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“Even when there’s a pip, it’s going to take at least a day-sometimes longer-for the chick to hatch. “The pip is when there’s a visible bump or crack in the eggshell that we can see,” biologist and Friends of Big Bear Valley executive director Sandy Steers told the Los Angeles Times. Biologists monitoring the situation are watching for a “pip.” According to the nonprofit, a three-egg clutch like this is rare for bald eagles and is a first for Jackie.
The nest is about five feet across and five feet deep and offers beautiful lake and mountain views. Incubating duties have been shared with their father, Shadow, who has also supplied Jackie with plenty of fish. She sat there keeping those eggs warm for 61 hours and 58 minutes without a single break. According to the nonprofit Friends of Big Bear Valley, she sat on the eggs for over two and a half days when the region was hit with a snowstorm. The eggs were laid in late January by a bald eagle named Jackie.