Baby Eagles Who Fell From Nest Are Excited To See Their Mother Again


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In Sequim, Washington, Kathy Pitts was out walking her dog when suddenly the pet picked up a scent. Pitts was directed to a shrub in her neighbor’s yard by his beginning to bark.

Two little, chubby birds with downy, grey feathers were there, cuddled in the shadow of the leaves.

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

Pitts knew these weren’t just any chicks. They were, in fact, the offspring of local celebrity couple Ricky and Lucy, a bonded pair of bald eagles, who have been nesting in the area since around 2013.

Lucy and Ricky had lost a prior pair of eaglets in recent years, and Pitts couldn’t stand to see it happen again, so she called retired wildlife expert Jaye Moore.

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

Moore rushed the eaglets to a veterinary center, where the pair was examined and cleaned up. The babies were found to be approximately 3 to 4 weeks old — about two months too young to even think about leaving the nest.

“They’re very slow moving, very aware and alert, but you could tell they were very much out of their element,” Keith Ross, a wildlife photographer who captured the rescue, told The Dodo. “Very sweet, very soft, pudgy little things.”

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

The next hurdle to overcome was getting the eaglets back into their nest high up in the pines.

When Casey Balch, owner of Pacific Northwest Tree Service, heard that Lucy and Ricky’s babies needed help, he cleared his schedule and rushed over. The worried parents supervised his every move from a nearby tree, especially whenever he was handling their precious cargo.

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

Since the eaglets’ safe return last week, Sequim residents have been closely monitoring the little family. They are happy to see that Ricky and Lucy are now again in full parental mode, caring for their young while keeping a vigilant eye out for predators.

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

“Everyone gets excited when they have chicks,” Ross said. “And then for them to fall out of the nest and for them to get replaced back, it’s pretty special — it’s like the Sequim babies got put back.”

“Hopefully they stay in this time!” he added.

Credit: KEITH’S FRAME OF MIND/KEITH ROSS

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