Local newsUpdate

Monitoring West Rand’s most famous residents

Members of the Roodekrans Black Eagle Project have been monitoring the iconic Verreaux's eagles of the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden for many years.

To say that the Verreaux’s eagles of the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden are famous, would be an understatement. With nearly 400 000 followers on Facebook from nearly every imaginable country in the world, it is safe to say that they are the West Rand’s most famous celebrities.

The first reported sighting of the black eagles in the area dates back to 1940, although there have been numerous unconfirmed sightings many years before that.

The Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden as it is known today was only established in 1982, and monitoring of the resident eagles commenced in 1988 by Dr Gerhard Verdoorn of the Raptor Conservation Group. This group became the Roodekrans Black Eagle Monitoring Project in 1998 when it was officially established as a Section 21 non-profit organisation.

• Also read: Changes happening in the black eagle nest at the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden

In 2003, Africam chose the spot atop the Witpoortjie Falls in Roodekrans as the site to install a camera focused on the nest of the eagles. This camera live streams to thousands of homes and classrooms across the world 24 hours per day. The live stream can be accessed by anyone.

Today, monitoring of the eagles, also known as black eagles, continues as enthusiastically as ever, with dedicated monitors taking photographs and taking note of the daily lives of the pair, faithfully recording all significant events.

According to the project committee member, Dougie Crewe, the organisation currently consists of about 30 members who gather at the botanical garden on Tuesdays and on weekends to take photographs, record significant events, and bond over their shared interest in these magnificent raptors.

• Also read: Black eagle chick stretching its wings, reaching every milestone flawlessly

“We regularly host schools and church groups that bring their learners and younger congregation members to gain knowledge about the eagles,” Dougie said.

The current pair, Makatsa and Mahlori, is currently in their annual rest period, hunting and preparing their nest for this year’s clutch, expected anytime from April.

“We are very excited to see what 2024 will bring for the eagles,” he said, adding that the Roodekrans Black Eagle Project is open for anyone who would like to become a member.

Members gather at the gardens every Tuesday, and anyone interested in either becoming a member or just learning more about the eagles of Roodekrans is welcome.

Related Articles

Check Also
Close
 
Back to top button