Most DANGEROUS Birds On Earth
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- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
- The scariest, most dangerous birds in the world! From the brutal spurs of graceful waterfowl to the bone-dropping tactics of vultures
#10 Giant Petrel
Often referred to as Stinkers or Gluttons, the scavenging bird species near Antarctica have a nasty track record. Opportunistic to a fault, the Giant Petrel is known for not only feeding on the carcasses of deceased penguins and seals, but also laying an aggressive, boisterous claim to their food. Assuming a hostile stance with wings outstretched and eyes focused on any competitors, the Petrel scares away any that approach. Feeding on both land and sea, this carrion hunter also consumes fish, krill, and squid. This has caused them to become a pest among fishing vessels as the Petrel will follow these boats and pick at any meat remnants they can find. But just because they don’t often feed on live prey doesn’t mean they can’t threaten them. The giant Petrel has been seen assaulting emperor penguins, small seals, and even albatross, either blatantly attacking them or drowning them.
#9 Mute Swan
Renowned for its majestic beauty throughout its native region of Eurasia, the Mute Swan isn’t just another elegant waterfowl. Not one for small talk, this bird is often identified by its unique beak pattern and strange techniques of communication. Adults will use a mix of grunts, whistles and snorts to communicate with their young or threatening predators. As a swimming bird, they can typically swim away from any danger, but when push comes to shove, the mute swan shoves hard. Equipped with a large snapping bill and bony spurs hidden in their wings, they thrash their foes with brutal intensity. This is only compounded by their inherent territorial nature. One incident in 2012 demonstrated just how brutal they can be when a kayaker came under attack at a Chicago condominium’s pond. He was actually looking after the local mute swan population when a bothered swan knocked him out of his boat and proceeded to flail against him until he drowned.
Also check out our video: Top 10 Most DANGEROUS Ocean Predators ruclips.net/video/x64k1zabER0/видео.html
This feels more like a mission briefing on enemy intel.
Lol
Agent Azure here is the briefing on your next targets
It really does.
Hitchcock knew the truth. They’re coming for us.
Know your enemy
This guy's voice makes me want to learn about explosives, not birds
Why? He making you horny or some shit lol 😂
He sounded like less electronified Ultron 😂🤣
@@andrewlawson3798 no but is that as a self projection for your desires? He made me want to watch an action movie ya weirdo
Now that you've mentioned it. I want to hear him speak about explosives
Well at least he was talking about dangerous predators and not a more peaceful type of nature documentary. :p
Swans usually represent love but they wake up and choose violence every day.
Toxic love, maybe
This made me laugh.
They're violently happy 😅
Swans need change to represent danger
The mans voice could make talking about kittens sound epic.
😺
🐈🐱
@@vulturemeat1974 yeah...good point
Their cute appearence melts hearts of humans and makes them commit their entire existance to protecting these little monsters.
Faaaccttss
Seagulls are protected up here in Oregon. I had a small commercial fishing operation out of Charleston back in the 90s they tell a story about a camper who got arrested by fish and wildlife for killing and cooking a seagull. The guy that ate the seagull told the game warden that he was really hungry but they arrested him anyhow. Purely out of curiosity the game warden asked the guy what a seagull taste like. The camper said, somewhere between a spotted owl and a bald eagle.
Hahahahahahaha
That’s awesome 😂😂😂
Lol
Reading how the guy got arrested to eat some food just makes me wanna scream like your Avatar. “Aehhhhhhhh!”
So he was one of em weird ass niggas that like to eat shit they shouldn't
His voice is more dangerous than those birds in the video😂
Facts people that’s a fact 🤓
He has to sound like that to make his video more reliable. 😁
Im hearing his voice and im thinking his voice makes the birds sounds dangerous. THEM I GO TO THE COMMENTS AND HERE IS YOUR. THE FIRST COMMENT.
His voice could actually donate testosterone
True😁
This guys voice sounds like the movie preview guy voice. “One man, one plan, and he knew too much...”
This bloke did voice overs for every 80s action movie trailer.
Ha yeah I know who you are talking about!
“In a world, where birds rule and humans pray they’re not their prey.”
