of its own nest on State Game Lands 269 in Crawford County. On Aug. 21, 2012 - exactly 25 years after being banded in a wild nest by the Game Commission - the male was found on the ground unable to fly. It had been struck by a vehicle. WCO Ronda Bimber transported it to Skye Spirit Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Center, near Harrisville, where the bird was nursed back to health and released back onto State Game Lands 95 a month later. His release is included in the film Pennsylvania Bald Eagles: Celebrating 30 Years of Restoration, which can be seen on the Game Commission'sYouTube channel. The sequence at left comes from what author Jacob Dingel describes as his best opportunity to photograph The Glades eagles. In the summer of 2016, he spotted the pair on a stump in The Glades Lake. With the female feeding on a carp, the male would turn to fly in for a share of the leftovers. JUNE 2017 35