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STFU, if there were no predators, you would be up to your ass in duck, turkey, and what ever the fuck else shit. Wake the fuck up.
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Lake Texoma... https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/15341/eagle_1-1238041.jpg https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/15341/eagle_4-1238038.jpg View Quote |
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You should probably take a break from the internet for a while. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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CoC 6 removed --- Edited by brass View Quote Man.... A guy like the legendary Steyr Aug is banned for life, if I commnet like this doesn't result in a permaban, then I don't know what should..... |
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Birds of Prey are cool.
I know I've told this story here before, but one of the coolest things I've ever done is help my licensed falconer buddy train his Red Tail to come back to him. Standing in the field with the glove on, just watching that bird fly right at you from 150 yards away 2 feet off the ground, then when he got near you, the wings spread out, the talons point at you, and he swoops up and lands on your arm/glove at shoulder height like 3 feet from your face. Pretty exciting for a city boy. |
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I watched "The Birds" when I was a kid.
I view any more than two birds in a cluster as a very ominous sign. Attached File |
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They are and wreck populations of animals people like to hunt. They're not endangered anymore and should at least have a season or something. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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You should see when they form up to migrate near Duluth Hawk watching Duluth
The ducks & turkeys are hiding out until they all leave |
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I can't find them, but I have a few pictures of chicken hawks in my (suburban) yard & sitting on the fence. Mi Esposa has a bird feeder in the back yard and attracts a crowd of 15-30 doves. It's like hunting over bait for him. Circle of life.
They are prominent in our area. The local HS mascot is the Redhawks. |
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Bull shit. View Quote https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail |
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Who’s the Arfcommer who shot video of the red tail nailing mice that he set out on his porch railing? All you could see was the mouse, then WHAM, the talons smash down on the mouse like something out of a Godzilla movie. View Quote Bird after bird would dive thru the bat flight picking off one on every swoop thru. Those hawks must have eaten a good 30 or 40 in the hour we were there. |
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@Swampgrass
As stated by a previous poster, it could be juveniles (maybe that just got their first set of adult plumage) that are hanging around together until they figure out the adulting thing. It could be a breeding pair with a younger upstart trying to horn in with the female and they're all squabbling away from the nest area. Pictures would help along with a commentary on their behavior. |
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Redtail window 2 @ironhandjohn |
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No. It's true. But I'm sure this website is full of shit. https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Bull shit. https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail |
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Gotta love the 13'ers just for the entertainment. Here, hold my beer while I step on my dick. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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I've seen juveniles hang out in groups but nothing like this ? Is this common ? View Quote Don't know if they roost together but they sure do hunt in groups. |
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I'd like to see that, I once was on a tour of a bat preserve, listening to the guide drone on about how bats were expert flyers, etc. Then the hawks moved in. Bird after bird would dive thru the bat flight picking off one on every swoop thru. Those hawks must have eaten a good 30 or 40 in the hour we were there. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Who's the Arfcommer who shot video of the red tail nailing mice that he set out on his porch railing? All you could see was the mouse, then WHAM, the talons smash down on the mouse like something out of a Godzilla movie. Bird after bird would dive thru the bat flight picking off one on every swoop thru. Those hawks must have eaten a good 30 or 40 in the hour we were there. |