Is it true you guys lost to an bullet proof bird called an EMU?
@@rwooshymcwoosh1808 that’s Australia not Britain
@@girl-di3nn same Queen
3:31 “When a vulture dropped a turtle on his bald head.”
_This narrator voice is more scarier than the bird itself._
tragic and hilarious at the same time
Secret the Narrator is actually a BIRD!!!🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅
Scarier*
More scarier is redundant
Well I'm Australian, the cassowary is right where it should be on the list, given half a chance, it will open you up like a cheap tin of dog food mate, nuff said.
Strewth!
Magpie
Whoa D:
I'm not Australian, but I've heard and read about the cassowary and it is nothing to mess with. 7 feet of badassery.
I believe it. You all have a souped up version of just about everything that can kill you there. (Stares at Funnel Web winking) Mm-mmmmmmmmm....... Nope.
The most dangerous bird is the bird brain texting on the highway
TOTALLY AGREE😁😂😁
ok boomer
@@mcdadais no problem snowflake
Just because we do it doesn't make it acceptable
@@jt9571 jeez he said snowflake too? I was joking with the Boomer comment. But you just went full on Boomer 😂
*talks about australian magpie
*shows european magpie
Not only shows the wrong bird,has no idea about Australian magpies.
Not European im in the UK and I haven't seen magpies like them b4
@@oneactionman I can assure you bud, the birds shown in the video are Common or European Magpies(Pica pica).
Not Australian magpie.
9.39 looks like an Aussie magpie, the rest don't look like ours
“The cassowary looks more like a dinosaur more than a bird”
You realize birds are dinosaurs
I will vouch for how aggressive swans are. I was in northern Michigan in the summer of 1985, kayaking with my recent high school graduate buddies. We were on a river and I went up ahead around a bend to play a joke on them. My plan was to sneak into some cat tails in a swampy area near the bank and lunge out at them to scare them. As I started to back into the thick cat tails, two swans scared the HELL out of me by nearly pecking and thrashing me out of my boat. Luckily, I was aimed away from them and paddled super hard, which seemed to show them I meant them and their babies no harm. My buddies missed the whole thing but heard what had happened. I stay away from areas like that when kayaking. I verified that a man was actually, pathetically drowned near Chicago.
I’ve been attacked by a herring gull before, and it’s actually really painful, I once took out some bread in a welsh town and a herring gull came out of nowhere and took the bread, it also used its talons to knock my skin off
Bruh herring gulls hasn t sharp claws
The cassowary is native to the rainforests of far northeastern Australia and New Guinea, not northwestern Australia which has no rainforests and is 2500km away.
Steve Symonds: thanks! That sounded funny to me, too.
I'm Australian, That is a correct statement, just sayin' Australia.
Show off, East or West still don’t want to run into them.😆
well australia is upside down, from his perspective its northwestern, so give him a break
It looks like Kevin from Up
"this bird might look friendly and small coming in at 17inchs, but it once took my car keys.. making it deadly number 1"
One tried to take my chips and almost turned me into the most dangerous man 😂
Big Bird is the most dangerous bird on Sesame Street
lol good one
BAWHAHAHA!! 😂😂😂
Not to be too silly about it, but I always thought Big Bird was kind of "loony." I guess that might make him dangerous, wouldn't it? I shudder for the kids raised on Big Bird seeing an ostrich for the first time--oh, look, mommy, Big Bird! I love you, Big - OW!ooooooF!
Yeah but at least you can see him coming. Imagine taking the trash out and ol Oscar popping up from his domicile and sticking you with a rusty blade. Just for shats and gags too, not even bc you did anything to him. Scary stuff man...
😆😆😆
I love the videos that are designed to inspire fear. Magpies are really cool birds. The swooping is a trait of many birds when they're defending their nest. Really not much to worry about here except for the Cassowary. They've been known to disembowel people.
There was only ONE confirmed DEATH by the bird.
What u expect birds are the closest animals to dinosaurs
Chickens are the closest living relatives to the T-Rex
@@Diavolofromanotherwarudo I bet a T-Rex would taste great basted with strips of bacon across its back...
actually they aren't. they are dinosaurs themselves, smaller spieces that survived the mass extinction event some 66 Mya.
