A much younger Richard Attenborough was also in a World War 2 classic, "The Great Escape." He played Bartlett and organized the escapes. One of my favorite movies of all time which featured an all star cast including Steve McQueen. If you've never seen it, I highly recommend you check it out! Enjoy. . .
Often peregrine falcons will ball their talons into a fist and "punch" the prey at extremely high speeds, cracking its bones and crippling it, forcing it to the ground where the falcon can eat it at its own leisure.
They are a fairly common sight around here (Dorset) and it's amazing to watch them hunt crows. They often just ram them at ridiculous speeds, and then you see the two birds interlocked and spiralling downwards in a bundle with feathers flying off it. Once on the ground, it's all over for the crow. Incredible to watch.
I live in Springfield, Massachusetts. There are multiple pairs of perigrene falcons. For years they were on a ledge of the monarch towers but lately they've taken up a spot under the memorial bridge. Once in a while you'll see them soaring over the Connecticut River. Truly beautiful birds
@@sudharshanve8519 No, they can't. They're fascinating, incredible birds, and indeed THE FASTEST ANIMAL IN THE WORLD, but 300 miles per hour is impossible. Incidentally, the eyelid which protects the falcon's eyes is called a "haw". It's a third eyelid which protects the birds' eyes from any debris while in a stoop.
@@killerskillet 415 kmph is the highest recorded speed, u think unrecorded ones couldnt have touched 450 plus odd?? That easily translates approx. 300mph.
zok310 That's like saying a fish is good at breathing underwater without technology or a human brain, these incredible birds' speed and agility were honed by evolution to these kinds of stunts
I just searched for falcon. I scrolled through the various suggested videos. I don't know how I settled on this one first but I'm glad I did, and walhalla I bumped into David Attenborough's voice! What a narrator!
I saw a Peregrine falcon today. At first I thought it was a Cooper's hawk, but then it stopped in flight and began to hover. Within 10 seconds, it went into its stoop and dropped like a bullet over the edge of a bluff. Pretty cool to see. The location was a place I have been to over 100 times in the past 30 years-------first sighting of a Peregrine there. Cool. (Santa Barbara, CA)
Well, unless you're their prey. I remember seeing these on 1-2 occasions in the Shenandoah National Park area as a boy (I'm almost positive I saw one in a stoop down the mountainside, unless red tailed hawks pull back their wings and dive too). The peregrines were nearly wiped out in the area from DDT and other stuff, but they were starting to come back in numbers when I was there. Truly magnificent creatures.
I’m in Spain rn and I saw a peri yesterday. I’ve been doing falconry for a year and it made me so happy. I was watching a tree full of parrots and all of a sudden a lot of them flew out, about a minute later a peri came stooping through a gap in the tree, grabbed a parrot and flew right past me. An osprey has started circling too. Probably looking for scraps.
I'm watching the Collins St Falcons live stream based in Melbourne Oz and it's incredible to watch how many other birds are killed to keep the Falcon chicks fed. The parent birds seem to have no trouble being serial killers, it's amazing to witness.
Me FalconCam Project, Orange NSW, Charles Sturt University. They are stunning birds. Aside of watching Bald eagles, Golden Eagles, WTE nest live streem one of my fave is in Sydney of White sea bellied eagles. All of them are gorgeous birds.. and parents.
