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Eagle Update
Two eagles side by side in
the top of a pine tree halfway down Palmetto 14 fairway captured Larry White’s
attention. The diversion was intentional. The wily eagles were distracting
golfers from their new nest just to the right of the tee box, 100 yards back. Likely
a married pair, eagles mate for life. Larry
got a great cell phone shot of the white-headed duo. Since he was in the middle
of the Working Men’s blitz, Larry wasn’t a threat to eagle eggs, even if he
could climb the towering pine that supported the nest, but the eagles weren’t
taking any chances.
Ben Franklin objected to the eagle as our national symbol.
Eagles steal fish and have superior attitudes. Knowing they are apex avarian predators
gives the bird a disrespectful approach toward humans and a dangerous one for
fellow raptors. With a seven foot wingspread and the strength to haul its nine
to fourteen pound body high in the sky and descend at one hundred miles per
hour to attack, the eagle is a formidable animal.
Larry cites a golfing day when he and partner Al Hudgins watched
a red-tailed hawk enter territory appropriated by an eagle. The eagle seized
the formerly dominant hawk and promptly killed it, right in front of the
foursome. Larry doesn’t know what led to the death penalty. Had the hawk
breakfasted on baby eagle or merely flown too close to the wrong pine tree?
Since our lagoons don’t freeze, Skidaway Island eagles are year
around residents. Nest-building begins in early February and mom eagle lays
eggs by the end of the month. The eggs hatch in late April and early May. Eagles lay up to three eggs, but the first
born may steal food from later hatchlings or peck them to death, an extreme
example of sibling rivalry.
Male and females look alike, but the female is twenty-five per
cent larger. Mom and Dad both build the nest, incubate the eggs, feed the
babies, and teach them to fly and fish. Landbridge Lane residents can expect eaglets
to begin circling nearby lagoons by late June or early July. Eagles take up to
five years to attain adult status and sexual maturity. Until then their
feathers are brown.
Almost every year since 1983, when no nesting pairs were found
in Georgia, eagles have increased. In 2010 one hundred thirty-nine active nests
were counted; 2011 there were one hundred forty-two. Last year researchers
counted one hundred fifty-eight nests in Georgia, seventeen in Chatham County.
The nest on Palmetto is new.
When eagles become common as great blue herons on Skidaway
Island, what adjustments must we make? Will
eagles object to high-rise golf balls?
Will our squirrel population decline?
Will ospreys be forced into servitude, fishing for the eagle’s dinner?
I tiptoed out on the 14th fairway at the crack of
dawn, over-sized lens protruding from my camera. Dad eagle took exception to my pointing it at the nest and swooped
back and forth over my head until he frightened me away.
I wonder what he will do, come spring, when I venture back to
get a shot of the babies?
By: Karen Dove Barr
Contact
karendovebarr@hotmail.com
Wild Times on Skidaway Island
by Karen Dove Barr
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt:
Wallowing
in mud and wading in tidal puddles while scarfing down a seafood buffet is hog
heaven to sus scrofu, the feral pig. America’s original travel agent,
Christopher Columbus, brought the first pigs to the West Indies during his
second voyage in 1498, where they adapted so well Spanish explorer Hernando
DeSoto off-loaded breeding pairs up and down the islands of the Georgia coast
in the 1540s so prospective settlers would have plenty to eat.
Unfortunately
none of Georgia’s Golden Isles has nearly enough Spanish settlers to keep the
pigs under control.
Hernando
DeSoto can’t be blamed for all feral hogs in the southern states. Escapees from
pig farms, particularly a large “hog-bust” in North Carolina in the 1920s, and
later introduction of wild Eurasian hogs for hunting throughout the South have
contributed to the mix.
Skidaway
Islanders with acorn-bearing live oaks, living on the western edge of the
island, are most likely to meet their wild hog neighbors. A large boar can be
aggressive if disturbed while digging up a yard, as can mama sow with
piglets.
On
the flip side Skidaway pigs, if cooked thoroughly, are perfectly edible by
Landings residents and it’s always hog-hunting season on private property in
Georgia.
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Karen Dove Barr,
Attorney, was recently recognized by the Georgia State Bar for providing legal
assistance to military families and service members. She has practiced in the field of family law in Savannah for 34
years.
http://www.karendovebarr.com/
https://www.facebook.com/karendovebarr
http://amazon.com/Wild-Times-Skidaway-Island-Karen/dp/1939521041
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/wild-times-on-skidaway-island-karen-dove-barr/1115227605?ean=9781939521040
http://strategicmediabooks.com/store/books/wild-times-in-skidaway-island/
Wild Times on Skidaway Island, Georgia's Historic Rain Forest, details life in a unique Audubon-designated, ecologically friendly refuge. There, golfers pitch balls around endangered great blue herons, mama raccoons march their babies across backyard decks where once Guale Indians trapped ancestors of the same raccoons, and residents dodge alligators and rescue snakes.
Even the vegetation is wild. Three hundred-year-old oaks dripping Spanish moss and poison ivy surmount an under-story of wax myrtle and holly. Carolina jasmine, Cherokee roses, and endangered orchids grow wild in the rain forest. The book examines choices residents make when stared down by a bald eagle, when a red-tailed hawk mistakes a golf ball for bird food, when wakened at midnight by deer munching hibiscus. Wild Times on Skidaway Island educates about the species that residents must adapt to on this historic island.
12 comments:
Thanks, Dina Rae! I look forward to hearing from your followers.
Nothing gives me more pleasure than observing nature. Your book is such a beautiful glimpse into our natural surroundings.
Thanks for sharing the great excerpt and the giveaway. Sounds like a great book. I love photographing nature. evamillien at gmail dot com
Hi Eve, How do you get the animals to pose?
Intriguing excerpt
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
Thank you so much for sharing with us! :-)
justforswag(AT)yahoo(DOT)com
Love the eagles. This is going to be amazing.
marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
I loved reading about the eagles. Will have to add this book to my tbr list. AFischer48@mail.com
Sorry for the late post. I’m playing catch-up here so I’m just popping in to say HI and sorry I missed visiting with you on party day! Hope you all had a good time!
kareninnc at gmail dot com
Sounds like a great read!!
Thanks for the chance to win!
natasha_donohoo_8 at hotmail dot com
Thanks for the excerpt and giveaway, Take me away to the island :) bobbyehopebooth at yahoo dot com
Love the excerpts on the tour, can't wait to read this book. And thanks for the giveaway!
tiger-chick-1(at)hotmail(dot)com
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