@@lashamartashvili
What makes a chicken a dinosaur?
@@richardrogers668 being a bird
when a gull swooped in to take his sausage 😂
Imagine being remembered as the guy who got murdered by a Swan. I'd hope my fams bury me in an unmarked grave that shits embarrassing.
Peeweekiwi Link from Zelda gets killed by a chicken
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍🏿
😂🤣😂🤣😂😂
It never occurred to me that an animal would drown another animal, especially not a bird.
Also drowned the man in the kayak by relentlessly flapping up and down against him. I'm ok with birds as long as they are off doing their birdie thing. They are dinosaurs with feathers and wings, Period.
Oh yea, my uncle who had a farm had a male, i can't remember the breed, i think duck, was drowining all his females till he killed the bird
Happens all the time. If another animal is lame it will be seen as a potential meal for the predator. See many geese drown birds that get too near to their young in nesting season.
Cassowary and Ostritch should have been 1 & 2. Harpy should have been 3.
Harpy could take down an ostrich may be 🤷♂️
Harpy eagles have grizzly talons
@Don Duke i have seen harpys swooping on panthers, trust me, if they want they can fuck up a ostrich, wich only defense is running. but the thing is harpies dont generaly attack people unless you are close to a nest.
Ostriches are dangerous, no doubt. But people who farm them manage to man-handle them pretty regularly. Can't say the same for cassowaries..
@@suchomimustenerensis5302 that's why we don't farm cassowaries !
We got Turkey vultures here. And it's so creepy when u get near and they squawk like turkeys.
Victory Saber In South Jersey we have real friggin vultures.
Pussssaay
Turkeys don't squawk they gobble just like ur Mrs.!!👍🏻😂😂
@@longdirtytoenails1076 I wpuld have to say the turkey vultures appear much creepier than standard vultures. Standard vultures just appear to be big, black feathered, birds, similar to raptors.
Turkey vultures on the other hand, those are ugly, naked headed creeps. Ugh.
Tbf, both are "real" vultures.
Side note; South Jersey actually has both Turkey Vultures and black vultures.
@@longdirtytoenails1076 This and they seem to be populating all around NJ...
The cassowary's claws remainded me of my ex mother in law ... Idk how she can cook with those talons ....
4:05 OMG those baby ostriches are too cute 🤗
*Says Australian magpie*
*Shows Eurasian magpie/Oriental magpie*
Yeh I was going to say they're not magpies, only the still photos are. We occasionally feed our local magpies.
Actually Australian magpies are some of the most intelligent birds in Australia being the only animal who can prey upon a cane toad. They've learnt to flip the toad on its back and eat the organs while avoiding the poisonous skin.
Also if you feed the magpies meat regularly they won't attack you even in mating season, when they usually live in families. the juveniles can stick around to help out for a few years after fledgling.
@@co0kiemonstar1 That's even true, even though we don't have those at the country I am living in (United Arab Emirates), we do not have typical magpies or jays, we just only have ravens and crows, which belong to same family. BTW, I am from Ukraine and Pakistan, but born in United Arab Emirates. I have been staying at United Arab Emirates for many years, but we can't go to Australia, yet we don't have a passport to visit Australia to see those non-magpies, but typical magpies are also pretty intelligent, they can also recognize itself in a mirror test.
@@co0kiemonstar1 Yeah, we've been feeding our local group as long as I can remember and we've never even had a problem. In fact I was walking one day and a crow became aggressive to me, the magpies saw and all swooped down and scared the crow away.
The maggies can and recognise individual people. In 1979 a friend of mine moved to Canberra and was being attacked in his backyard. He rang the wildlife people who sent him a leaflet titled 'how to live with your magpie'. Simple really, just feed it, but not a lot. You are then seen as friend. No problems from there on.
"In a world - where birds are the most dangerous predators"
"One man man must fight the odds"
"Arnold Schwarzenegger - is - Magnus Birdfighter - [Get away from de chopper! Thaaarth!]"
