Tim Hoppe The young bald eagle in the foreground was found on the ground May 4 after storms blew down its Mercer County nest. On May 23, it was introduced to this nest and two new siblings. The bird was one of two bald eagles returned to the wild on State Game Lands 214 in May. Eagles find new homes at Pymatuning Two young eagles successfully rehabilitated and returned to the wild. Within two weeks' time in May, two bald eagles - one rescued weeks earlier; the other nearly a year earlier - were returned to the wild on State Game Lands 214 in Crawford County. On May 21, Game Commission staff and rehabilitators released an eagle that had been rescued as a grounded nestling in June 2017 and cared for in captivity for 49 weeks. Then on May 23, an 8½-week-old eaglet that lost its Mercer County nest in a May 4 storm was placed with a set of foster parents. Both returns to the wild went off without a hitch. "Diligence on the part of our field staff AUGUST 2018 and close working relationships with rehabilitators allowed us to successfully reintroduce these two eagles to the wild," Game Commission Northwest Region Director Rich Cramer said. The young eaglet that lost its nest May 4 was on the ground when Deputy Tom Jones arrived. Since there was no nest to return the eaglet to, Jones contacted Carol Holmgren at Tamarack Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Center in Saegertown. Holmgren and her staff took in the displaced eaglet. After almost three weeks of monitoring and individualized care, the eaglet was cleared for reintroduction to a foster nest on State Game Lands 214 at 45