Birding!

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I think Walmart needs to hire someone interested in birding because they have a labeling problem in the meat department.

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It must be an oriental thing. Deep fried chicken paws.
 
Yikes ! I will try almost anything in terms of food, at least once...and I'd probably try these as well...but that has to be one of the most repulsive-looking "food" items I have ever seen. :yuck:


So....the feeders continue to be swarming, mostly with Juncos right now but many other species are present as well, including a bunch more Fox Sparrows. This has attracted lots of attention from predators. We regularly see Cooper's and Sharpshinned Hawks (both Accipiters) as well as Kestrels (small falcons) watching and sometimes making attacks on the dinner crowd. Like most predators, they are only successful a small percent of the time.

This morning I was working in the yard, on the opposite side of the house from the main feeders. Little birds were everywhere. I was taking a break and just absently looking around when I spotted an adult male Sharpie flying along the treeline, roughly 100 yards from the house. He was too far to alarm the feeder birds, and he seemed to pay them no mind. He continued along the trees for a couple hundred yards as I watched, then banked around 90 degrees to the left and shot along in that direction for a distance that took him past the house. He then did another left turn, which put him on a course straight for me. He was obviously picking up speed. Very cool to watch the little speedster coming right at me across the open field, just above the bushes. He came all the way to the house at top speed, and as he passed between me and the house he banked left yet again, still pouring on the speed, essentially doing a tight 180-degree half-circle around the end of the building and only about 8 feet in the air. This meant that he burst around the last corner of the house only 30 feet from 50 or 60 small birds that didn't know he was there, heading straight for them at Mach II.

Unfortunately, I didn't get to actually see the hit, but as small birds scattered in every direction, the Sharpie must have plucked one out of midair without slowing down. He re-appeared in my field of vision at the far end of the house only a split-second later with his prize clutched in his talons and headed for the treeline. It happened so fast that he must have barely slowed down throughout the attack.

Stuff like this impresses the hell out of me. This tiny bird, the size of a Blue Jay, executed a cunning and well-planned maneuver that saw him scoping out the target from a distance, then building up speed as he approached in a giant loop, unseen by his quarry to take them by surprise. He hit the prey going fast, and yet was able to snatch it up and continue on without faltering, despite having suffered a high-speed collision with a prey item that probably weighed at least 20-25% of his own weight, and then added that much to his total weight as he continued still completely in control of his flight.

Look around you sometime in a crowd; you're surrounded by a lot of people who are flabby, overweight, out of shape and generally pretty poor specimens of the breed. Observations like this simple one in my backyard serve to remind me what incredible athletes all wild animals need to be...and are...just to go about their normal daily affairs. :)
 
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I share your admiration and awe, especially when it comes to the Accipitriformes order. I not the bloodthirsty type, but the combination of cunning, power, speed, agility, etc. that a bird of prey exhibits is nothing short of amazing. Those flabby, overweight, out-of-shape people wouldn't be if they had to get their meals the way wild animals do.

It seems like I might have shared this experience before, but when my daughters were small, we caught a mouse in a live trap in the house. Because it was small, had big dark eyes and was "cute", the girls talked me into letting it go instead of feeding it to one of my snakes. We drove down the road about a mile and pulled over next to an open field. I took no notice of the utility pole and electric line overhead. The girls and I gallantly opened the trap and gave the mouse its freedom, watching in satisfaction as it scampered away. Before we could even turn back towards the car, a male Kestrel was angling up and away with the mouse in its talons. Probably watched the whole thing from the electric line overhead, delighted at its good fortune. The girls actually took it pretty well, I don't remember any tears. I do remember one of them saying in disbelief, "was that our mouse?", it all happened so smoothly and swiftly.
 
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Perzackly! :)

Kestrels are one of my all-time favourites. As the smallest of our falcons (actually in Falconiformes, I believe?) they were fairly common living and nesting right within the city where I grew up, and I have a Kestrel box in a place of honour here at home now. I've had several successful years of watching a pair of the little demons rear a clutch of young there, interspersed with more years of nothing. A couple of years the box was taken over by a single male Kestrel that I assumed was the dad from the previous year, only to watch the poor guy sit and wait and wait for his mate to return to join him. She didn't, and eventually he moved on. One year the pair occupied the nest only to have a second male intrude upon their bliss, resulting in fairly fierce competition for the lady. The original owner kept the nest...but the intruder kept the lady and moved on with her. :(

I am sitting in my easy chair in the den, watching my feeders, and I can just see my Kestrel box out in the pasture, about 200 yards away. Got my fingers crossed for it this year; I've already spotted a pair of Kestrels mating on the power line running right across the yard to the house, so my hopes are high...again...

As Gary Larson said in one of his immortal Far Side cartoon panels..."Birds of prey know they're cool". :)
 
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