Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 20, 1954
Unusual Eagle Experiences
By John Mees, Ranger Naturalist
On July 23, 1954, while I was on duty
in Sinnott Memorial, a bald eagle, Haliacetus leucocephalus
(Linnaeus), was observed in the water approximately 20 yards from the
shore to the east of the viewpoint. Using field glasses, I could see the
eagle moving through the water with the aid of his wings. I could not
see whether or not the eagle had a fish in his talons and do not know
how it got into the water.
After the eagle reached shore it flew
into a nearby tree, where it stayed for about a half-hour. Later it was
seen soaring above the rim of the lake. Dr. D. S. Farner (1952. The
Birds of Crater Lake National Park. University of Kansas Press. xi, 187
pp.) mentions a similar incident.

Bald Eagle
From Kodachrome by Welles & Welles
|
On August 7, 1954, A. E. O'Nion of
Danville, California, brought to my attention an unusual incident which
happened while he was fishing from a rowboat on the lake. A short
distance from him was another party of fishermen. One of the members of
this party hooked a small fish, apparently in the eye. All eyes were
turned toward the man showing his skill at catching the first fish of
the day and were watching him reeling in the line with his prize.
Nobody noticed a bald eagle, soaring
above, which had spotted with its keen eyes a crippled fish in the clear
blue water below. When the fish broke the surface of the water the eagle
swooped down over the water in a dive, grasped the fish in its talons
when it was only a few feet from the boat and flew away to a nearby
tree. Needless, to say, the fishermen were surprised -- even dumbfounded
-- by such a strange experience. They went home empty-handed as far as
fish were concerned, but with an unusual fish story.