Think of an eagle...
What comes to your mind?
A large powerful bird of prey, swooping down and snatching up its next victim?
Or maybe you imagine a beautiful and noble bird with very likable qualities.
Actually, eagles are all of that and more.
In the
As members of the same species, the 59 different eagles share a lot of things in common. They are all predators or raptors, they are excellent fliers, and they all have excellent vision.
Eagles have strong, hooked bills and powerful talons adapted to their flesh-eating mode of life. They catch their prey with their feet and the claws of the rear toe and the central of the front three toes close together powerfully, killing their victims. The length of the toes and claws is more closely correlated with the size of the prey than with the size of the eagle itself.
The flight of eagles is powerful and often soaring. Some that take their prey on the ground swoop down on it from hunting perches on cliffs or branches. Like other raptors, eagles regurgitate pellets containing undigested feathers, hair, and bone fragments; ornithologists use these to study the birds' feeding habits in a particular region.
The female, usually larger than the male, chooses the nesting site and does most of the building. Eagles tend to renew old nests, adding only twigs and lining; such nests may be used year after year and for many generations. Most eagles lay two to three eggs. Incubation begins with the laying of the first egg, so that the firstborn is older and larger than its siblings.
Would you like to know hoe an eagle chooses her mate?
The eagle is such a wonderful creature that has a lot to offer to life. When the male eagle reaches the age of three, it begins the process of wooing the female eagle but there are some key requirements it must fulfill to get the nod or total approval of the female eagle in the proposed relationship. The two undergo a process called tagging that usually lasts for a couple of days in which the male eagle proves whether he is truly qualified to foot the bill of the female eagle. Amongst the fundamental qualities that the female eagle looks for in the male eagle is his trustworthiness and his ability to cater for her and her eaglets when they are born.
You may wonder, how does the female eagle confirm this and what are the pointers she looks for in the male eagle?
Let’s check this out - during the process of tagging, the female eagle conducts some exercises which tests these abilities in the male eagle. They are as follows:
- The female eagle takes a stick in a three dimensional figure-eight pattern in the air to heights reaching as high as 10,000 feet above the ground level and then drops it. She requires the male eagle to catch it before it reaches the ground and return it to her.
- The female eagle repeats this process every time by reducing the height with which it flies above ground level and using a larger stick but increases the speed at which it drops the stick. She expects the male eagle to pick the stick up each time without allowing it to fall to the ground and returning it to her.
- She continues this until the height of flight above the ground is just about 500 feet. At this point, the male eagle goes through the greatest test of the whole exercise. If he fails here, he is given the boot out of the relationship but if he succeeds, he wins the heart of the female eagle completely.
The question is; why this stress? or whole exercise?
The female eagle takes the male eagle through all these because she wants to be sure that the male eagle has the following abilities/qualities:
- He is dependable friend
- To find out whether he is very fit to be her husband
- She wants to be sure that when the baby eaglets are born, he would be able to catch them when she is teaching the eaglets how to fly. This is because the process of teaching the eaglets how to fly requires her to drop them and see whether they can fly, and should they has any struggles in flying; the male eagle is expected to catch them before they crash land.
- He is patient enough to be the head and overseas the affairs of their proposed family
Even the greatest and most powerful have weak moments. At such times, they may need a push before they stretch their wings and fly. Golden and bald eagles are among the largest and most powerful birds in the world. Eagles are symbols of strength, bravery and courage -- and proud independence. Even then, their independence must be learned.
As young eaglets, the nest is comfortable, safe, and secure. But if the eaglets are to survive on their own, they must leave the comfort of the nest and learn to fly! To convince the eaglets that it is time to leave the parents make the nest uncomfortable by tearing up the bedding with their talons, allowing the sticks and sharp ends to be exposed.
The mother eagle then beats her wings at the eaglets, harassing them, and driving them forward. Cowering before such an attack, the little eaglets climb up on the edge of the nest, only to be pushed over the side by the mother eagle. The eagle gently coaxed her offspring toward the edge of the nest. Her heart quivered with conflicting emotions as she felt their resistance to her persistent nudging. “Why does the thrill of soaring have to begin with the fear of falling?” she thought. This ageless question was still unanswered for her.
Despite her fears, the eagle knew it was time; her parental mission was all but complete. There remained one final task – THE PUSH.
The eagle drew courage from an innate wisdom. Until her children
discovered their wings, there was no purpose for their lives outside the nest. Until they learned to soar, they would fail to understand the privilege it was to have been born an eagle. The push was the greatest gift she had to offer. It was her supreme act of love. And so, one by one, she pushed them. The eaglet falls, its wings struggling to catch the air currents, but flopping out of control due to inexperience Just before the eaglet crashes upon the rocks below, the mother eagle swoops down, catches it on her back, and soars upward into the sky. Much relieved, the young eaglet feels safe, until suddenly, without warning, the mother eagle dives downward, depriving the little eaglet of its grip. Once again it finds itself plummeting toward the ground.
Repeatedly the eaglet is dumped then rescued until it learns to catch the rising air currents and ride the winds. Its wings strengthen and soon the eaglet soars high above the earth, taking on the character of a true eagle.
Unfortunately, some eaglets refuse to use their wings and fly. Eventually, the mother eagle soars high one final time with the eaglet on her back, and with a wild screech of disappointment and pain, she dives out from under it and flies away, leaving it to its fate -- either “fly or die.”
From the above phases of the eagle’s life, we can infer some key points as nuggets to soar high:
- True friendship consists not in the multitude of friends, but in their worth and value.
The female eagle has a worthy and dependable friend in the male eagle with great worth and value to her life. We all need such in our lives to have the right balance as we progress with our daily life endeavours. We have a duty to choose the right ones because they can either make or break us - the choice of friends or relationships we keep this year is absolutely ours. We have a duty to choose rightly by paying attention to some key qualities in them.
- Focus
This is a very vital requirement to soar very high as we progress this year. The female eagle never wavered on her resolve to know the true quality of her potential mate, friend and husband. She did not settle for less neither did she compromise on the standard required of him. Similarly, the male eagle on his part was resolved to win the heart of the female eagle irrespective of the cost. We must have set goals and targets with a strong focus at achieving them irrespective of the challenges that come our way in form of family issues, associates, economic changes as well as unexplainable life situations. When we have a goal with a focus, it helps our judgment on what we desire to get and how to get it.
- Trust
Due to the tagging process and all that is involved, the female eagle is rest assured that no matter what happens, the male eagle will watch her back as well as keep the eaglets safe.
We will need trusted partnerships and networking to carry out some laudable innovative ideas and hatch great concepts/plans. This really makes life easy when we know deep down that we have people who we believe in and vice versa, as well as willing to trust
Do you have a "fly or die" attitude similar to the eaglets? It's time you gave your life a push and stretched your wings! If you never stretch your wings, you will never fly to greater heights.
We must remember that success begins when we understand that life is about growth as the eaglets does. It is about acquiring the knowledge and skills we need to live more fully and effectively.
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