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Dakota
02-14-2012, 04:18 PM
If its not a Bald Eagle then what is it? Out by the channel in Cedar Creek

http://i541.photobucket.com/albums/gg385/dakotavikings/BaldEagle002.jpg

white95v6
02-14-2012, 04:46 PM
i would say its a bald eagle.

we seen two last week on the caney.

tnridgerunner
02-14-2012, 04:54 PM
No question. It is a mature bald eagle.

Travis C.
02-14-2012, 04:57 PM
So cool to see those birds around here.

Dakota
02-14-2012, 05:23 PM
I thought it was. I was on the move in my boat and it stopped me in my tracks. Took several pics of it. The first one I've seen on old hickory. This was dec 2011

randy10357
02-14-2012, 07:18 PM
They are such a majestic bird. Ther are a couple of resident bald eagles at the upper basin of Reelfoot Lake that are incredible to watch.

My sons and I were up there in October and watched them soar and then rest in their nest which is HUGE....

I need to find my photos and post.

jrbaker90
02-14-2012, 07:38 PM
That is definitely a bald eagle I was just up at reelfoot lake saw about 6 eagles and saw one at the resort I was staying at in a cypress tree.

bd-
02-14-2012, 07:47 PM
For the last several winters there has been a bald eagle that tends to hang around the vicinity of the Gallatin Steam Plant, usually somewhere along the river from the Plant discharge canal on upriver to the next couple big bends. There aren't any definitive landmarks in your picture but it wouldn't surprise me to learn that this one was photographed in that area.

bd

smalliefan
02-14-2012, 08:01 PM
i stopped and watched one while wading the east fork of the stones near woodbury last summer. may be the first time i've seen one in the wild around here. beautiful bird!

tkwalker
02-14-2012, 09:13 PM
They are around ... I have seen a number of them around my cabin on the Caney in Lancaster ... Also when I was guiding I have spotted a number of them on the river between Carthage and Cordel Hull Dam... Also Osprey in Martins Creek near Granville on Cordel Hull stealling my skippies from my planer boards !!! ... I think bd and his brother was with me that day ... <'TK><:)

Dakota
02-14-2012, 09:22 PM
Bd I took this pic near the main channel coming out of cedar creek. I fish the gsp about 2-3 times a month but haven't seen the bald eagle out that way as of yet. For the last several winters there has been a bald eagle that tends to hang around the vicinity of the Gallatin Steam Plant, usually somewhere along the river from the Plant discharge canal on upriver to the next couple big bends. There aren't any definitive landmarks in your picture but it wouldn't surprise me to learn that this one was photographed in that area.

bd

Alphahawk
02-14-2012, 11:34 PM
The last time I fished the Caney....back in late fall...there were 6 of them cavorting around. As we were coming back up toward the dam one came down right in front of the boat and snatched a nice rainbow out of the water. I have seen them everywhere I fish...from Nickajack down to Pickwick.

Travis C.
02-15-2012, 08:04 AM
Didn't the ones on the Caney have a youngster either last year or year before?

nofish
02-15-2012, 08:17 AM
Me and a friend saw one on Natchez trace pkwy on the way to laurel hill lake about 6 months ago. He was about 50ft off the side of the road eating what we thought was roadkill, but he could've killed it. I was very surprised because I had no idea they were in Tennessee.

Alphahawk
02-15-2012, 08:36 AM
Didn't the ones on the Caney have a youngster either last year or year before?

Yes...my son and I had the privilege to see juvenile Eagles being fed while on a fishing trip below Cordell Hull. One Eagle flew down to the river and caught dinner...LOL...while the other one circled overhead...I assume as in a guarding position over the nest. When that bird dropped off dinner the other Eagle came into the nest and started the feeding and the one who caught the fish assumed the guard position circling over the nest. It was quite interesting to see that.


Regards

Reel Tune
02-15-2012, 03:08 PM
That's awesome, they are such beautiful creatures.

Last time I was below the Old Hickory dam I saw one, and I've also seen one at the TWRA Williamsport Lakes. I have yet to catch one with the camera ready. At Williamsport I wanted to get in position to have the eagle in the background as I was holding up a fish, or just fishing, but couldn't get setup.

bd-
02-15-2012, 06:30 PM
There is a resident pair on the lower Caney that have raised one or two youngsters every spring for the last several years. They always seem to stick around, though the young birds always seem to leave at the end of the season. I didn't see the resident birds around anywhere last fall though - I hope they are okay.

It's interesting that the eagle in the original post was photographed around Cedar Creek. I hadn't ever seen one in that area, though admittedly it's been several years since I've fished there. I used to get over that way more years ago when I bass fished more.

The other place where I always see bald eagles in the winter is on Dale Hollow. I haven't seen any resident birds there - I think they all just fly down for the winter. But from November through about March or April there seem to be eagles on the lower end of the lake near the dam pretty consistently.

bd

Catchingtrout
02-15-2012, 09:58 PM
I have several pictures of Balds on OHL from years past. I haven't seen them in warmer weather, but January, February and early March you can bet they will show themselves. I have some really nice photo's and video of Golden eagles on the lower Caney

bd-
02-16-2012, 09:31 AM
I have never seen a golden eagle on the Caney. That would be an extremely rare sight. They did release a few in the area around Cordell Hull lake in the 1990s though, so it's certainly possible. I thought I saw one once, but when I got closer I realized it was just a juvenile bald eagle. The young bald eagles don't have their white plumage for their first year or so and they can look very similar to a golden.

