FALCONRY: Don’t kill your hawk!!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии • 24

  • @ThatSocratesguy
    @ThatSocratesguy 5 месяцев назад +1

    Dave you are a treasure trove of falconry knowledge and experience

  • @lynziloopot
    @lynziloopot 6 месяцев назад +2

    Very informative thank you Dave. I’ve already decided not to fly one of my permissions due to the dangers (road and railway line). I will man her there though to keep the relationship with the farmer but no loose flights

  • @johnwilkes7190
    @johnwilkes7190 6 месяцев назад +3

    Some good reminders there Dave. Plus one on lead in Eagles we see quite a lot of Wedgetails with sub lethal lead levels from eating cadavers left in the field . Sadly quite a few die from it, and yes they dissolve it very fast , a 40g .22 bullet in under ten days for instance. Another one to consider is secondary rodenticide poisoning.

  • @juliealmond9546
    @juliealmond9546 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great reminders, thanks

  • @freebirdofreason1994
    @freebirdofreason1994 6 месяцев назад +5

    Very interesting food for thought. Those Electric power lines are a worry , had several reports of injuries and deaths to hawks last season.
    Good reminders and awareness video, Thanks Dave .

  • @harrishawklerinDE
    @harrishawklerinDE 6 месяцев назад +4

    This is what I keep telling my mentor. Hawking is dangerous enough when everything goes right, and we must try to avoid the dangers we can! Finding the balance between risking enough to give my Harris hawk all the chances she can have and being cautious enough to protect her from clear dangers is not easy! I tend to err on the side of caution and look out for the risks. This video was hard to listen to, but so important!

  • @kilakila992kilakila2
    @kilakila992kilakila2 6 месяцев назад +2

    Plenty of food for thought Dave. A lot of it common sense but we do get careless when doing the same thing very often.

  • @chuckr1951
    @chuckr1951 6 месяцев назад +2

    Good video sir. In the US we have the buzzard on steroids. I know at least half a dozen falconers who have lost birds, mostly big falcons, to Red-tails. And they are ubiquitous. But a well known falconer in the UK told me of a friend's Goshawk sitting on a branch in the open taken by single stoop from a Common Buzzard. Awful.

    • @falconry.davesharpenatureboy
      @falconry.davesharpenatureboy  6 месяцев назад +1

      Our common buzzards are half your Redtail ; but my bald eagle has been floored from a soaring glint from common buzzard strikes twice ! Like he’d been shot !

  • @ComicusFreemanius
    @ComicusFreemanius 6 месяцев назад +2

    There's a transformer near a big church in my old neighborhood, big field with a transformer mounted higher than it's post. And there was a redtail lying under it when I was there last.

    • @falconry.davesharpenatureboy
      @falconry.davesharpenatureboy  6 месяцев назад +2

      Your coyotes are slow in the uptake hehe! Cheers for the comment it validates my point

    • @ComicusFreemanius
      @ComicusFreemanius 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@falconry.davesharpenatureboyand the vultures. It's a wetland in NC, there's a million redtaileds. Coyote's are more in the nearby pine forests / ft. Bragg. Probably hunting deer. See a lot more red foxes.

    • @falconry.davesharpenatureboy
      @falconry.davesharpenatureboy  6 месяцев назад

      @ComicusFreemanius way more stuff than here that’s for sure, the uk is depleted of wild places

  • @alastairmacnaughton7673
    @alastairmacnaughton7673 6 месяцев назад +3

    I would like to thank you for these videos as I want to be a falconer after six-form and I plan my first bird to be a goshawk

  • @buskingkarma2503
    @buskingkarma2503 5 месяцев назад +1

    My wife and I seen a sparrowhawk land with prey in it's claws on the lawn in our garden,here in Scotland,it was so cool!👌out of all the birds of prey that I have seen in the wild,the sparrowhawks are my favourite,,,and I'm honestly thinking of getting one!😆is a sparrowhawk a good bird to start with?

    • @falconry.davesharpenatureboy
      @falconry.davesharpenatureboy  5 месяцев назад

      Ironically it’s pretty much the worse bird to start with and few manage to fly them for just one season let alone several ; typical eh!

  • @nrthlincspyro8622
    @nrthlincspyro8622 6 месяцев назад +2

    Ive had the unfortunate experience
    Of my bird getting electrocudetd on a transformer box
    Also hitting a big lake and having to swim out to help it out
    And buildings
    Also a bird managed to damage its wing in avery
    Lessons learnt but i try to avoid all of them