Sandy and Luna in Big Bear's famous bald eagle nest Friday. (Friends of Big Bear Valley/YouTube)

By Makenna Cramer for LAist
Originally published May 1, 2026

The two chicks growing in Big Bear’s famous bald eagle nest have been named.

The offspring of famous parents Jackie and Shadow will be called Sandy and Luna, according to Friends of Big Bear Valley, the nonprofit that runs a popular YouTube livestream of the nest and is working to preserve acres of land in the area.

The organization announced the results of this year’s chick naming contest Friday after inviting the eagles’ fanbase to submit suggestions with a donation last month.

Keeping with tradition, the final votes were left up to Big Bear Valley third-grade students. A list of names was selected randomly from the nearly 64,000 public fundraiser submissions and delivered on ballots to the students, who are studying bald eagles in school, earlier this week.

Sandy was the most popular name entered into the contest with more than 3,700 submissions, according to Friends of Big Bear Valley.

The name is an homage to Sandy Steers, an environmental advocate who helped launch the eagle livestream and the nonprofit’s late executive director. She died in February, a few weeks before the pair of eggs were laid.

“Please know that although Sandy would not have wanted us to outright name one of the eaglets Sandy, she would have been honored that you and the students went through the process and named one of the 2026 eaglets after her,” the organization wrote on Facebook Friday to its more than 1.2 million followers.

The names Star, Chip and Phoenix were the runner-up choices for the eaglets.

Chick naming traditions

Sandy and Luna have been known as Chick 1 and Chick 2, respectively, since they hatched in early April.

A tiny gray bald eagle chick is hiding behind an adult bald eagles' white head, with half of its face and body visible in a nest of twigs and sticks. The chick appears to be looking directly at the camera.
One of Jackie and Shadow’s chicks peeks out from behind its parent on April 5. (Friends of Big Bear Valley/YouTube)

Once the eaglets arrived, Friends of Big Bear Valley was swarmed with hundreds of requests to name one of the chicks “Sandy.”

But it’s a right of passage for the Big Bear third-graders to name the chicks, and the tradition was “one of Sandy’s greatest joys,” according to Jenny Voisard, Friends of Big Bear Valley’s media manager.

Jackie and Shadow, the adult birds whose parenting saga each nesting season has captured human attention around the world, have had previous chicks named Stormy, BBB (for Big Bear Baby), Simba, Spirit and Cookie through a similar process.

“Last year, because Jackie and Shadow did not have chicks the previous two seasons, she opened it up to the other grades that didn’t get to participate when they were in the third grade,” Voisard said in a statement. “That was Sandy. Education was extremely important to her.”

Last season’s eaglets were dubbed Sunny and Gizmo by the Big Bear elementary students, who voted on 30 finalists pulled from about 54,000 name choices crowdsourced in a week-long fundraiser.

But which one is which?

The eaglets have grown rapidly in recent weeks from small blobs of gray fluff struggling to hold their heads up to young birds exploring the nest and stretching their wings.

As one fan on Facebook described them — the eaglets “kind of look like dryer lint at this stage of the game. Cute dryer lint but dryer lint just the same.”

It can be tough to tell which is which on the livestream, but Friends of Big Bear Valley said there’s a few differences their team has noticed:

  • Sandy is larger, including its head and neck
  • Sandy is more submissive and has a slight curve to its gape (the corner of its mouth)
    • Fans might remember Gizmo’s similar “Mona Lisa smile” gape last season
  • Luna is smaller and has been more aggressive
  • Luna’s gape is straighter
Two fuzzy gray eaglets are sitting in the middle of a nest of twigs and sticks. Red text is added on top of the photo, describing the eaglet on the bottom as "Chick 2" and the one on top "Chick 1." A red arrow is pointing to Chick 1 with text that reads "slight curve to the gape and larger head and neck"
(Friends of Big Bear Valley/YouTube)

The nonprofit noted there is one more “odd, but true” difference between the eaglets — Luna makes “quite the whistle sound when it does a poop shot.” Sandy, on the other hand, is more silent.

Friends of Big Bear Valley said these are subtle differences that will likely change soon.

What’s next for Sandy and Luna

The nonprofit asked people to submit gender neutral names because the sex of each eaglet is not yet known.

Sandy and Luna are nearly 4 weeks old as of Friday, but once the eaglets reach around 9 to 10 weeks old, there should be signs that can help Friends of Big Bear Valley make an educated guess.

Some of the signs the nonprofit looks out for include the chick’s size, ankle thickness and vocal pitch.

Generally speaking, female bald eagles are larger than males. Female bald eagles also tend to have larger vocal organs — the syrinx — which leads to deeper, lower-pitched vocalizations, according to Friends of Big Bear Valley.

The only definitive way to know the eaglets’ sex is through a blood test, which nonprofit officials have said is unlikely. There is no human intervention in the nest during nesting season, according to Voisard.

When the eaglets are around 10 to 14 weeks old, they could fledge, or take their first flight away from the nest overlooking Big Bear Lake.

But as the nonprofit often reminds fans, nature is in charge of the timeline — a previous eaglet named Simba took 16 weeks to fledge.

Fledglings from Southern California have been spotted as far north as British Columbia, as far east as Yellowstone and as far south as Baja California, according to Friends of Big Bear Valley.

Big picture progress

Friends of Big Bear Valley is continuing to lead a $10 million fundraiser to buy more than 62-acres near the nest to preserve it from a planned housing project called Moon Camp.

Instead, the organization and the San Bernardino Mountains Land Trust want the land to be placed under a permanent conservatorship.

Officials say “Save Moon Camp” is the most ambitious fundraising effort in the history of Friends of Big Bear Valley. It’s raised more than $2.3 million as of Friday.

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