You mean, "get to the choppa!"
🤣wrestling cassuaries!
The vision used for the Australian magpie isn't even a magpie!
Shelton Fernando the later images were.
Yeah, it was a European Magpie. Same name, completely different bird.
This is a great list. I live in NYC and feed my little bird friends from my fire escape. Still, I see the aggressive nature of birds. If a goldfinch could eat us it would. Also, I like this channel. The video speeds along quickly and seamlessly. It's nicely done.
He’s voice would be perfect for bedtime stories 😂
I just saw this...a wonderful eyeopening video. I love the Harpy Eagle. That bird is gorgeous, but I wouldn't want to invade it's territory. I actually saw the documentary mentioned when a camera was to be put in the nest where the baby harpy was. That bird almost knocked the guy out of the harness and tree. He was pretty beat up, but they did get the camera installed.
The voice over on this video is hilarious 😂
I love his voice
Therapist: so why are you scared by birds
Me: well.......
Excellent and informative video. Very well done. I had no idea that loons could be so dangerous.
That dramatic voice hahah ;D "In the next episode: Pebbles- and their larger cousins, rocks! How they sneak up on your in the wild, be prepared!"
I got beat down my a ostrich. I was told my last words were here turkey turkey. I knocked myself out falling over the fence but I woke up with knots on my head from that bird
I'LL TAKE A SIP😁🤣🤣🤣
I was bitten by an Ostrich at a zoo when I was a child. Scared the hell out of me. That was about fifty years ago. I never forgot it. I was honored to have an Ostrich steak once - nasty bastards are tasty!
Never Gonnatell
What does that mean?
A voice like this will even make a sparrow look dangerous.
0-0
"These birds aren't so much dangerous, as they are birds. With wingspans that rival that of other birds, these birds can run and even fly. Some of these birds have feathers, and others do too. While some of these birds might attack any incomers, some of them don't, and others will."
Sounds like you're describing a friggin terminator :o
Hotchpotchsoup I’m describing birds that both eat and fly, with eyes focused on scaring other fish, flying low over potential meat, and even over meat.
@@CraigNorton Sounds like bad news indeed, utterly worrisome. Do they ascend AND descend too?
Hotchpotchsoup It is worrisome, as some birds will ascend while they descend onto pingueens.
@@CraigNorton I believe you meant to say penguins, or was it pigqueef? Pugeels?
Whichever it is, I wouldn't like to see it in a national geographics documentary, sounds like a life changing experience, and not for the better.
Speaking of life changing experiences; do whales fart?
That dudes voice could make a pigeon sound dangerous. "The pigeon. Seems harmless right? But watch it murder these helpless worms."
Man with the golden voice.
Imagine you're chilling in a boat and a goose flies up and fucking drowns you
The rule of nature. The more pretty and colorful they are, the more deadly...
Swans are no joke but at the same time I kinda feel if you grab their necks its a wrap.
They'd attack you with their wings. Sure a human can relatively easily kill a swan with bare hands but you won't come out uninjured.
I like interacting with swans, once i was kneeling at the bank and two _huge_ males exited the water and waddled right up to my face. it was intimidating but they were only looking for food. they will let you know if they aren't happy with your presence the only danger is if you end up in the water and can't get away from them.
I`ve seen and heard Northern Loons my whole life.They stay stay well away from people.This is click bait and this guy is full of crap!
Absolutely.
I've seen swans my whole life too. Doesn't mean there wasn't a freak incident with very specific unique circumstances where someone was killed by a seemingly innocuous animal. I saw another comment saying it's impossible for that story to be true because a loon doesn't have the strength in its head & neck to pierce a human heart because it wouldn't be able to get through the rib cage. I told them they should've explained that to the stingray that killed Steve Irwin.
@@lachlanbell8390 Except stingrays cause paralysis, which is the real danger (especially underwater). Your analogy makes no sense.
Idk sometimes freak accents happen.
Sorry, that overly serious gruff voice won’t let me get past the ostrich. All due respect.
lol, same here ;)
A buzzard is actually a turkey vulture ,not that hawk they was sayin was.
when you are so bald then the bird mistake your head as a boulder
The great northern loon is gorgeous. Also piercing the rib cage damn that's pretty crazy.