Golden eagle:

http://sdakotabirds.com/species/photos/golden_eagle.jpg

Juvenile bald eagle:

http://www.wisenaturephotos.com/Juvenile%20Bald%20Eagle1.jpg

Tough to tell apart.

bd

90titans89
02-16-2012, 10:22 PM
So Cool! Thanks for sharing.:D

MNfisher
02-18-2012, 11:14 PM
Wow, I didn't realize Bald Eagles were that rare down here. In MN, we saw them all the time and didn't even really acknowledge them when we came across them. They were very common. Interesting.

Catchingtrout
02-26-2012, 06:21 PM
Caney Fork Goldens

FOXZILLA
02-26-2012, 08:47 PM
I saw two bald eagles in the HH area of the Caney on Feb. 21. Very cool.

Mike Anderson
02-26-2012, 10:57 PM
Those are most definitely young Bald Eagles not Goldens.

tnridgerunner
02-26-2012, 11:07 PM
I'm glad to have them, whatever they are. Mike, is there an easy way to tell the difference between an immature bald and a golden?

Mike Anderson
02-27-2012, 12:03 AM
I'm glad to have them, whatever they are. Mike, is there an easy way to tell the difference between an immature bald and a golden?

No not really unless you can get good close ups, or see the parents... I'm just pretty familiar with this pair. They have a nest that needs not be revealed on a public forum, where I've been watching and photographing this pair, their mom and dad, and their older brothers and sisters for several years now.
http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-SkgMdKW/0/L/20110721-EJ7G5090-L.jpg


http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-d9PFqjM/0/L/20110721-EJ7G5074-L.jpg

http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-DSwTGKx/0/L/20110513-EJ7G1533-L.jpg

http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-FWP278w/0/L/20110513-EJ7G1574-L.jpg

Mike Anderson
02-27-2012, 12:04 AM
http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-xNZGzJB/0/L/20110721-EJ7G5082-L.jpg

tnridgerunner
02-27-2012, 12:24 AM
Several years ago I used to see a pair of what I believe to be goldens maybe five miles from the Caney. They seemed to be more oriented toward small mammals than fish below the dam, which the balds prefer.

Some of my neighbors around Center Hill are very protective of eagles, so people shouldn't get any bad thoughts about trophy hunting or anything of that sort. These neighbors are always armed and most of them are very good shots. You won't always see them, but they see you.

Mike Anderson
02-27-2012, 10:18 AM
I think that the younger eagles all prefer small land mammal's when they are first learning to catch live prey. A failed attempt in the water could be fatal.

One day on Percy Priest I was watching an Osprey flying back to his perch with a Shad he had just caught. Suddenly a mature Bald Eagle shows up flying full speed out of nowhere and smacked head on into the Ospey knocking the fish loose. Both birds fell several feet but recovered before hitting the water. The Eagle recovered the fish. That, was a very cool sighting and evidently not uncommon.
I've also seen Eagles lock talons way up in the air and spirial down several feet while holding on to each other.

There's an abundance of natural wonder all around us all the time. All you have to do is look for it. Like this Butterfly dive bombing an Osprey!
http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/20100917-MG9835/1143123569_vCvfg-L.jpg

http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/i-BGVRMr7/0/L/20110629-EJ7G4388-L.jpg

http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/20100904-MG9127/1143123329_AZqyE-L.jpg

http://michaelanderson.smugmug.com/Wildlife/Birds/20100909-MG9388/1132954504_9YcRv-L.jpg

bd-
02-27-2012, 03:57 PM
Mike, is there an easy way to tell the difference between an immature bald and a golden?

There is only one way I know of to tell, and it's not easy.

If you see the eagle with its leg extended, you can look at the feathering on the lower leg.

A juvenile bald eagle will have bare skin for a few inches up from the foot - basically a bare "ankle."

A golden eagle's leg, on the other hand, will be feathered all the way to the base of the toes.

This is tough because when eagles perch, they often do so with their body huddled over their feet so you can't see the "ankle" area. For instance, on the photo of the juvenile bald eagle I posted up above, the eagle's body feathers block the view of the lower leg.

On the other hand, you can see that Catchingtrout's picture is definitely a pair of juvenile bald eagles because the one on the right has his leg extended, and you can see that the dark brown feathers stop a couple inches above the foot.

I did some reading to see how long a juvenile bald eagle keeps the brown plumage, and I found that sometimes they don't gain the full adult black-and-white plumage until they're 4 or 5 years old. Therefore, with the nesting pair of adult bald eagles on the Caney producing one or two young eagles a year, and the rarity of goldens in this part of the country, I'd think the assumption weighs heavily that any dark brown eagle in that area is more likely to be a juvenile bald eagle rather than a golden.

Like I said, it's possible that a golden might show up in the area, but it wouldn't be common.

As far as forage, bald eagles (especially adults) do prefer fish but they're not picky. They will even eat carrion if it's available. Up in Alaska they're kind of famous for hanging out around garbage dumps. I saw one at Dale Hollow on the roadside eating a dead racoon once.

bd