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Right on schedule

Another year, another clutch for Harriet

By CHUCK BALLARO - | Nov 30, 2021

Harriet laid eggs on Nov. 20 and Nov. 23, putting them on schedule to hatch around Christmastime. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE Southwest Florida Eagle Cam FACEBOOK PAGE

Harriet, the area’s most famous avian celebrity, has been laying eggs for so long that people are beginning to wonder when the bald eagle will eventually stop laying them.

After all, she has been in the area and in the same tree for more than 15 years now, with the last 10 of those years being shown to the world on the Pritchett Eagle Cam.

However, even though that day will eventually come, it won’t be this year, as Harriett and M15 will be parents once again with a clutch of two more eggs, and during its regularly scheduled time of the year in the late afternoon.

The first egg was laid on Nov. 20 at 3:49 p.m., while the second was laid on Nov. 23, at 5:10 p.m. putting the eggs on schedule to hatch around Christmastime.

Ginnie Pritchett-McSpadden, co-founder of the Southwest Florida Eagle Cam, said after years of watching Harriet lay her eggs, they can pretty much pinpoint to the minute when the eggs arrive.

A closer look at Harriet and M15's eggs in the nest in North Fort Myers. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE Southwest Florida Eagle Cam FACEBOOK PAGE

“We watched the nest and saw all the signs that we do when she is going to lay an egg and she jumped into the nest and had the egg in the quickest time we have seen. It usually takes a couple hours and this one took 30 minutes,” Pritchett-McSpadden said.

Harriet’s process is similar to labor for humans, Pritchett-McSpadden said. There’s heavy breathing and she pauses as the egg is being laid, allowing them to know when there’s been success.

Of course, you don’t see it right away because Harriet and M15 want to make sure the eggs stay warm. For the next five weeks, both parents will incubate and turn the eggs so the entire egg stays warm and to prevent the embryo from sticking to the shell.

As for the late afternoon egg laying, Pritchett-McSpadden said she isn’t sure why that is.

“They tend to happen at 3 to 5 p.m. It could be temperature or comfort. I’m not sure of the science behind it, but I’m sure there is somewhere,” Pritchett-McSpadden said.

Last year, Harriett laid her eggs about a month late. Those eaglets hatched two hours apart, and although they had to spend a week at CROW in Sanibel over concerns about their health, both were able to fledge.

The delay was a result of the double clutch she had the previous year after her first clutch saw one egg unviable and the second eaglet die.

A second clutch was laid in late February 2020. Those eggs hatched around April Fool’s Day.