On the 16 of June I decided to join Meg with her bi-weekly
mission to the Sandveld to check the breeding status of the Black Eagles. I needed
nest monitoring experience and I decided to draw from the three years of eagle
monitoring that Meg has. There are all sorts of subtle behavioural changes exhibited
by eagles when they are breeding. These behavioural changes can be used to
determine if an eagle is incubating, whether it may have a chick or is ‘nest
warming’. Black Eagles and Martial Eagles are different eagles, but I wouldn’t
be surprised if the eagles exhibited similar behaviours when breeding. Next
year I need to be able to determine the breeding status of about 60 Martial
Eagles pairs from helicopter ‘fly bys’ which is incredibly difficult, so I
decided to get a head start.
I took a leisurely drive up to the Sandveld checking on
the two Martial Eagle nests I had checked with Gigi, Dennis and Chris earlier
in the year. At the first nest check I saw an eagle on the nest, but the eagle
left as soon as the other eagle flew in and perched above the nest. The eagle
which was on the nest had flown off to perch on the lower reaches of a neighbouring pylon.
From the perch the eagle would periodically dive into the undergrowth. No
eagles were on the nest for about half an hour, which suggested they were not
incubating.
At the second nest where I had not seen an eagle at all,on
my previous visit, I saw an eagle perched in the nest and another eagle perched
one pylon away from the nest. This is a positive sign that they may use the nest
this year.
I got to Meg just after dark. We “kuiered” at Donkieskraal luxury tented
camp which in the Sandveld. We had a lovely evening filled with questions about
dreadlocks and eagles. In the morning it was back to business. I went with Meg
to check a Black Eagle nest and then I was off to look at a Martial Eagle nest
near Leipoldtville(the nest Meg had found while looking for Black Eagles). I
approached the farmer’s house to introduce myself and a young man came out to
greet me. I asked for permission from the farmer to be on the farm and before I
knew it the young man had invited himself along, full of questions. It was really
great to share my passion for Martial Eagles with a young mind, a sponge for new
information about an incredible bird he had never seen before.Together we sat
watching the Martial Eagles mate. After this an eagle left the nest and soared above
us for a while before disappearing high into the sky. I left the farm to meet
up with Meg and check up on another two Black Eagle nests. On the stretch from
Cape Town to the Sandveld, Meg has 35 Black Eagle nests (she doesn’t monitor all
of these) and I have four. It really is quite incredible that these two eagles
operate on different spatial scales.
We stayed at Redelinghuis in a beautiful cottage, with
two lovely families from Cape Town who had come up for the long weekend to
enjoy the waves at Elands Bay. We had a lovely evening filled with questions
about eagles and eagle biologists. We left in the morning to check three Black
eagle nests as I didn’t have any nests I knew of between Redelinghuis and
Piketberg.
We had checked two Black Eagle nests and while driving
towards the last Black Eagle nest of the day,Meg’s eye caught something. I was
far too busy concentrating on the road to have noticed. Meg stopped suddenly
in front of an ostrich. She quickly got to work setting up her scope.
I shouted at Meg from my car “are you mad and why are
you stopping for an ostrich?”
To which she had replied “No there is a spoon bill here!”
all the while killing herself with laughter.
I walked up to her and said “Cool, But aren’t we
looking for eagles?”
She looked at me and said “Just look through the scope.”
What I was looking at was no ostrich and it was most certainly was not a
spoonbill, but a new nest on top of an electricity pylon.
Excitement filled my body as I flagged a tractor down.
The man in the tracker looked very confused and I asked him in the most
brilliant Afrikaans(something which I am not able to do under normal circumstances)
where I needed to go to get closer to the power line. Meg and I were
pretty excited;we jumped into our cars and drove off in the direction of the
farm where the power line was situated, to ask for permission to have a look at
the nest. Permission was granted and we wasted no time marching our way up to
get a better view of the nest.
We were undecided as to whether the nest and it‘s
occupants belonged to a Black Eagle or a Martial Eagle and the heat haze was
really making it difficult to decide. We got a bit closer and the waiting game
began. We could only see a head out of the nest. Then suddenly the Eagle stood
up in the nest for a brief moment and I saw the flash of a very white chest and
the shape of a head that could only be a Martial Eagle. Meg and I were overjoyed,
but not for the same reason. Meg has been killing herself trying to get to all
the Black Eagle nests in the Sandveld and to have another nest in the middle of
her study site was not going to be easy.
After all the excitement, we were exhausted, but there
was still a Black Eagle nest to see too. We were able to see the Black Eagle
incubating not too far up the mountain, which was great for our tired bodies.
We stayed with Patrick and Karin; managers at Wagenpad farm. They welcomed us into
their home with sweet babies (a hot drink of coffee/ Milo and Amarulaand chocolate
liqueur). Thanks go toTillia& Lawrence at Donkieskraal, Gary, Lizzy&
Chris in Redelinghuis and Patrick & Karin at Wagenpad for welcoming Meg and
I into their homes!
New Martial Eagle nest in the Sandveld
Checking out the new nest
Martial Eagle with prey - new nest in the Sandveld
Both Martial Eagles - new nest
Prey remains collection from a pylon near the nest
Last Black Eagle of the trip - perfect eagle watching position with Jengo
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