7-21-2005
Last of the Dead Creek Eagles Are Set Free
Two young eagles check out their surrounding from their
hack box at the Dead Creek Wildlife Management Area before taking
their first flight.
photo by: Steve Costello, CVPS
For Immediate Release: July 21, 2005
Media Contact: Amy Alfieri, Vermont Fish & Wildlife (802) 343-7454
Margaret Fowle, National Wildlife Federation (802) 229-0650
LAST OF THE DEAD CREEK EAGLES ARE SET FREE
ADDISON, VT - The doors to the hack boxes at the Dead Creek Wildlife
Management Area were opened before dawn on July 16, freeing Vermont's
Bald Eagle Restoration Initiative's four remaining eagles.
"Two of the young eagles were ready to go and flew off, while the
other two stayed behind," said Amy Alfieri of the Vermont Fish &
Wildlife Department. "I was concerned about the docile eaglet from
Massachusetts. It never flapped its wings or showed any interest in
fledging, but by mid-afternoon it was out on the deck in front of the
hack boxes flapping vigorously. I'm sure it will fledge soon enough."
Eleven eaglets have been raised and released from the Dead Creek
hacking site during this second season of the Vermont Bald Eagle
Restoration Initiative. Six eaglets from Maryland were placed in the
hack boxes in early May and released on June 2. Four more arrived later
in June from rehabilitators in Massachusetts and New York. The newest
addition, an orphaned eaglet from Maine, was placed in the hack box on
July 10.
"It's been a busy but satisfying season," said Margaret Fowle of the
National Wildlife Federation and project partner. "We released more
eaglets than last year, plus we gave a home to two orphaned eaglets."
Partners in the Vermont Bald Eagle Restoration Initiative include the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department,
National Wildlife Federation, Outreach for Earth Stewardship, Central
Vermont Public Service, and Senator Jim Jeffords.
The initiative's goal is to help establish a breeding bald eagle
population in Vermont. Project partners also are presenting programs and
developing teaching resources to raise awareness about endangered
species and the conservation of all wildlife.
To learn more about the project and bald eagles in general, visit the
Vermont Bald Eagle Restoration Initiative website: www.cvps.com/eagles.
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photo caption: Two young eagles check out their surrounding from their
hack box at the Dead Creek Wildlife Management Area before taking their
first flight. The hack box doors were opened on July 16, freeing the
remaining four eagles reared during the second season of Vermont's Bald
Eagle Restoration Initiative.
photo credit: Steve Costello, CVPS
For Further Information please contact: Amy Alfieri at 802-343-7454