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I sure could use some of their help in the eyesight department. My myopic ass needs to get to the eye doctor for new glasses soon. I’m only half serious about spirit animals, and I honestly don’t know how it’s supposed to work, but I have an interesting(to me, anyway) story about red tails and me. I once got really lost in rural Arkansas after delivering a load of pipe to a job-site, and the ‘shortcut’ back to I-40 got me even more lost. It was getting dark, no sun, pre cell phone, my map didn’t show the road I was on, and I was a new driver beginning to panic. I got to a T-intersection and there was a hawk sitting on the sign. It turned its head and looked to the left & back at me a few times. I took it as a sign, turned left and followed the road to another T-intersection and found another hawk, this one looking to the right. This continued several more times until I could see 40 off in the distance, at which point I saw no more hawks. Another time Mrs. IHJ came to pick me up from work, but couldn’t find which truck was mine. There were 100 identical tractors parked in rows & I was asleep in the back of one of them. She circled the lot until she saw a hawk sitting on a lamp post right above my truck, so she stopped. The hawk dipped its head a few times and then flew off, and Mrs. IHJ’s knock on the door woke me up. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: You leave my animal brothers(sisters, too, I just can’t tell them apart) alone. I wanted a really cool, dangerous spirit animal, like a grizzly bear or great white shark. Instead, I got red-tail hawks, but it’s cool... So does the spirit animal choose you; how does that work? I’m only half serious about spirit animals, and I honestly don’t know how it’s supposed to work, but I have an interesting(to me, anyway) story about red tails and me. I once got really lost in rural Arkansas after delivering a load of pipe to a job-site, and the ‘shortcut’ back to I-40 got me even more lost. It was getting dark, no sun, pre cell phone, my map didn’t show the road I was on, and I was a new driver beginning to panic. I got to a T-intersection and there was a hawk sitting on the sign. It turned its head and looked to the left & back at me a few times. I took it as a sign, turned left and followed the road to another T-intersection and found another hawk, this one looking to the right. This continued several more times until I could see 40 off in the distance, at which point I saw no more hawks. Another time Mrs. IHJ came to pick me up from work, but couldn’t find which truck was mine. There were 100 identical tractors parked in rows & I was asleep in the back of one of them. She circled the lot until she saw a hawk sitting on a lamp post right above my truck, so she stopped. The hawk dipped its head a few times and then flew off, and Mrs. IHJ’s knock on the door woke me up. |
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No. It's true. But I'm sure this website is full of shit. https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail View Quote And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. |
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I watched a hawk kill a northern flicker woodpecker in my back yard....it was brutal and fascinating to watch.
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The story you posted above is about a Cooper’s hawk, which is a bird-eating accipiter. Red Tailed hawks (buteo) primarily eat rodents. You are advocating the killing of something based on a false argument. And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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No. It's true. But I'm sure this website is full of shit. https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. |
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Should be treated the same as Groundhogs, Feral Cats and Feral Pigs. View Quote |
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I’ve seen more hawks near my house in FL and woods this year than the last 16 years.
Not sure why but welcome. |
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The story you posted above is about a Cooper’s hawk, which is a bird-eating accipiter. Red Tailed hawks (buteo) primarily eat rodents. You are advocating the killing of something based on a false argument. And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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No. It's true. But I'm sure this website is full of shit. https://www.nwf.org/en/Magazines/National-Wildlife/1993/The-Case-of-the-Disappearing-Quail And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. Yes, hawks catch game animals, chickens, etc. once in a while but they are hunters of opportunity and risk vs reward. A raptor would much rather subsist on small, easily caught prey such as mice, voles, rats, snakes, etc. then risk injury by catching larger prey. When I am doing presentations with my hawks I deal with this all the time. A guys property is overrun with coyotes and feral cats but he thinks the two hawks on his property are killing all the rabbits. I am a Falconer like a couple of other guys on here. Don't kill protected birds because you are ignorant. |
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Last week I saw 3 golden eagles together,well, within a couple hundred yards of each other. I see single birds and pairs quite often but that is the first time I have seen three at one time. This morning I was checking out a water development in a canyon ten or twelve miles from here as the crow flies . I helped build it about five years back and hadn't checked in now in a couple years. I didn't expect to see bighorns on it this time of year although they left plenty of sign from earlier. Any way I had never hiked to the head of the canyon and since it is a beautiful spot and it was a fine day I decided I would. I climbed high along the west slope, there was a little fresh snow but it had mostly gone where the sun hit it and so I sat down on my jacket to enjoy the sun and thought about taking a nap when an eagle soared down canyon below the opposite rim, followed a couple minutes later by it's mate. I feel lucky to live in a place like this.
