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Fauna · Loch Maree, Highland, United Kingdom

White-Tailed Eagle Fishing — Loch Maree Scotland

The white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) fishing on Loch Maree in the Torridon and Beinn Eighe NNR — the world's fourth-largest eagle, reintroduced to Scotland in 1975 after 70 years of extinction, now 150 pairs breeding in Scotland with the Loch Maree area's population producing the finest accessible Scottish white-tailed eagle fishing encounters. The eagle's fishing technique (the slow banking approach, feet lowered at the final moment, the surface strike audible as a slap at 200-metre range, and the subsequent laborious flight with a large salmon) and the combination of the eagle's 2.4-metre wingspan against the Torridon's ancient sandstone mountains creates Scotland's finest large raptor encounter outside the Cairngorms. The white-tailed eagle's return to Scotland's sea lochs and freshwater lochs and its subsequent spread to England (Sussex, Isle of Wight, East Anglia) creates a conservation trajectory visible in each encounter with a bird whose grandparents were shot on the same loch edges.

When
Jan — Dec, peak Apr — Aug
Best viewing
A dawn vigil on the shores of Loch Maree for close-range views of white-tailed eagles performing dramatic surface-strike fishing runs against a backdrop of ancient Torridon sandstone mountains. Encounters are likely but not guaranteed.
Category
Fauna
Status
Peak season

About this spectacle

Standing at the edge of Loch Maree at dawn, you scan the ancient Torridon sandstone ridges until a shape detaches — vast, flat-winged, unmistakably large. The white-tailed eagle banks slowly over the dark water, its 2.4-metre wingspan casting a shadow that seems out of proportion with anything else in the Scottish sky. Then the feet drop, the final approach flattens, and the surface strike arrives as a sharp slap audible at 200 metres. If the eagle connects with a large salmon, what follows is a laboured, almost comically effortful climb away from the water, the fish carried broadside. Behind the bird, the Torridon mountains — some of the oldest rock in Europe — provide a backdrop of rust and grey that makes every frame feel prehistoric. These are birds whose grandparents were shot here; their presence is a measurable, walking conservation recovery, visible in the confidence with which they work the loch in morning light.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Apr — Aug

Getting there

Nearest airport: INV. Nearest city: Inverness.

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