Hey dude, I don't know if you're the type of person to be bothered by this or not, but I'd really like to be able to use these sounds in some music I'm making, and I just want to ask you if I can or not. If you don't want it to be part of it, that's fine, just let me know. If I don't hear back in 3-4 days, I won't use it, and I'll find another sound somewhere else. Thank you for reading this, if you do, and thank you for your consideration.
Great job ! Thanks for sharing your work/passion. Amateur birder here and trying to identify a owl I had seen and found this very helpful as well as a pleasure to watch. Thanks again.
This video is absolutely incredibly beautiful! Not long enough for me though! LOL It was shared by Toledo Metroparks. Thank you kind sir for uploading!
Greg, this is gorgeous action! I'm making a narrated movie for RU-vid about Short-eared Owls, and I lack footage of the owl fighting a Harrier. Would you be interested in giving me permission to use this footage? I would, of course, credit you. Here's a link to my channel in case you'd like to check out the quality of my work. ru-vid.com/show-UC-Q-eORu_VVtkbmOgaSpH7A
Thanks! I just observed this bird in one of my window bird feeders for the first time not knowing what is is minutes ago! The squirrels, pigeons, and black starlings are back, but that visit from this gorgeous woodpecker makes this hobby all worth it!
Bald eagle is not very ferocious. It is also a collective bird. But if the golden eagle had been in his place, he would have killed whoever was trying to steal his food .
it isn't. it's a juvenile bald eagle. it says as much in the description, and you can also tell just by looking at it that it's neither a sea eagle nor a golden eagle.
One time, while working on a high rise building, i witnessed a falcon, dive bomb, strike a hawk, that was harassing the falcons mate and nestling, attack the hawk from above sending the bird plummeting to the ground to it's death. The falcon was traveling at a high rate of speed when it hit the hawk. An amazing event to witness.
Not sure how fate has landed me here at this time but to answer your question Hawks are, broadly speaking larger than falcons. Peregrine falcons however attack their prey by diving at them at up to 240mph (386Km/h) and ramming their target. The largest female Peregrines are up to 53oz (1.5kg) with males topping out at around 35oz (1kg). Therefore a regular sized male peregrine falcon of around 700g (24.7oz) at maximum dive speed hits with 3899J or 2875 foot pounds of force. If a falcon decided to ram the top of your head you would die, if they hit your shoulder you'd have a broken clavicle and probably need rotator cuff surgery, if it hit your arm you'd have a broken arm. Do not underestimate these birds
@@leehyun6513falcons do not kill like other raptors. Their talons are too small to stab their prey to death like other raptors. So instead they dive bomb using their feet to punch their prey with one good critical hit.
@@LordOceanus About the last paragraph, it's factually true but is never going to happen. Peregrine falcons stoop *birds.* Birds are relatively light and fragile. But humans aren't - it's like punching a boxing pad vs. punching a concrete wall. A full-speed collision even with your arm (let alone skull) would kill the falcon, and they're not stupid to try it.