Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable South Holston hacked Bald Eagle recovered after 14 years in wild. An injured adult Bald Eagle was taken to the College of Veterinary = Medicine at The University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Saturday (Oct. 4). It had been = turned over to the American Eagle Foundation of Pigeon Forge, by officials of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. It had a very badly damaged = wing. The bird wore a US Fish & Wildlife Service bird band. It was a bird = hacked at South Holston Lake on 29 July 1994 as part of a multi-year project = which was funded with $17,700 raised by Bristol Bird Club members and hundreds = of others in a cooperative project with the Bristol Herald Courier. And = with matching donations from the federal government, the total came to $23,000. Michael P. Jones, D.V.M., Associate Professor of Avian & Zoological = Medicine with UT Veterinary Medicine looked at the bird today. The entire = humerous bone=20 was exposed and there were other problems. Dr. Jones recommended the = eagle=20 be euthanized, since he would have had to amputate the entire wing which = is no longer allowed by the US Fish & Wildlife Service. At this hour, we do not know where the injured bird was discovered or = who recovered it from the wild. This eagle, taken to the UT Veterinary school today, was sponsored by = BBC member Bob Quillen and seven of his fellow workers from the Right of Way = section of the Virginia Department of Transportation's Bristol District Office = which oversees 12 Southwest Virginia counties. Quillen, who was a Right of Way Agent, coordinated raising contributions = of $510 from his fellow workers. The Bristol District Office had more than 315 = other employees who donated to help adopt a second eagle. "That absolutely made my day," said Quillen when reached by telephone at = his home Saturday evening. "It is really wonderful to know what happened to = our bird." He had told the VDOT newspaper when they donated the money in = June 1991 that "Eagles recognize no boundaries, and neither do VDOT employees when it comes to preserving our endangered species." Quillen's group named their bird "Zeus" from Greek mythology. Zeus was = the king of the gods, the ruler of the god of the sky and thunder. His symbols = are the thunderbolt, eagle, bull and oak. Eaglet Zeus was taken from a wild nest in Wisconsin at the age of 8.2 = weeks and flown out of the region by Northwest Airlines as a donation to the = project. It was kept in a hacking tower on a ridge above South Holston Lake from = 17 June to 29 July of 1994. It was 14.3 weeks of age when released, weighed 11.3 pounds, and stayed at the lake until it departed the area after having = been last seen 8 August 1994. This eagle, with band number 629-39613, wore a green patagial marker = with an orange number 97 on its left wing. =20 The South Holston hacking project was a cooperative effort of the U.S. = Forest Service,=20 Tennessee Tech University and TWRA. . =20 In the long run 29 birds were hacked over a three year period from the = huge hacking towers at South Holston. Eaglets were brought from Alaska and Wisconsin = during the period 1991-1994. Quillen is now retired from VDOT. A public relations officer and = cameraman from VDOT in Richmond came to South Holston Lake to interview Quillen and = another=20 local employee in 1991. The story with photo appeared on the front page = of VDOT's=20 statewide employee newspaper. No one was concerned that this was a = Tennessee project and would be conducted in Tennessee. The Bald Eagle is our = national symbol. Eagles soar throughout the region. We now have eagles nesting in = Kingsport and=20 on the Clinch River in Hancock County. They are showing up in rural = areas of=20 Southwest Virginia where they have never before been seen by birders. Eagles have been observed every month of the year at South Holston. We do not know how many eaglets, grandeaglets or great grandeaglets have = been among the descendants of Zeus, let alone others hacked at South Holston. = =20 Let's go birding...... Wallace Coffey Bristol, TN =20 =================NOTES TO SUBSCRIBER===================== The TN-Bird Net requires you to SIGN YOUR MESSAGE with first and last name, CITY (TOWN) and state abbreviation. You are also required to list the COUNTY in which the birds you report were seen. 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