Falcons are roughly divisible into three or four groups. The first contains the kestrels (probably excepting the American kestrel);[11] usually small and stocky falcons of mainly brown upperside color and sometimes sexually dimorphic; three African species that are generally gray in color stand apart from the typical members of this group. Kestrels feed chiefly on terrestrial vertebrates and invertebrates of appropriate size, such as rodents, reptiles, or insects. The second group contains slightly larger (on average) species, the hobbies and relatives. These birds are characterized by considerable amounts of dark slate-gray in their plumage; their malar areas are nearly always black. They feed mainly on smaller birds. Third are the peregrine falcon and its relatives, variably sized powerful birds that also have a black malar area (except some very light color morphs), and often a black cap, as well. They are very fast birds with a maximum speed of 390 kilometres per hour. Otherwise, they are somewhat intermediate between the other groups, being chiefly medium gray with some lighter or brownish colors on their upper sides. They are, on average, more delicately patterned than the hobbies and, if the hierofalcons are excluded (see below), this group typically contains species with horizontal barring on their undersides. As opposed to the other groups, where tail color varies much in general but little according to evolutionary relatedness,[note 1] However, the fox and greater kestrels can be told apart at first glance by their tail colors, but not by much else; they might be very close relatives and are probably much closer to each other than the lesser and common kestrels. The tails of the large falcons are quite uniformly dark gray with inconspicuous black banding and small, white tips, though this is probably plesiomorphic. These large Falco species feed on mid-sized birds and terrestrial vertebrates. Very similar to these, and sometimes included therein, are the four or so species of hierofalcons (literally, "hawk-falcons"). They represent taxa with, usually, more phaeomelanins, which impart reddish or brown colors, and generally more strongly patterned plumage reminiscent of hawks. Their undersides have a lengthwise pattern of blotches, lines, or arrowhead marks. While these three or four groups, loosely circumscribed, are an informal arrangement, they probably contain several distinct clades in their entirety. A study of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data of some kestrels[11] identified a clade containing the common kestrel and related "malar-striped" species, to the exclusion of such taxa as the greater kestrel (which lacks a malar stripe), the lesser kestrel (which is very similar to the common, but also has no malar stripe), and the American kestrel, which has a malar stripe, but its color pattern-apart from the brownish back-and also the black feathers behind the ear, which never occur in the true kestrels, are more reminiscent of some hobbies. The malar-striped kestrels apparently split from their relatives in the Gelasian, roughly 2.0-2.5 million years ago (Mya), and are seemingly of tropical East African origin. The entire "true kestrel" group-excluding the American species-is probably a distinct and quite young clade, as also suggested by their numerous apomorphies. Most members of the genus Falco show a "tooth" on the upper mandible Other studies[18][19][20][21][22] have confirmed that the hierofalcons are a monophyletic group-and that hybridization is quite frequent at least in the larger falcon species. Initial studies of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data suggested that the hierofalcons are basal among living falcons.[18][19] The discovery of a NUMT proved this earlier theory erroneous.[20] In reality, the hierofalcons are a rather young group, originating at the same time as the start of the main kestrel radiation, about 2 Mya. Very little fossil history exists for this lineage. However, the present diversity of very recent origin suggests that this lineage may have nearly gone extinct in the recent past.[22][23] The phylogeny and delimitations of the peregrine and hobby groups are more problematic. Molecular studies have only been conducted on a few species, and the morphologically ambiguous taxa have often been little researched. The morphology of the syrinx, which contributes well to resolving the overall phylogeny of the Falconidae,[24][25] is not very informative in the present genus. Nonetheless, a core group containing the peregrine and Barbary falcons, which, in turn, group with the hierofalcons and the more distant prairie falcon (which was sometimes placed with the hierofalcons, though it is entirely distinct biogeographically), as well as at least most of the "typical" hobbies, are confirmed to be monophyletic as suspected.[18][19] Given that the American Falco species of today belong to the peregrine group, or are apparently more basal species, the initially most successful evolutionary radiation seemingly was a Holarctic one that originated possibly around central Eurasia or in (northern) Africa. One or several lineages were present in North America by the Early Pliocene at latest. The origin of today's major Falco groups-the "typical" hobbies and kestrels, for example, or the peregrine-hierofalcon complex, or the aplomado falcon lineage-can be quite confidently placed from the Miocene-Pliocene boundary through the Zanclean and Piacenzian and just into the Gelasian, that is from 2.4 to 5.3 Mya, when the malar-striped kestrels diversified. Some groups of falcons, such as the hierofalcon complex and the peregrine-Barbary superspecies, have only evolved in more recent times; the species of the former seem to be 120,000 years old or so.[22]
Peregrine fans: 'watch a living missle' by wild nature. It's amazing captured footage that shows how incredibly protective these birds are of there chicks
The great horned owl likes to take peregrine fledglings from their nests and mummy or daddy peregrine will fearlessly fight to the death and attack the much larger owl by hitting it at 200mph snapping its spine or neck
Amazing footage!,, seen a perigrin falcon attack on a flock of birds feeding on flies last summer while fishing, I was in a boat about 20 meters away when I heard almost like a sonic boom from a plane, it was the perigrin attacking and caught a bird... it was amazing
The final stoop over the Piazza Navona is obviously not real. However, I have seen peregrine falcons sitting on the lantern tower on top of the church we see at the end, Santa Agnese....so the scene is perhaps not as far-fetched as it seems :-)
Raptors are gorgeous. And peregrine falcons are the Concorde of raptors: so technically sophisticated you almost can't believe they really exist. And yet they do.
