This is the sharpest of a
burst of photos I took as the eagle flew away from my position (time
stamp 07:23:01 heavily cropped). It shows that the right leg is the one hanging down.
The eagle disappeared into the distance, flying WSW towards the
Everglades.
I wandered northward to the wet prairie, where I captured a
delightful view of a Great Egret foraging in the slough:
A Great Blue Heron flew in...
...and settled on a snag at the northern end of the prairie:
While I was enjoying the herons an Osprey flew by and oddly seemed more
intent on what was behind him than looking where he was going:
I looked there as well and to my utmost surprise saw two large dark
birds in a dead melaleuca tree about 0.2 mile (320 meters) away. They
had flown in while I was busy with the heron, and were adult Bald
Eagles! The one on the right was noticeably larger, a female:
The eagles were at least 0.2 miles (320 meters) distant, and the
shadows of the branches partially obscured their features. I was
particularly interested in determining whether the female was the
new companion of our resident male, but this photo seems to
show the tail of an adult bird:
Closely cropped views of the female's tail...
...and head...

...revealed none of the distinctive dark marks shown by the younger
female. Here is a photo of the new female's tail that I took this past
week:
The original female (named "Joy") was last documented at the nest on
October 30. On November 7th an apparent female roosted near the nest as
darkness set in, but the image showed her right leg hanging down with
the talons possibly distorted. Although the reason for the original
female's disappearance is unknown, it is possible that she had suffered
an injury. Earlier this year the nest observers noted that she often
dangled one of her legs. I captured this image of her on January 11,
2014:
So, the mystery deepens. Were my photos simply not sharp enough to
determine the age of this female that was with the male today? Is Joy
still alive and in the area of the nest? Is it possible that the new
female drove her away?