Obituary: Jean Keene; ‘Eagle Lady’ of remote Alaska city fed hundreds of birds (2024)

Jean Keene, the 85-year-old “Eagle Lady” whose feeding program drew hundreds of bald eagles and scores of nature photographers to Alaska’s Homer Spit each winter, died Tuesday night in her Spit home.

Miss Keene had been unwell but continued to feed fish scraps to the eagles this winter. In 2006, the city of Homer banned feeding of eagles, but allowed Miss Keene to continue feeding until 2010. She had been at it for 30 years.

Miss Keene’s death leaves the city, which is south-southwest of Anchorage, in an awkward fix. With several hundred eagles currently loitering on the Spit, a sudden halt to feeding could bring starvation or an invasion into local backyards, federal biologists say. It’s probably too late in winter for them to go elsewhere.

“Some of the younger birds would probably not make it,” said Vernon Byrd, a Homer-based biologist with the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. “They’d have to forage around, start to get into more garbage and boats looking for food. People would come on the weak ones standing around.”

City officials said Wednesday that an assistant who has been helping Miss Keene with feeding will be allowed to keep going with existing food supplies, good for seven to 10 days.

The city council would then have to change the law to allow feeding to continue without Miss Keene, at least until spring, when the Eagle Lady customarily shut down her operation and the birds dispersed to resume natural feeding.

Miss Keene started feeding eagles in the late 1970s and became a fixture of life in Homer, whose population is about 5,500. Her death flashed quickly around the Internet on photography sites.

“I don’t think folks in town really realized what a celebrity she was,” said Dick Ginkowski, a Wisconsin photographer who said he’d been to Homer 10 times.

“We’re all just shocked at her passing. She was such an integral part of the Land’s End community,” said Dawn Schneider, general manager of Land’s End Resort at the end of Homer Spit.

The resort’s restaurant has a booth with a plaque where Miss Keene held court regularly with visitors from around the world, Schneider said. On Wednesday, flowers were turning the booth into a shrine.

Miss Keene was born in 1923 and was raised on a Minnesota dairy farm. She started out as a rodeo stunt rider, using her long red hair to dramatic effect as she dismounted and mounted a galloping white horse whose mane and tail were dyed the same color. Her rodeo career ended in injury when a trick went wrong.

She moved to Alaska in 1977, finding work with Icicle Seafoods on the Spit, which became a source of cod heads and freezer-burned salmon in her early years of feeding. She lived for years in a barely insulated mobile home on the cold and windy Spit, alone but close by the birds she loved.

The number of eagles drawn to the Spit increased each year. Miss Keene’s biographer, Cary Anderson, said in 2003 that she was throwing out 500 pounds of food every day. Curious onlookers would show up, too, parking like they were at a drive-in movie theater, telephoto lenses protruding from their windows.

“Jean never once sought publicity or attention for feeding the eagles,” Anderson said Wednesday. “She was generous to everyone who was interested in photographing the eagles, whether she was interviewed or not. She never asked anyone for a dime.”

Criticism of the eagle-feeding efforts flared up around Homer in 2004 after photo guides and lodge owners began duplicating Miss Keene’s program, attracting eagles for the benefit of their clients.

Critics said it was demeaning to turn the national bird into a Dumpster diver. They said crowding eagles was unhealthy, threatened smaller birds and pets and drew eagles away from their natural wintering grounds. Government biologists frowned on the practice but stopped short of calling for regulation.

Supporters called such complaints unproven and noted the practice drew tourists to town in a quiet time of year. Photographers lavished praise on the gritty Keene.

“Homer was exactly the right place for Jean Keene because she was a character,” said Ginkowski. “You don’t see those originals much anymore.”

The clash eventually drew international attention from such media outlets as network newscasts and Comedy Central’s “Daily Show.”

“If you have seen stunning close-up photographs of bald eagles with fish in their beaks in glossy magazines in the United States, Europe or Asia,” wrote The Washington Post, “chances are good that they were shot outside Keene’s trailer.”

The city’s eventual compromise in 2006 eliminated other feeding efforts but allowed Miss Keene’s to continue until 2010. It was clear she didn’t have too many winters left. Lately, with heart trouble, she needed help to throw out the food.

“It has been a difficult few months for me,” said her son, Lonnie, in a blog post to a photographers’ site, “but I am happy that she left this mortal coil at home near her beloved birds and surrounded by friends.”

Obituary: Jean Keene; ‘Eagle Lady’ of remote Alaska city fed hundreds of birds (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Clemencia Bogisich Ret

Last Updated:

Views: 6316

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Clemencia Bogisich Ret

Birthday: 2001-07-17

Address: Suite 794 53887 Geri Spring, West Cristentown, KY 54855

Phone: +5934435460663

Job: Central Hospitality Director

Hobby: Yoga, Electronics, Rafting, Lockpicking, Inline skating, Puzzles, scrapbook

Introduction: My name is Clemencia Bogisich Ret, I am a super, outstanding, graceful, friendly, vast, comfortable, agreeable person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.