In 1916, Scotland lost its largest bird of prey. The last white-tailed eagle — wingspan wider than a man is tall — was shot by a gamekeeper on the Isle of Skye. For nearly six decades, Scotland’s skies carried on without it. Then, in the summer of 1975, everything changed.

Scotland’s Lost Giant
The white-tailed eagle — called the “flying barn door” by birders who’ve seen one sweep over a loch — is the largest bird of prey in Britain. Its wingspan reaches 2.4 metres, nearly eight feet across. It hunts fish by plunging its talons into the water’s surface. It mates for life and returns to the same nest year after year.
Scots once called it the iolaire sùil na grèine — the eagle with the sunlit eye. For centuries, it was part of the Highland landscape, as natural to Scotland as the red deer or the Highland cow.
Then, over roughly 150 years, it was methodically destroyed.
Why Scotland Lost Them
The Victorian era brought a war on raptors. Gamekeepers shot, trapped, and poisoned eagles to protect grouse moors and sheep farms. Egg collectors raided nests every spring. A bird that had soared over Scotland since long before written history was wiped out in a few generations.
By the early twentieth century, only a handful remained. The last confirmed white-tailed eagle nest in Scotland was on Skye in 1916. After that — silence.
The golden eagle survived, retreating to the most remote Highland glens. But the white-tailed eagle was simply gone.
Back From Norway
In 1975, a small team of conservationists quietly changed Scottish history. Four young white-tailed eagles, caught in Norway where the population remained strong, were flown to the Isle of Rum in the Inner Hebrides and released. It was a gamble.
The birds were cautious. Progress was agonisingly slow. The project nearly folded several times in the early years, as the birds failed to settle or wandered far from Rum without nesting.
But in 1985, the first white-tailed eagle chick hatched in Scotland in nearly 70 years. Slowly, the birds spread to neighbouring islands. A pair settled on the Isle of Mull in the 1990s, and the population began to take hold.
Today, Scotland has more than 150 breeding pairs. The flying barn door is back.
Mull: Scotland’s Eagle Capital
The Isle of Mull, off Scotland’s west coast, has become one of the best places in Europe to watch white-tailed eagles in the wild. The RSPB runs a dedicated watch point at Loch Frisa in the centre of the island, where rangers help visitors spot breeding pairs through telescopes. In summer, you can watch adults carry fish back to the nest.
Eagle-watching boat trips run from Mull’s shores too. You may see the birds plunge for fish in the Sound of Mull, or ride thermals high above the coast, wings locked and barely moving. Many visitors who came to Mull for other reasons end up standing still for long minutes, staring at the sky.
Mull delivers on almost every wildlife front. Otters hunt along the rocky shoreline. Red deer graze the hills. If you’re already planning to discover Scotland’s most remarkable seabirds, Mull is a natural first stop. And if island wildlife in general draws you, Scotland’s islands hold wildlife concentrations that rival almost anywhere in Europe.
Two Eagles in One Scottish Sky
Scotland doesn’t just have white-tailed eagles. There are now more than 500 breeding pairs of golden eagles here — more than in England and Wales combined. The two species share the Highland skies, each hunting differently: the white-tailed eagle targeting fish and waterbirds near coasts; the golden eagle patrolling open moorland and mountain ridges.
To stand in a Highland glen and see both species in a single afternoon is an experience that stays with you. Scotland offers that possibility — for free, from a public viewpoint, if you know where to look.
When and Where to Go
The best time to see white-tailed eagles on Mull is April to August, when the birds are most active around the nest. The RSPB Mull Eagle Watch runs from April to early August at Loch Frisa. Arrive early morning for the best sightings.
Further north, the Skye coast, the Kyle of Lochalsh area, and the Cairngorms all offer golden eagle sightings. Clear days with light winds are best, when the eagles use thermals to soar high above the glens.
You don’t need binoculars, though they help. You need patience, a clear horizon, and the willingness to look up.
When a white-tailed eagle glides over a Highland loch — wings barely moving, shadow sliding across the water — it’s hard to believe Scotland almost let this go forever. It took 70 years, four Norwegian birds, and decades of patient conservation work. But Scotland got its eagle back. And if you go looking, you can watch it come home.
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