The annual Alaska Bald Eagle Festival in Haines usually draws visitors from around the continent. It was cancelled due to COVID-19 this year and even the eagles didn’t show up.
It is touted as the largest congregation of eagles in the world. They’re drawn by the thousands to this confluence where the Tsirku River, warmed by groundwater, meets the Chilkat River. The water cuts a dark slash through the otherwise frozen landscape, an unfrozen place where eagles can fish.
Stacy Evans, a biologist for the conservation group Takshanuk Watershed Council, is in charge of counting the birds this year. Someone has kept track almost every season since the late 1980s.
“I counted 46 eagles from this spot. And that’s consistently low. So in a normal year, we count eagles in the hundreds from this area, sometimes up to 500,” she said.
That’s 500 eagles in one spot on the river. Total numbers are usually in the thousands. But most of the eagles didn’t return this year. Almost as though they knew their festival was cancelled.
The American Bald Eagle Foundation runs the festival. Sidney Campbell is the Raptor Program Manager.
“We throw the festival to celebrate the return of the Eagles every year, and to celebrate them just as this really iconic and charismatic and culturally important species,” she said.
There are some eagles in the cottonwoods that line the Chilkat River. Most of them have fluffed out their feathers to dry after fishing. A late run of chum salmon draws them here from as far as Washington state.
But the chum salmon run on the Chilkat was a record low this year—just a fraction of the expected return. It’s impacted the whole ecosystem: eagles, fishermen, and bears. The bears have been so hungry in Haines that they’re breaking into houses and cars to find food.
Now, without eagles, the birders and wildlife photographers are scarce as well. In a typical year this stretch of beach is riddled with them.
“No festival is leaving a great hole in my year,” said Al Batt.
“So we kind of plan our year around my wife and I being in Haines in November. So it was a it was a great blow for us like somebody hit me in the Adam’s apple.”
He lives in Hartland, Minnesota, but claims to have come to Haines for the Alaska Bald Eagle Festival for longer than he can remember. He often guides birders and photographers along the river to get that perfect shot—an eagle swooping in on a salmon carcass, talons out and 7-foot wingspan flared to arrest its dive.
There’s far less of that this year. Here’s Evans again.
“The fact is, if there are salmon here, there will be eagles here. So you know that the eagles are probably fine finding calories somewhere else this year, but we definitely need strong salmon runs to basically fuel the entire ecosystem here,” she said.
Why the salmon aren’t showing up is a little more complicated. Some say overfishing decades back harmed the return. Others think hatchery fish are competition for wild resources.
What Evans has observed as a biologist is the river temperature is trending up.
“Climate change is sort of that nebulous, multi-faceted problem that is certainly contributing to issues with salmon. We have seen already here some higher temperatures and are in the rivers. 2020 was cooler, as most people probably noticed. But 2019, especially, we were seeing some major spikes in parts of the river,” said Evans.
She says the eagles that are here this year are the locals. Which means roughly 80 percent of the eagles we usually see in Haines stayed home.
There’s only one photographer camped out on the beach today, a small blur of camo against the snow. His lens follows an eagle glide towards a stand of cottonwood. Below, the dark back of a salmon flickers in the water.