Crosswinds Marsh has a mating pair of bald eagles. Over the past few years, there have been several ypoung eagles born here at the marsh.
| Bald Eagle Nestling Facts |
- Eaglets are nestlings for 10 to 12 weeks. By the time they are 9 weeks old, they are fully grown.
- Some scientists did a study keeping track of all the time that the parent eagles spent at the nest. Once the babies hatched, the female was present at the nest about 90% of the time. The male was present about 50% of the time. During the study, at least one of the parents was at the nest almost all the time.
- The young nestlings are directly fed raw meat starting day one. Eagles do not regurgitate food to feed their young like some other animals do.
- During the first two weeks, the male provides most of the food. After 3 or 4 weeks, the female provides as much food as the male, and by the late nesting period, the female provides most of the food.
- Eaglets are fed 1-8 times a day. The parents carry prey to the nest to feed their young. They feed their chicks by tearing off pieces of food and holding them to the beaks of the eaglets. The parents tear off bits of prey and feed them directly, bill to bill.
- In the nest the oldest eaglet can act aggressively toward their siblings. The older, and larger eaglet often tries to dominate or even kill its sibling(s).
- Eagle parents protect their chicks from the cold and the heat. On sunny days, parents sometimes spread their wings to produce shade for the chicks.
- After hatching, chicks are wet, exhausted, and nearly blind. Their eyes, dark brown in color, are closed, but open after a few hours. A newly-hatched chick can’t regulate its body temperature and relies on the parents to keep it warm.
- In the second week the chicks can hold up their heads. Their plumage darkens. Now the eaglet can maintain its own body temperature under normal weather conditions without brooding from an adult.
- Three to four weeks after hatch the eaglets feathers begin to change. Black contour feathers begin to form on back, shoulder, breast and wings, and flight feathers begin to develop. They are about 1 foot in height
- As the babies grow you may see them poking their heads above the nest rim, especially by about 5-6 weeks of age. Parents begin spending more time away from the young and often perch in nearby trees.
- Adults will feed their babies directly until the eaglets are five to six weeks old, when the young are able to tear pieces of food off and feed themselves.
- By age 5 weeks, male and female parents bring relatively equal amounts of food. Parents begin spending more time away from the young and often perch in nearby trees.
- By six weeks the young are able to stand and walk, and by seven weeks maximum body growth nearing completion.
- At eight weeks, they are at their hungriest and are ready to fly by week twelve.
- By the time chicks are 9 weeks old, they are fully grown. Chicks continue on the nest gaining strength for 10 to 12 weeks.
- As the babies eat, poop, and grow, the nest starts getting dirty. The babies usually lean over the edge of the nest to poop, but once in a while they miss! Food particles remain in the nest after each feeding. After a while, the nest becomes a stinky mess.
- Eagles don't clean their nest. Instead, they add fresh leaves and other plant parts to cover up the rotting food and eaglet poop.
- Over time nests get pretty gross with old, maggot-filled fish parts stuck in the sticks of the nest, baking in the hot sun! Eagles often build "alternate" nests, within their territory, likely in an attempt to let one nest sit unused for a year or two, to allow it to "weather" and clean itself out.
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Crosswinds Marsh is one of the largest man-made wetlands in the country. It was built to replace the wetlands that were paved over to expand Wayne County's Detroit Metro Airport (the McNamara terminal). Wayne County, together with Sumpter Township, purchased over 900 acres of farmland that believe it or not, was once wetland that had been converted into farm fields by draining the land...in a process that took over a year. They flooded former farm fields, planted new wetland plants and transplanted endangered species from metro Airport. The area is managed by the Wayne County Parks.
The Cache is a small sized lock & lock container hidden along the Bald Eagle Trail.
Crosswinds Marsh Rules
No fires
No bikes / ATVs / personal watercraft
No swimming or ice fishing
Dogs must be leashed
No alcohol or illegal substances
No camping
Fishing in designated areas only
Collecting of plants & animals prohibited
Park only at N 42 05.744 W 83 26.552
All Geocachers must follow the above rules.
Crosswinds Marsh is open from DAWN to DUSK. Admission is always free.