The 11-acre estate has a three-car garage and six-car motor park at the end of a wishbone-shaped driveway. Next to a mounted basketball hoop, the kitchen area has two refrigerators, a freezer and a microwave, according to a promotional video. The main room is filled with exercise equipment and what appears to be a covered hot tub. The home’s insane man cave is its own separate building with a black-and-white checkered floor. With five bedrooms, four-and-a-half bathrooms and an epic man cave, his house hit the market less than a month after Pederson listed his $2.7 million Jersey home. Now, the 28-year-old has been traded to the Indianapolis Colts, and his $1.7 million house at 125 Commissioners Pike Road in Woodstown, New Jersey, is for sale. But they have at least one thing in common: They’re both cutting ties with the Philly area after their public conflict caused them both to leave the team. No one wants to buy Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico sex ranch on sale for $27.5MĪ quick buck: F1 star Lewis Hamilton sells $50M Tribeca homeįormer Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz and ex-Eagles coach Doug Pederson famously didn’t have much common ground. There is a tendency to select coniferous trees for perching during times when deciduous trees are in leaf and a preference for deciduous perches before leaf out and after leaf drop.Inside the funky, circular New York home that’s fit for a Muppet-makerĪ-Rod sells Miami house for $6.3M following Jennifer Lopez split.The life status of the perch tree (dead, dying, or alive) is less importance than tree height and proximity to water.Perch trees tend to be dead and dying and within 20 meters of shoreline.Several scientific studies on bald eagle perch use have determined favored perch trees are larger and taller with longer trunks than non-perch trees.Perches are used for resting, for lookout posts with a great view in order to scan for possible predators, and for hunting. A bald eagle territory needs quality daytime perch sites.Once territories are established and birds know their relationship to one another, there is little need to compete for resources. With abundant food, neighbors can co-exist and share foraging areas, but they do establish clear boundaries around their nests. Direct and indirect competition between neighboring pairs happens where nests are in close proximity. Resident eagles are usually aggressive toward other bald eagles in the breeding area.Owls, osprey, and hawks are a threat to the eggs, as well as hungry raccoons.When an eagle intruder inadvertently flies close to or through an occupied territory, the resident adults gives chase, and in extreme cases, engages in aerial tumbling and even talon-locking.There are floater and immature males on the fringes waiting to breed. Floaters - adult birds without territory - may be wanting to move into existing nests. The biggest territorial threat is posed by other eagles.In addition to calling, an eagle will also protect its territory by flying around it or by perching conspicuously near the top of a nearby tree.
The raptor tosses its head skyward several times while emitting a ringing call to perceived threats. Eagles use a loud song or call to defend their territory.The second or third nests are alternative nests. From year to year, the pair may abandon a nest and build another, or it may continue adding to and renovating a single nest. A territory can only have one active nest at a time.An average territory is about 1 mile in diameter, though in areas where food is harder to find, territories may be larger than in areas where food is abundant.A territory is typically circular or nearly so and is the space that each pair claims as their personal resource.The size of a territory will be based in large part on the availability of food.Nest trees are tall, large diameter trees, usually within 0.8 km (.5 mi.) of water.A nest site is selected and the territory is established around it.