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I sure could use some of their help in the eyesight department. My myopic ass needs to get to the eye doctor for new glasses soon. I’m only half serious about spirit animals, and I honestly don’t know how it’s supposed to work, but I have an interesting(to me, anyway) story about red tails and me. I once got really lost in rural Arkansas after delivering a load of pipe to a job-site, and the ‘shortcut’ back to I-40 got me even more lost. It was getting dark, no sun, pre cell phone, my map didn’t show the road I was on, and I was a new driver beginning to panic. I got to a T-intersection and there was a hawk sitting on the sign. It turned its head and looked to the left & back at me a few times. I took it as a sign, turned left and followed the road to another T-intersection and found another hawk, this one looking to the right. This continued several more times until I could see 40 off in the distance, at which point I saw no more hawks. Another time Mrs. IHJ came to pick me up from work, but couldn’t find which truck was mine. There were 100 identical tractors parked in rows & I was asleep in the back of one of them. She circled the lot until she saw a hawk sitting on a lamp post right above my truck, so she stopped. The hawk dipped its head a few times and then flew off, and Mrs. IHJ’s knock on the door woke me up. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: You leave my animal brothers(sisters, too, I just can’t tell them apart) alone. I wanted a really cool, dangerous spirit animal, like a grizzly bear or great white shark. Instead, I got red-tail hawks, but it’s cool... So does the spirit animal choose you; how does that work? I’m only half serious about spirit animals, and I honestly don’t know how it’s supposed to work, but I have an interesting(to me, anyway) story about red tails and me. I once got really lost in rural Arkansas after delivering a load of pipe to a job-site, and the ‘shortcut’ back to I-40 got me even more lost. It was getting dark, no sun, pre cell phone, my map didn’t show the road I was on, and I was a new driver beginning to panic. I got to a T-intersection and there was a hawk sitting on the sign. It turned its head and looked to the left & back at me a few times. I took it as a sign, turned left and followed the road to another T-intersection and found another hawk, this one looking to the right. This continued several more times until I could see 40 off in the distance, at which point I saw no more hawks. Another time Mrs. IHJ came to pick me up from work, but couldn’t find which truck was mine. There were 100 identical tractors parked in rows & I was asleep in the back of one of them. She circled the lot until she saw a hawk sitting on a lamp post right above my truck, so she stopped. The hawk dipped its head a few times and then flew off, and Mrs. IHJ’s knock on the door woke me up. |
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Quoted: The story you posted above is about a Cooper’s hawk, which is a bird-eating accipiter. Red Tailed hawks (buteo) primarily eat rodents. You are advocating the killing of something based on a false argument. And to counter that story, cats are responsible for the predation of quail to a much greater extent than birds of prey. If you want to make a difference shoot feral cats. View Quote So cooper hawks kill quail and red tailed kill squirrels, just for examples. My argument is that they're destructive in the amount of game they kill. Which they are. Only GD would say the national wildlife federation is wrong lol |
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Last week I saw 3 golden eagles together,well, within a couple hundred yards of each other. I see single birds and pairs quite often but that is the first time I have seen three at one time. This morning I was checking out a water development in a canyon ten or twelve miles from here as the crow flies . I helped build it about five years back and hadn't checked in now in a couple years. I didn't expect to see bighorns on it this time of year although they left plenty of sign from earlier. Any way I had never hiked to the head of the canyon and since it is a beautiful spot and it was a fine day I decided I would. I climbed high along the west slope, there was a little fresh snow but it had mostly gone where the sun hit it and so I sat down on my jacket to enjoy the sun and thought about taking a nap when an eagle soared down canyon below the opposite rim, followed a couple minutes later by it's mate. I feel lucky to live in a place like this. View Quote |
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