@unrepeatable raddish It just was a metaphor... If you'd like to put it on literal terms, the falcon might be slower, but it isn't jet-powered, so the Concorde was a cheat.
Just saw a peregrine attack today in downtown Toronto. Soared motionless above a building catching the updraft and then dove impossibly fast down toward a small bird who saw it in time to evade. It was several hundred meters away ong buildingsand flags etc. No idea how it saw the thing. Insane!
The Eagle is a symbol of tenacity, the breath of the soul of a patriot to not give up on challenges even though sometimes the has to fall but he continues to rise to become the Fire of the Expedition.
Who would win in a narration fight, Morgan Freeman or David Attenborough. Sure Freeman may have the voice, but Attenborough is a one of a kind story teller
ROS GAMER 2233 theirs no human because if they were there they would mess it up but it’s just large camera and something holding it or it’s U know a drone.
I always thought England was straight metric system. But I saw an interview with the dude who plays Sam on GoT, and said a lot of places in England still use miles instead of kilometers. So I don't necessarily know that this was tilted toward an American audience. Can't say for sure as I have never been to England, just what I heard
All places in England use miles and yards along with Imperial gallons. And yes I've been there several times. But since 1965 their money is in decimals.
@@chrisdonaldson9532 Aren't Smithsonian Channel and Smithsonian Institute, primarily American entities?.... Remember, for some strange reason, Americans love hearing spoken British English... To many Americans it sounds more 'proper' and 'authoritative'... It might be a good bet that British announcers and narrators get more money in the USA, than anywhere else (and maybe more than a native American English-speaking equivalent performer).
Before I'd known that DNR had released some around here, one zipped past me at alarming speed as I was walking down a trail. Now they're everywhere around here.
In nature, the last thing you hear before you die is David Attenborough's voice.
You made me think what would if be like if he did movies .... Rambo First blood
I wouldn’t mind
Lol. 😂🤣😂🤣
LoL 😆😆
🤣😂🤣😅
Peregrine is the fastest bird in the world...
And david is the best presenter of wildlife programs in the world...
And Satyajeet makes the best Veggie samosa in the world...
Satyajeet Vaidya true and Ostriches are the fastest running they are faster than Roadrunners
cheetah are faster than ostrich
@@d1marquez37 I think he meant ostrich is the fastest running bird.
David and Jacques Cousteau are the best
If this dude narrated my life. It would make everything I do seem THAT much more awesome!
Shut Up Anthony! Brother(RIP) Richard(Jurassic Park)..voice was Awesome too..in fact they sound oddly alike..
Haha right
Narrator voice : Tiny dick Anthony is going to finally partake in some pussy
A much younger Richard Attenborough was also in a World War 2 classic, "The Great Escape." He played Bartlett and organized the escapes. One of my favorite movies of all time which featured an all star cast including Steve McQueen.
If you've never seen it, I highly recommend you check it out! Enjoy. . .
@@ceaser8999 Hahahaha ... funny!
I have loved David Attenborough way of narrating nature for many years ... his british accent and the dedication to spread out knowledge.
How can a bird be fantastically majestic and adorably cute at the same time?
I used to think that about Diana Spencer!
Spot on.
Often peregrine falcons will ball their talons into a fist and "punch" the prey at extremely high speeds, cracking its bones and crippling it, forcing it to the ground where the falcon can eat it at its own leisure.
That's true
They sometime tackle their prey or knock them down they even tackle geese that's crazy
They are a fairly common sight around here (Dorset) and it's amazing to watch them hunt crows. They often just ram them at ridiculous speeds, and then you see the two birds interlocked and spiralling downwards in a bundle with feathers flying off it. Once on the ground, it's all over for the crow. Incredible to watch.
They also use their pointed hook-shaped beak to sever the spinal column of their prey, instantly disabling it and ultimately killing it.
So...
A falcon punch?
