American Eagle Foundation

 Bald Eagle in captivity at American Eagle Foundation Pigeon Forge Tennessee in Great Smoky Mountains

We happened upon The American Eagle Foundation quite by accident. We are actually camping at Bear Cove Resort, which is right up the street from this hidden gem. We took the dogs for their usual walk one morning, and decided to turn right instead of left out of the campground. The next thing you know, we’re exploring up a side street when we come upon the sign for The American Eagle Foundation, and it says that they do tours! SCORE!! So as soon as we got home, I looked them up on the internet at Eagles.org, and made my reservation for my FREE tour! You have to make your reservation for a week in advance, so we were all set up for the next Monday.

Tour of American Eagle Foundation Headquarters Pigeon Forge Tennessee Great Smoky Mountains National ParkThe American Eagle Foundation is located in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains in Tennessee. They area 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization dedicated to protecting and preserving the majestic Bald Eagle and other birds of prey. Their motto is “Educate, Repopulate, Rehabilitate”. You can see them perform the “Wings of America” Birds of Prey Show every day at Dollywood Theme Park. But getting behind the scenes at The Foundation Headquarters (located outside Dollywood theme park), was the real treat! The Headquarters houses AEF’s non-releasable birds (due to injury most of the time) and trains them for educational purposes. It’s also a place to rehabilitate sick or injured birds, provides breeding enclosures for Bald Eagles and Golden Eagles, incubates the eggs for later release into the wild, and houses all of AEF’s administrative offices.

Challenger Bald Eagle at American Eagle Foundation in Pigeon Forge Tennessee Great Smoky MountainsOn the tour you will get to meet Challenger – the bald eagle rescued at a young age after he had fallen from a nest in Louisiana. Challenger now has a permanent home at The American Eagle Foundation, and has the very important job of being a free-flying Eagle in stadiums and sports arenas during the playing of The National Anthem. We did get to see Challenger free-fly back and forth between 2 of our hosts, and it was very majestic!! We also got to meet other birds of prey that are housed at The Foundation, including owls, kestrels, vultures, falcons and hawks.

All in all our visit to The American Eagle Foundation was a lot of fun, very educational, and quite inspirational! I would highly recommend this (FREE) tour to anyone wanting to learn more about Eagles and other birds of prey. They also have live Eagle’s nest webcams, which you can visit on their website. Just click on the “Nest Cams” link. Since they are a non-profit organization, they run on donations from the public. You can donate here or shop their store here, where all merchandise purchases help out the foundation as well.

Smoky Mountains Sunset

Smoky Mountain Sunset

Smoky Mountains National Park is one of my favorite places on Earth. The mountains, the streams and rivers, the trees – all blend to make a spectacular place to visit. We love it here so much that we are working on purchasing property near the National Park, so we can live near its spectacular beauty forever.

This image was taken at Morton Overlook in Smoky Mountains National Park. Morton Overlook is located on Tennessee Route 441, and can be accessed at a pull-out. The layers of mountains make this a spectacular place to photograph sunset. There were several cars there, and quite a few people also taking pictures there with us, but not so much as to crowd anybody out. It might get worse there in the high-tourist summer season – we were there at the very end of May, right before school let out and all the tourists come out to play.

To photograph this image, I used my Canon 5D Mark III and Canon 70-200 f2.8 lens. I normally wouldn’t use this lens on landscape work, but I wanted to be able to pull in closer to the mountains and sunset. I took 3 separate exposures so I could use HDR later on in my processing and get one good exposure. I did this rather than use a neutral density filter mostly because I don’t care for putting filters (which can get dusty and dirty) onto my high-quality lens glass. With my tripod mounted camera, I shot the first image at .8 second at f-32 and ISO 100. The second image was shot at .4 second, and the third was shot at 1/5 of a second – keeping the f-stop at 32 and the ISO at 100. I then pulled the 3 photos into Adobe Lightroom, chose the 3 images I wanted, keyworded and titled them and exported them to Photoshop. In Photoshop I used the Google NIK HDR merge multiple image series tool, merged the 3 images, and used the “End of The Road” preset just because I preferred how that one made this image look. All in all I think this image turned out quite nicely, and I will be putting it up for sale on my Fine Art America page.

Would you like to learn to photograph like this? I am available for private lessons! Just use the contact form and let me know!

If I can do it, so can you!

Carol