My home town of Syracuse has become a hot spot for bald eagle watching. They are a common enough site around Onondaga Lake that some people travel here just to see them, and they have their own Facebook page: The Bald Eagles of Onondaga Lake. So I was happy to have the chance to learn more about them.
This book does tell you about the eagles: their nesting, and mating, and hunting habits. But it is mostly about the role of eagles in the history of America. To begin with, the bald eagle was put on the seal of the United States of America, and became a symbol of the country. As a symbol, the eagle was put on all kinds of things: coins, buttons, paintings, and was honored as an embodiment of strength and freedom.
But in real life, a lot of people hated eagles. They got bad press from the beginning, for stealing fish from ospreys. Apparently they really do this. An eagle will fly at an osprey carrying a fish, until the osprey drops the fish. Then the eagle will snatch it out of the air. Therefore, people despised the eagles for being lazy, cowardly, and immoral.
Farmers hated eagles for stealing their livestock. Eagles had the reputation for carrying off whole pigs, and even children. Eagles can snatch chickens, and the youngest newborn lambs, but they can’t carry anything heavier than five pounds. So definitely no children. (There was a movie that depicted an eagle carrying off a child, but it was completely faked.) Eagles also did a lot of unsung good for farmers by killing the rodents that ate the grain.
Fishermen hated eagles because eagles eat fish. And they do. One of the places where eagles were most hated was in Alaska, where fishing is the livelihood of many people. For many years, Alaska had a bounty on bald eagles. They paid 50 cents to a dollar for a pair of talons, and thousands were cashed in.
The story of the book is that the bald eagle came back from extinction twice. The first time they were hunted almost to extinction. They were shot wholesale, for sport, because they were considered vermin, and just because they were there. Congress passed a law protecting eagles (with an exemption for Alaska), and there was a gradual change in attitudes. As the eagles’ numbers began to decline, people became concerned about preserving the national symbol.
Then, when the numbers began to rebound, DDT was invented. DDT was used to kill insects, but it traveled up the food chain. It caused eagles’ (and other birds’) egghsells to be thin, and break. Eagles weren’t having babies. Again, the numbers of eagles began to plummet. People were again concerned that they were facing extinction. Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring was one of the things that raised awareness of DDT, and it was banned.
Numbers rebounded again, partly just by nature doing its thing, but also because of scientists who worked in special breeding programs. There are many stories of devoted and brave people climbing into nests, building special towers where eaglets could grow without seeing people, and feeding chunks of raw fish to babies using a puppet arm.
The book has a lot of interesting stories about interesting people throughout. In general, I think the book had too many words. The language is flowery at times, and when the author tells a story, he tends to include a lot of detail. But I read the whole thing.