That is one bad ass bird.
Coaster Haven 8nthat bird runs almos as fast as a bugatty veyron
José Antonio Garcia Not sure, I wouldn't be surprised though.
no the bird does not run that fast
This is THE bad ass bird
Starlings are such nasty vermin too. Team Peregrine!
Their nest cams are fascinating and so much fun to watch! The babies are big fluff balls. The parents are so gorgeous and sleek!
pegster6 yes they are. Look at Wakefield Peregrines they’re awesome.
I wish David Attenborough could narrate my life.
+kevin p yeah, whenever you hear his voice you don't want to do anything else but chillax and watch :)
kevin p 😂😂😂
Oscar Nilsson word lol
Ok thanks hun
"Now the human sub-species is beating his meat"
I live in Springfield, Massachusetts. There are multiple pairs of perigrene falcons. For years they were on a ledge of the monarch towers but lately they've taken up a spot under the memorial bridge. Once in a while you'll see them soaring over the Connecticut River. Truly beautiful birds
I love this damn narration
its david attenborough the voice of god in my head
"Assassin's Bird", not a bad idea.
Hope they have a good "Brotherhood" with the Auditore 😜
Lol
Marc Adriel Danan Change 3 letters for Assassin’s Fist as well
The superb narrator, and elite camerawork.
Great thanks to the operators who took the videos of the birds such skilfully. 👏
David Attenboroughs,voice...the best!
The fact that mach 0.26 is reached by a bird is nothing short of amazing.
@unrepeatable raddish regardless, the fact that its body is built to withstand such a high velocity is nothing short of remarkable.
Wow, even at the end they had no clue the Falcon was already on the attack. Incredible.
200mph and uses absolutely no gogles.
There is a thing that acts like goggles, it is a milky see-through membrane that covers their eyes, stopping them from being damaged
Think they can even touch 250-300 mph.
@@sudharshanve8519 No, they can't. They're fascinating, incredible birds, and indeed THE FASTEST ANIMAL IN THE WORLD, but 300 miles per hour is impossible.
Incidentally, the eyelid which protects the falcon's eyes is called a "haw". It's a third eyelid which protects the birds' eyes from any debris while in a stoop.
@@killerskillet 415 kmph is the highest recorded speed, u think unrecorded ones couldnt have touched 450 plus odd?? That easily translates approx. 300mph.
@@sudharshanve8519 415 kph is 250 mph you brainiac.
Free fall at 200mph trying to catch a bird moving faster than you just so you can eat..... All without a computer or human brain. Amazing
zok310 um the peregrine falcon is way faster than a starling
zok310 That's like saying a fish is good at breathing underwater without technology or a human brain, these incredible birds' speed and agility were honed by evolution to these kinds of stunts
Nature and evolution
The one who stretched the sky made the creatures wise 😊😊
zok310
Birds has an organic computer a.ka. brain.
The way that thing flies is stunningly beautiful.
I just searched for falcon. I scrolled through the various suggested videos. I don't know how I settled on this one first but I'm glad I did, and walhalla I bumped into David Attenborough's voice!
What a narrator!
I saw a Peregrine falcon today. At first I thought it was a Cooper's hawk, but then it stopped in flight and began to hover. Within 10 seconds, it went into its stoop and dropped like a bullet over the edge of a bluff. Pretty cool to see. The location was a place I have been to over 100 times in the past 30 years-------first sighting of a Peregrine there. Cool. (Santa Barbara, CA)
Peregrines don't hover.
Kestrels hover
Not to mention, peregrine falcons are so cute!
cute little killing machines
Isabella Aguiar l-/ quite nice falconry bird too! Class to hunt with
You mentioned it. 🥰🥰
Well, unless you're their prey. I remember seeing these on 1-2 occasions in the Shenandoah National Park area as a boy (I'm almost positive I saw one in a stoop down the mountainside, unless red tailed hawks pull back their wings and dive too). The peregrines were nearly wiped out in the area from DDT and other stuff, but they were starting to come back in numbers when I was there. Truly magnificent creatures.
2:08 that was some great slow motion editing there , I just love that part of this video
I’m in Spain rn and I saw a peri yesterday. I’ve been doing falconry for a year and it made me so happy.
