6. In the wild, eagles quite often require a hundred square miles for a breeding territory. Our eagle breeding aviaries are large but not quite that large. Many of our breeding eagles were injured birds acquired from zoos, which we then trained utilizing falconry techniques and subsequently began breeding. One pair of handicapped eagles has in the last six years produced 18 young. As you stroll past the eagle aviaries you will notice one pair with no feathers on their head, the reason for this is that they are not eagles but in fact vultures. Vultures have large wing spans like eagles and require a large aviary. Next stop on your tour are the "Falcon Shelters", marked number 7,
click here.