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> What the heck is this?, Eating critters in my yard.
mudfoot76
post Dec 1 2004, 11:49 AM
Post #21


Currently teenerless :-(
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QUOTE(charlesmac @ Dec 1 2004, 12:25 PM)
I've seen one swoop down and nab a squirrel out of a tree. They are pretty cool to watch, tree rat never saw it coming. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/chowtime.gif)

I saw a hawk swoop down and nab a sparrow (or some other smallish song bird) out of a tree in my backyard. A gaggle of these little birds happened to be perching, and the tree exploded when that hawk came down. A few of them flew into the large window on my back porch (IMG:style_emoticons/default/boldblue.gif)

Nice story about the cat...i'm having lunch at my desk too today (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wink.gif)
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airsix
post Dec 1 2004, 11:51 AM
Post #22


I have bees in my epiglotis
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QUOTE(mikez @ Dec 1 2004, 08:39 AM)
Here's a pic of a Merlin.....good call....

Sorry guys, It's not a Merlin or Harrier. It is a Red Tailed Hawk. Specifically it is an immature Red Tailed Hawk. Next year his plumage will be much darker. His tail, which is horizontally banded this year will be rust colored next year and he'll loose the speckled breast. Based on the description of his size it is a male (females are larger). He's most likely eating rodents on your property. This species will only in very rare cases take avian prey. He's a good thing to have around. He also appears to be in very good health.

-Ben M. (licensed falconer)

ps - some of you may recal that my old avatar was... an immature Red Tailed Hawk.

(edit) pps - just saw Jake's post. As usual, Jake is correct. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wink.gif)
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skline
post Dec 1 2004, 01:17 PM
Post #23


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Well, they are kind of like the Chinese, they all look alike to me. Just kidding, it is hard to tell from that picture however, I am a huge fan of the red tail hawk. I like all the raptors or birds of prey, I have small falcon that frequently comes around here once in awhile and another friend on the other side of town that breeds them. Here are a few pictures of some Red Tailed Hawks in early years.

They do look like that.


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skline
post Dec 1 2004, 01:17 PM
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Another


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skline
post Dec 1 2004, 01:19 PM
Post #25


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This picture would make a great avatar.




With a captions like :you talking to me?"


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Elliot_Cannon
post Dec 1 2004, 01:29 PM
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I first started flying in South Dakota back in 1967. There was a Bald Eagle there that would swoop past little Cessnas in the traffic pattern with it's talons extended. I think it had a nest nearby. Scared the crap out of more than one student pilot. Learning to fly is hard enough without being attacked by a Raptor!!
Cheers, Elliot
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airsix
post Dec 1 2004, 03:16 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis
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Here's what that bird will look like in a year when he has adult plumage. I cropped out the bottom of the picture for those who don't want to see a worked-over rabbit. I took this photo at a distance of about 18 inches from the subject. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) We hunted together for 2 years. He was released back into the wild last spring.

-Ben M.

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balljoint
post Dec 1 2004, 05:02 PM
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Now listen here, I said listen here my boy, I, I, I coulda sworn that was a chicken-hawk, I said a chicken-hawk.


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redshift
post Dec 1 2004, 06:19 PM
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Bless the Hell out of you!
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We have a couple pairs near the shop, they hunt in the field back there..

Over on Hilton Head, I watched a Bald eagle flying for about 10 minutes, called out a couple friends, and as we stood there in complete awe, he swooped down, and nailed a rodent no more than 15 feet from us, and he just sat there on it, looking at us for a couple minutes, and he started raising all hell when we tried to flank him..

(IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)


M
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carambola
post Dec 1 2004, 07:30 PM
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had some kinda of hawk and it's partner fly the tree line behind my house. just one of those things that's really cool to watch. so one day i come home and it was laying dead in my side yard. front of the wings all torn up and bones were broken, i thought it tried to take down a single engined plane.
it was such a majestic being that i dug it's grave.
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tommy914
post Dec 1 2004, 09:49 PM
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Here's my hawk encounter.
Just caught a small bird during a rain storm, and decided to take a break on my mail box.


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airsix
post Dec 1 2004, 10:54 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis
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QUOTE(tommy914 @ Dec 1 2004, 07:49 PM)
Here's my hawk encounter.
Just caught a small bird during a rain storm, and decided to take a break on my mail box.

Cool. That one's a Coopers Hawk. They are tenacious little hunters. They take avian prey and do it with amazing ability. They can chase down almost any bird in level flight that is their size or smaller. They are smart too. They will often spot feeding birds from a distance, identify a large view-blocking feature like a board-fence, tree, car, etc. and then come in fast with this object between them and the quary. At the last second they pop out from behind the fence/tree/bush doing about 45mph and the quary only has time to say "Oh shi" and it's over.

-Ben M.
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airsix
post Dec 1 2004, 11:08 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis
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Here's what Buddy (see previous pic) looked like in his first-year plumage. They go through quite an apearance change with their first moult. Kinda miss the little guy, but I'm sure he's found a nice lady friend by now. And his kids won't go hungry - he developed into quite the hunter.

-Ben M.


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skline
post Dec 2 2004, 12:22 AM
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What an awesome bird. I would love to hold one of those. It looks so peaceful and tame on your arm there. Hard to believe it could take a finger off in one shot. I have the utmost respect for those birds. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/pray.gif)
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kermit
post Dec 2 2004, 01:19 AM
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QUOTE(sgomes @ Dec 1 2004, 08:29 AM)
It's clearly and African swallow.

It can't be an African Swallow, its not carrying a coconut! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif)
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balljoint
post Dec 2 2004, 09:32 AM
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I see two or three hawks every day on my commute to and from work. Sometimes sitting in trees, sometimes soaring and sometimes staying exactly in one spot, hovering in an updraft over a field. Neat.

During a trip out to Vancouver Island a few years ago, my wife and I stayed at a bed & breakfast in Hamilton, BC.
The proprieters knocked on our door one afternoon and asked us if we wanted to watch them feed the eagle.
It seems for the past 15 years these people had been feeding this eagle and one before it, every Sunday afternoon. They walked out into the street and they could see the eagle sitting 200 feet up in it's nest in a tree. The guy would take a raw chicken leg and start to windmill his arm and the eagle would drop out of the nest. Then the guy would fling this chicken leg up in the air and the eagle would grab it mid flight about 20 feet over our heads at an incredible speed. That was a neat thing to see.
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bare 1
post Dec 2 2004, 02:54 PM
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Great pics. Where I work on Whidbey Is. I see bald eagles ,red tails, harriers almost everyday. Also the occasional golden eagle although not that often. I've seen 9 baldys on the beach around a dead seal. When you see a baldy trying to pick a duck out of the water you know why we use that word to mean "git yer head down". The duck usually survives as the eagle isn't amphipious. Thanks for reminding my of the great place I live. Sometimes I forget. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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jr91472
post Dec 2 2004, 08:32 PM
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European swallow.....
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