I was watching a tree full of parrots and all of a sudden a lot of them flew out, about a minute later a peri came stooping through a gap in the tree, grabbed a parrot and flew right past me.
An osprey has started circling too. Probably looking for scraps.
Fastest moving but only vertically, in a freefall. Ohh, legendary David! My hero, unrivaled true storyteller!
Fastest ...period..when stooping even faster
For obvious reasons, they have a high mortality rate. Life on the edge!
pegster6 The have one of the highest kill rates. About 60% of their hunts are successful - more than any other bird hunter on the planet.
Where have you heard those numbers? Because another video I watched said the Peregrin Falcon have a bad kill rate of about 20%
I think kill rate is depend on where they live.
Tony Skywalker and what they r hunting
real life tom cruise in top gun
I'm watching the Collins St Falcons live stream based in Melbourne Oz and it's incredible to watch how many other birds are killed to keep the Falcon chicks fed. The parent birds seem to have no trouble being serial killers, it's amazing to witness.
Me FalconCam Project, Orange NSW, Charles Sturt University. They are stunning birds.
Aside of watching Bald eagles, Golden Eagles, WTE nest live streem one of my fave is in Sydney of White sea bellied eagles. All of them are gorgeous birds.. and parents.
Cinematography is wonderful. And the narration makes it all the more valuable. The information about wings is really great.
3:33
Falcons are roughly divisible into three or four groups. The first contains the kestrels (probably excepting the American kestrel);[11] usually small and stocky falcons of mainly brown upperside color and sometimes sexually dimorphic; three African species that are generally gray in color stand apart from the typical members of this group. Kestrels feed chiefly on terrestrial vertebrates and invertebrates of appropriate size, such as rodents, reptiles, or insects.
The second group contains slightly larger (on average) species, the hobbies and relatives. These birds are characterized by considerable amounts of dark slate-gray in their plumage; their malar areas are nearly always black. They feed mainly on smaller birds.
Third are the peregrine falcon and its relatives, variably sized powerful birds that also have a black malar area (except some very light color morphs), and often a black cap, as well. They are very fast birds with a maximum speed of 390 kilometres per hour. Otherwise, they are somewhat intermediate between the other groups, being chiefly medium gray with some lighter or brownish colors on their upper sides. They are, on average, more delicately patterned than the hobbies and, if the hierofalcons are excluded (see below), this group typically contains species with horizontal barring on their undersides. As opposed to the other groups, where tail color varies much in general but little according to evolutionary relatedness,[note 1] However, the fox and greater kestrels can be told apart at first glance by their tail colors, but not by much else; they might be very close relatives and are probably much closer to each other than the lesser and common kestrels. The tails of the large falcons are quite uniformly dark gray with inconspicuous black banding and small, white tips, though this is probably plesiomorphic. These large Falco species feed on mid-sized birds and terrestrial vertebrates.
Very similar to these, and sometimes included therein, are the four or so species of hierofalcons (literally, "hawk-falcons"). They represent taxa with, usually, more phaeomelanins, which impart reddish or brown colors, and generally more strongly patterned plumage reminiscent of hawks. Their undersides have a lengthwise pattern of blotches, lines, or arrowhead marks.
While these three or four groups, loosely circumscribed, are an informal arrangement, they probably contain several distinct clades in their entirety.
A study of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data of some kestrels[11] identified a clade containing the common kestrel and related "malar-striped" species, to the exclusion of such taxa as the greater kestrel (which lacks a malar stripe), the lesser kestrel (which is very similar to the common, but also has no malar stripe), and the American kestrel, which has a malar stripe, but its color pattern-apart from the brownish back-and also the black feathers behind the ear, which never occur in the true kestrels, are more reminiscent of some hobbies. The malar-striped kestrels apparently split from their relatives in the Gelasian, roughly 2.0-2.5 million years ago (Mya), and are seemingly of tropical East African origin. The entire "true kestrel" group-excluding the American species-is probably a distinct and quite young clade, as also suggested by their numerous apomorphies.
