Hey SeilerBird. Love your pictures.
My wife and I were on our way to the city nearest our little town on the Trans-Canada Highway. At that point, the highway follows close along the South Thompson River for most of the journey, flowing from Shuswap Lake to join the mighty Fraser River and on to the West Coast at Vancouver about 250 miles away.
We always have Bald Eagles and Osprey in the area that fish in the river daily. This one time we saw a "baldie" diving into a cove area, so we stopped and could then see that he was after some ducks swimming in the area. As we watched he made a pass at one of them, but as he got close, the duck dove under. Well, this eagle swooped up in a near vertical climb, all the time with his head cocked sideways. As he reached a point about 30-50 feet above the water, he did the most beautiful "Immelmann" you ever saw and reversed direction, diving on that duck just as he surfaced. I don't think the head of the duck was more than halfway out of the water. Goodbye duck! Your next {and probably last) flight will be in the eagle's talons. It was a sight to behold and one I don't expect I'll ever see again.
For clarification: Any of you WW II-knowledgeable flyers out there will recall that an Immelmann turn was done to quickly reposition yourself behind the enemy chasing you, and done properly flying a plane properly equipped with the power to do so like a Spit or P51, would put you on his tail and in your gunsights before he knew where you went. Climb...half roll, stick over and down on him.
But I digress. This area is as good as any for great bird photography, and there are two eagle festivals in the area between here and Vancouver in Nov. and December each year. Fifteen hundred to two thousand birds are not uncommon (but you gotta' believe that the powers that be are counting some birds twice). I wish I could find the link to a Youtube video which showed a large Bald Eagle grabbing a almost equally large Salmon. So large in fact that he couldn't lift it. The video shows him dopping it twice, the the third time he landed right on it and using his wings like oars, he paddled it to a small island nearby. Smart bird!
There is something to be said for living in "God's Country". Come visit British Columbia Tom, on your travels.