![]() Throughout its 76-year history, NWF has a long record of successful efforts to protect habitat for grizzly bears, Florida panthers, bald eagles and other North American predators. ![]() NWF Priority: Protecting Habitats for Predators ![]() “It’s rare to find a cliff with only one.” Females lay one to four eggs at a time, though usually two, of which one typically survives the two months needed before fledging.ĭunlop says he has had a camera in his hands most of his life but really started getting serious about photography “with the digital age.” Using digital cameras, he says, “I can shoot in the morning and have an 11 by 14 picture on the wall by dinner.” “Many cliffs have half a dozen nests on them,” Dunlop says. ![]() The birds tend to mate for life and to claim territories of 8 to 12 square miles where, over the years, they may build and maintain more than a dozen aeries in trees and on cliffs. They feed on a wide variety of prey, from rodents to reptiles, including animals that may nearly match an eagle’s own body weight of more than 14 pounds for the largest females and less than 9 pounds for large males. With a wingspan that can approach 7 feet, the eagles are powerful and maneuverable fliers. Golden eagles range across most of the Northern Hemisphere. Especially memorable, he says, was one blasé female that flew into the nest and calmly fed its young while Dunlop was only 20 some feet away setting up a remote-control camera. If he finds that the birds are not coming into the nest because of the blind, he takes it down and moves away. The eagles, he says, generally ignore remote-control cameras close to their young but will pay attention to the blind, at least initially. He also positions remote-control cameras with wide-angle lenses in or near aeries for shots that combine a nest with more distant backgrounds, such as the flat lands sprawling below. “If I leave a blind up too long, it’ll be destroyed,” he says. Capturing his images may require that he spend an entire day in a blind with outside temperatures approaching 100 degrees F. He looks for nests that stand opposite hillsides or cliff faces that he can reach on foot and where he can set up a blind. “I monitor them each year and use a spotting scope to see what the eagles are doing.” “A lot are accessible, but it often seems like you’re hiking forever to reach some of them.” He is familiar with a number of nests, or aeries, which can measure as many as 6 feet across. “I do a lot of hiking and driving,” in search of nests, he says. His gear: a collapsible blind and a selection of fast, telephoto lenses that allow him to capture images of skittish raptors that may be 200 feet away.ĭunlop seeks out the birds primarily during April and May, when Nevada eagles are hatching their young. His quarry: golden eagles nesting on the sides of cliffs that might tower 400 feet high. “I go to the desert because nobody’s out there,” he says. Text by Roger Di Silvestro, Photographs by Nick DunlopĮVERY SPRING FOR THE PAST SEVEN YEARS, California photographer Nick Dunlop has gone on the hunt in the remote reaches of western Nevada’s Great Basin and Black Rock Deserts.A photographer describes the lengths (and heights) he goes to capture unparalleled images of nesting golden eagles
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