Most members of the genus Falco show a "tooth" on the upper mandible
Other studies[18][19][20][21][22] have confirmed that the hierofalcons are a monophyletic group-and that hybridization is quite frequent at least in the larger falcon species. Initial studies of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data suggested that the hierofalcons are basal among living falcons.[18][19] The discovery of a NUMT proved this earlier theory erroneous.[20] In reality, the hierofalcons are a rather young group, originating at the same time as the start of the main kestrel radiation, about 2 Mya. Very little fossil history exists for this lineage. However, the present diversity of very recent origin suggests that this lineage may have nearly gone extinct in the recent past.[22][23]
The phylogeny and delimitations of the peregrine and hobby groups are more problematic. Molecular studies have only been conducted on a few species, and the morphologically ambiguous taxa have often been little researched. The morphology of the syrinx, which contributes well to resolving the overall phylogeny of the Falconidae,[24][25] is not very informative in the present genus. Nonetheless, a core group containing the peregrine and Barbary falcons, which, in turn, group with the hierofalcons and the more distant prairie falcon (which was sometimes placed with the hierofalcons, though it is entirely distinct biogeographically), as well as at least most of the "typical" hobbies, are confirmed to be monophyletic as suspected.[18][19]
Given that the American Falco species of today belong to the peregrine group, or are apparently more basal species, the initially most successful evolutionary radiation seemingly was a Holarctic one that originated possibly around central Eurasia or in (northern) Africa. One or several lineages were present in North America by the Early Pliocene at latest.
The origin of today's major Falco groups-the "typical" hobbies and kestrels, for example, or the peregrine-hierofalcon complex, or the aplomado falcon lineage-can be quite confidently placed from the Miocene-Pliocene boundary through the Zanclean and Piacenzian and just into the Gelasian, that is from 2.4 to 5.3 Mya, when the malar-striped kestrels diversified. Some groups of falcons, such as the hierofalcon complex and the peregrine-Barbary superspecies, have only evolved in more recent times; the species of the former seem to be 120,000 years old or so.[22]
Peregrine fans: 'watch a living missle' by wild nature. It's amazing captured footage that shows how incredibly protective these birds are of there chicks
Thank you for the link. How fascinating to watch!
Who was it captured from ? All film is captured.
The great horned owl likes to take peregrine fledglings from their nests and mummy or daddy peregrine will fearlessly fight to the death and attack the much larger owl by hitting it at 200mph snapping its spine or neck
it's quite hard to appreciate the speed of this bird with all of the vision in slowmotion
The quality of the video is amazing
it's CGI.
The G.O.A.T of narrations 🙌🏾
Paragreine falcon, natures little missile
Amazing footage!,, seen a perigrin falcon attack on a flock of birds feeding on flies last summer while fishing, I was in a boat about 20 meters away when I heard almost like a sonic boom from a plane, it was the perigrin attacking and caught a bird... it was amazing
I feel lucky that I wasn't born a starling
we are very lucky to be human and out of the food chain. but dont fear death. you will be reborn. one of the things you learn from mushrooms.
@@vityazsix Nobody asked, but OK...
😂
@@vityazsix lucky to be human lol yeah because we don't use violence against each other..this is nature
@@ututheavenger at least we have the illusion of peace bro
Talonflame used Brave Bird
The opposing staravia fainted.
Some bits are animated, right?
KawaiiYanderle
KawaiiYanderlee nope
The final stoop over the Piazza Navona is obviously not real. However, I have seen peregrine falcons sitting on the lantern tower on top of the church we see at the end, Santa Agnese....so the scene is perhaps not as far-fetched as it seems :-)
Who tf do they record this?
メKawaiiYanderleeメ nope
Sir David Attenborough, a well deserved knighthood.
So beautiful!
Thank you.
I've always loved nature but David doesn't make none lame
❤
Raptors are gorgeous.
And peregrine falcons are the Concorde of raptors: so technically sophisticated you almost can't believe they really exist. And yet they do.
@unrepeatable raddish It just was a metaphor... If you'd like to put it on literal terms, the falcon might be slower, but it isn't jet-powered, so the Concorde was a cheat.
The filming is amazing!
one of the famous voice... ive been listening to his voice for a very long time!!
The beauty of this bird
That was absolutely AMAZING!!!
Finally I get to see this man, I've been listening to his narrations and wondering who is this.... He is so good
Nature is amazing...
Thank you for giving such wonderful information
Starlings were like: Peter, where are you? Are you there?
He is the best wildlife narrator ever,
a gorgeous bird thanks for video
Always love his voice!
