Eagle enthusiasts turn out for Bald Eagle Days on Saturday

BY DAVID HARPER World Staff Writer
Saturday, January 12, 2013



The spirits of local bald eagle enthusiasts are soaring this weekend.

The Bald Eagle Days event offers an opportunity for those with an interest in America’s national bird to see them in their own habitat along the Arkansas River and then to subsequently get a closer look at a series of seminars at the Jenks High School Freshman Academy.

Tulsa Audubon Society president John Kennington said Saturday that the two-part event, now in its second year, allows bird-lovers and novices to learn more about the “mystique” behind the birds.

Kennington estimated there are about 200 bald eagles that nest in Oklahoma but that hundreds more migrate through the state.

He said they are “birds of opportunity” who aren’t very picky about what they consume.

“They will eat whatever they can get their talons on,” Kennington said.

Todd Humphrey, who teaches ornithology at Jenks High School and is a member of the Tulsa Audubon Society’s board of directors, said bald eagles eat fish but also will devour many other creatures including other birds, such as American coots and ducks.

“Their first choice is what’s easiest,” Humphrey said.

Sunday’s schedule for Bald Eagle Days will follow the same format as Saturday. The seminars about eagles and other bird-related topics will occur from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. in Jenks. Those sessions will be preceded by a gathering at Helmerich Park, 7301 S. Riverside Drive, from 8 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. during which people will look across the Arkansas River at nesting bald eagles.

Read more of this story in Sunday's Tulsa World.
Associated Images:

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Jenks students (from left) Natalie McKillip, Cameron Lambky and Brooklynn Bond take turns looking through a spotting scope on the east side of the Arkansas River to view eagle nests a half mile away on the opposite side of the river during an early morning eagle watch at Helmerich Park on Saturday. The students were at the watch for a school project. MICHAEL WYKE/Tulsa World


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Ann Robinson takes a peek through a one of the spotting scope on the east side of the Arkansas River to view eagle nests on the opposite side of the river. Robinson brought her son to the watch for his school project. MICHAEL WYKE/Tulsa World



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