds. And your post brings back the memory of watching salmon leap upstream in Alaska one August many years ago.

    Glad Ava went with you. It’s nice to hear of a child getting out into nature with a much-loved grandparent.

  4. Thanks Diana,
    I am pleased that you enjoyed the eagle having lunch. I think Ava is hooked. I bought her a camera and a tri- pod and she is now at age 10, an avid nature photographer.

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