Cape Breton Post

Juvenile eagle rescued by firefighte­rs will recover

- KIRK STARRATT

WOLFVILLE — She hoped to land a striped bass but ended up capturing an injured bald eagle instead.

Capt. Kathy Babcooke of the Wolfville Fire Department recently went fishing off the dikes just outside of town. She spotted two juvenile eagles sitting on the bank not far from where she intended to cast her line.

They didn’t seem to want to leave the spot at first but eventually they did. Babcooke walked over to where the eagles were sitting, looked down and saw another young eagle stuck in the mud. She said her heart sank.

“At that point, I thought he was dead,” Babcooke said. “I started talking to him because I just wanted to see if he responded and he put up his head and opened his eyes.”

Although she was greatly relieved, the eagle was exhausted and she didn’t have a lot of hope for him. He had a fishing hook attached to a piece of line embedded through his tongue and lower beak. The other end of the line was attached to a sinker that was anchored in the mud.

Babcooke called her fellow firefighte­rs. Chief Todd Crowell, Capt. Doug Ross and Capt. Rich Johnson came out with a blanket that they used to wrap around the eagle.

“He was so tired and so exhausted that he hardly fought at all, he just made some noises,” Babcooke said.

She cut the fishing line and her fellow firefighte­rs took the injured raptor to the Wolfville fire hall to remove the fishing hook.

Crowell said after they extracted the hook, they contacted the Department of Lands and Forestry. Staff from the department took the eagle to the Hope For Wildlife facility in Seaforth.

Crowell said firefighte­rs get called on occasion to rescue animals, such as cats stuck in trees, but this was the first time he was involved in rescuing an eagle.

Hope For Wildlife founder and director Hope Swinamer commends the Wolfville firefighte­rs on the “amazing” job they did.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? This injured juvenile bald eagle was rescued from the mud by members of the Wolfville Fire Department and is currently in the care of Hope For Wildlife.
CONTRIBUTE­D This injured juvenile bald eagle was rescued from the mud by members of the Wolfville Fire Department and is currently in the care of Hope For Wildlife.

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