We have a thief that can cause us much grief. No, I am not trying to be poetic. This is a fact and a challenge not easily
solved. He visits in the daylight hours, on sunny days. He is careful, checking for human presence if possible before he steals.
The thief is an eagle, monarch of the skies, a beautiful
large aviator. Male or female I know
not, but I do know that his(perhaps her?) nest is not too far
away. His visits are too frequent to our
neighborhood. His visits take a toll, as
is the case with all thieves.
After flying high above our farm, he is always on the hunt. Lovely
to behold if one did not know his intent. His target its our fish pond and the lovely
trout that inhabit those waters. He can
dive down, plummeting out of the sky, and sink his talons into the back of a
fish as it nears the surface of the water.
Those hooks dig deep and the wiggling of the captured victim is in
vain. He
may fly away to eat at a more leisurely spot that where “man” may
interrupt his dinner. But he also may
eat on the bank of the pond, if he is feeling undetected. This is a
picky eagle, he eats only the eyes and part of the fish’s head, discarding the
flesh when he is sated.
One thing that this master of the skies does not like is
bottle rockets that are launched to scare him away. It is a temporary distraction and we know he
will be back. Three other fish ponds in
the area are faced with the same problem.
The eagle is not our only thief with similar traits. He is just the most recent one we have
observed. Blue herons and sandhill cranes have a great hunger for trout.
What can be done?
Here is a gorgeous bird that we all admire, our National Bird. He has the protection of the government as
being endangered. He is above
reproach. He is a robber, taking
expensive items much as any human thief would do, with no care for his
victims. This eagle has two victims, the
fish and the man who owns the fish, who purchases the expensive fish and feeds it. In this case, both are helpless to prevent
his assaults.
It is not so different from those ranchers and farmers whose
animals are at the mercy of the wolf packs that have been invited back into the
country where they once roamed free.
More protection, more victims. This seems an unsolvable problem when
trying to uphold the laws of the nation.
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