Just saw a peregrine attack today in downtown Toronto. Soared motionless above a building catching the updraft and then dove impossibly fast down toward a small bird who saw it in time to evade. It was several hundred meters away ong buildingsand flags etc. No idea how it saw the thing. Insane!
He is an excellent narrator of the story very captivating voice
fantastic photography and narration...
Awesome! There is no other word to comment it. I love birds of prey.
This narration and this animal are best!
Peregrine falcons are just plain neat. Fascinating animals
Damn Nature, you scary! :)
right!! i got that!
It is more scary for a cow to be loaded on a truck and be taking to an abattoir.
David is such a cutie ♡ He would make a lovely grandpa ♡ Especially during story time ♡
Excellent videography I'd say !
Cheetah is the fastest animal: *Myth*
Peregrine Falcon is the fastest animal: *Fact*
This was narrated in a non intelligent expression 😆.
@@fitlifestylebiggainz .
So when people say “Speed Kills” they were being literal lol
Think that saying come from speed freaks homicidal tendency. Cheers
I have been hearing your voice since many many years and this is the first time ever to see you
Thumbs up for the great camera work 👍
That Gotdayum bird is a Cannibal !
It's 3am. I'm going down a rabbit hole of videos and wont stop.
This should already have way over one million views.
If David Attenborough not going to narrate story of my life at my funeral, I ain't dying.
Hi david !! Nice vodeo i saw all your dencumentaries and i put "like" if you can do more videos with peregrine falcon please Thank you !!
This mans voice is legendary
I can only imagine how it would feel driving a car at 200mph, let alone free falling that speed.
Try skydiving
Thank you for being more mature than the BBC.
The finishing was amazing
The Eagle is a symbol of tenacity, the breath of the soul of a patriot to not give up on challenges even though sometimes the has to fall but he continues to rise to become the Fire of the Expedition.
Nice editing.
Amazing video!!
If the attack scene was actually captured and not animated it would have been just epic
Long live sir david attenborough!!
My nigga Ezio would fuck up Templars on this bird's command.
lol I was looking for a Assassin's Creed reference :D
I just saw a peregrine do this to a dove in the tree in my neighbor's backyard yesterday. Freakin' amazing!
The real assassins creed
Who would win in a narration fight, Morgan Freeman or David Attenborough. Sure Freeman may have the voice, but Attenborough is a one of a kind story teller
3:34 "Man down! I repeat, MAN DOWN!"
Wow!! 200mph!!! I'd hate to hit a bumblebee going that fast....🤯
How in the world did you video this? Great video
I LOVE THE MANA VOICE IT'S SO PERFECT
unrepeatable raddish bro your a couple years late
I watched a peregrine tuen it's wings to "scoops" transferring it''s vertiical energy horizontal. Phenomenal.
Awesome video!
Awesome Video!
Falcon at 0:35 is like - "I can hear you!"
Title : how the fastest bird catches its prey
Cheetah : am I a joke to you?
I love this guy
At 0:34 that falcon is like wtf are you doing human
ROS GAMER 2233 theirs no human because if they were there they would mess it up but it’s just large camera and something holding it or it’s
U know a drone.
I felt so betrayed when Sir David Attenborough used imperial unit on this video. :-P
I always thought England was straight metric system. But I saw an interview with the dude who plays Sam on GoT, and said a lot of places in England still use miles instead of kilometers. So I don't necessarily know that this was tilted toward an American audience. Can't say for sure as I have never been to England, just what I heard
All places in England use miles and yards along with Imperial gallons. And yes I've been there several times. But since 1965 their money is in decimals.
@@chrisdonaldson9532 Aren't Smithsonian Channel and Smithsonian Institute, primarily American entities?.... Remember, for some strange reason, Americans love hearing spoken British English... To many Americans it sounds more 'proper' and 'authoritative'... It might be a good bet that British announcers and narrators get more money in the USA, than anywhere else (and maybe more than a native American English-speaking equivalent performer).
Rico - “Betrayed”? Metric hard-liners are so funny.
Sir David's Voice ❤
peregrine falcons are the most entertaining birds to watch
Before I'd known that DNR had released some around here, one zipped past me at alarming speed as I was walking down a trail. Now they're everywhere around here.