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February 11, 2014 • Page 3
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Eagle Season
About 300 bald eagles spend the winter in South Dakota along the Missouri River or in
the Black Hills. Photo by Harlan Humphrey.
A bald eagle built a nest
near the old Meridian Bridge
in Yankton two years ago,
and then perched on a nearby cottonwood branch and
posed for pedestrians, who
were at eye level to the big
bird when they were on the
bridge’s upper deck.
The eagle eventually abandoned that nest.
Maybe it was tad too close
to civilization for her comfort. But more eagles than
ever are wintering on the
open water of the Missouri
River in Yankton, and they
often glide slowly over the
walking bridge that extends
into the city’s old downtown.
Eagles were following the Dodo bird to extinction a scant 50 years ago.
Illegal hunting, habitat
destruction and a poison
known as DDT were killing
the species. In 1963, only 487
nesting pairs could be found
in the United States.
But the
Endangered Species Act
banned DDT in 1972, and the
eagles gradually adapted to
a changing prairie landscape. Today, the state
Game, Fish & Parks
Department estimates that
there may be as many as 300
nesting pairs just in South
Dakota.
Most South Dakota
eagles can be found winter-
ing below the Missouri River
dams, where massive old
cottonwood trees provide a
barky foundation for their
large, heavy nests. Open
water below the river’s
dams provides easy fishing.
Eagles also nest in the Black
Hills near the Deerfield
Reservoir, and it’s not surprising to find them in other
parts of the state.
Eagles build their
nests by mid-February and
begin laying eggs late
February. The birds mate for
life, and use the same nests
from year to year, adding
twigs each year. Their nests
are among the largest of any
North American bird. One
big nest measured 13 feet
deep by 8 feet wide.
The majestic bald
eagle was chosen as our
national emblem in 1787,
partly because it was native
to North America. The fierce
appearance of its curved
beak, regal white head and
piercing eyes were also fac-
tors. In the emblem, drawn
in 1782, a bald eagle is displayed with an olive branch
in one claw and 12 arrows
clutched in the other, representing both peace and war.
Benjamin Franklin
famously opposed putting
the bald eagle on the
nation's emblem. He favored
the wild turkey, which he
claimed was, "a much more
respectable bird and a true
native of America." He said
the turkey was a bird of
courage that "would not hesitate to attack a grenadier of
the British guards who
should presume to invade
his farm yard with a red coat
on."
It seems Franklin
was also put off with the
bald eagle's habit of eating
carrion. They often steal
food from smaller birds by
intimidating them into dropping their prey. They also
feed on dead fish and crippled birds. "He is a bird of
bad moral character," wrote
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Franklin. "He does not get
his living honestly. You may
have seen him perched in
some dead tree where, too
lazy to fish for himself, he
watches the labor of the
fishing hawk and, when that
diligent bird has at length
taken a fish and is bearing it
to his nest for his young
ones, the bald eagle pursues
him and takes the fish."
It seems unpatriotic to dredge up Franklin's
comments. After all, the
eagle is just doing what
comes naturally. Go eagle
watching this winter and
you will instantly be reminded of why our founding
fathers chose this regal bird
to represent our nation.
Your best chance to see
some soaring is to visit the
Missouri below the dams at
Yankton, Pickstown, Fort
Thompson and Pierre. In
Yankton, a few eagles can
often be found in the big
trees that lie south of
Riverside Ballpark.
The Sioux Falls
Outdoor Campus East in
Sioux Falls will host Bald
Eagle Awareness Days Feb.
20-22, while the Outdoor
Campus West in Rapid City
will host a raptor-themed
open house on Feb. 22.
Contact the S.D. Game, Fish
and Parks Department for
more information at (605)
773-4229.
Interested in
this spot?
Katie Hunhoff is the editor of South Dakota
Magazine, a bi-monthly publication celebrating life
in our great state. Visit
www.SouthDakotaMagazine.com for more stories on
the people and places of South Dakota or to subscribe to our print publication.
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