@daAnder71 I wouldn't doubt it considering the point on that thing with the proper force I'm sure it could do just that.
I love the swan and the loon. They are absolutely beautiful. I was lucky enough to grow up in the Country side north of Peterborough ON and seen and heard them often. Even taken and axe out on the ice to rescue a swan that got frozen in the ice. They are not dangerous at all if they are not protecting their young.
I love that you didnt put Crows and Ravens, both types are pretty peaceful and can even be close with humans; hell Ravens are known to mimic like parrots.
He did however, when talking about the Australian magpie, show clips of the common magpie (which is an unrelated crowbird).
These "dangerous " birds are very protective of their young and why not? Leave them alone and they will leave you alone 🙈
@ Lynda Clancy... not always true... I once asked a seagull to leave me a loan... not only didn't I get any money the buzzard tried to shit on me
@Lynda Clancy .... Wild creatures such as attacking birds, do not have the intellectual capacity to engage in war as humans do. This is a quest for survival. Some hunt, some scavenge and the rest defend themselves by out smarting their attackers.
Not if theyre hunting you
Petrels are no joke though. I've watched penguin documentaries and saw them kill am elephant seal that was wounded from a fight with another male elephant seal. The petrels started eating from the wounds while he was still alive. More arrived and the basically started eating him alive until they finished him off.
Cassowary is native to northeastern Australia, not northwestern Australia as suggested in this video.
Wow, number one clearly has very funky eggs :) Near the place I was born, local authorities have built a cycling pad that goes straight through a pond. The cyclists and people walking there, are about 1 meter below the surface of the water. Several swans are living in that pond. Even if it is not allowed, people love to feed them, hence they have become quite lazy, and don't look a lot themselves to find food. They also have grown very impatient: when people stop their bikes, and start searching for the bread they brought with them, the swans try to take it out of their hands, to make sure the other swans don't get it. When you want to chase them away, they start hissing, and aiming at your wrists. When you show them bread, but don't throw it in the water in time, they sometimes will "bite" in your fingers. It can hurt quite a bit, especially for kids. I once saw no other option than to punch one on the beak, knocking it from above to below. That worked. The swan of course was very irritated, but remained from then onwards at a certain distance, making a lot of hissing sounds. In those cases, don't turn your back to them, they're out on revenge. When the swan tried to do just that, I threw water on it, and again, it started to remain at a certain distance. But never, really never try to irritate them when they are out of the water, they really can be very agressive, and aren't afraid at all....
This narrator should voice act Batman in any animated Batman film or game...
Yea I believe that raw chicken has these birds beat more people die from eating undercooked chicken
Harpy eagles have been known to take revenge on loggers by ripping out there eyes they are generally non aggressive as long as you stay away from there nest!
Love thick voice narrators, for the fact that we talking about your voice, its a good thing
U are weird ya know
The cassowaries seem incredible. It would be pretty scary to encounter one of those in the wild. The bird that basically had a knife beak, and stabbed someone in the heart through the ribcage was remarkable as well.
Why did I just watch this? How did it even get into my suggestion box?
Oh well. I did learn which parakeets were venomous!
"I did learn which parakeets were venomous!" As a parrot fanatic (parakeets are small parrots with long tails), what the actual fuck?
A hunter told me he saw a Canada's goose get too close to a swan. The swan snapped its neck with a single thrust of its beak.
It's just "Canada goose".
Both birds do not get along in nesting season and both are territorial. The advantage is the swan is the bigger bird but even a goose will snap the neck off a gull. See this all the time at my own park. This is normal wildlife behaviour.
Most dangerous bird?
One that’s not cooked
Hahaha true.
Amen brother.
So, the common chicken tartare?
Or what you get at KFC !
the mute swan is like the quiet kid in class
The Mute Swan account is inaccurate & embellished. I worked for a competing goose management company in the area, and actually tried to get that account with the pond where it occurred, as we passed it everyday. The swan swam at him, and the guy flipped the kayak on his own. He then drown because his waders filled with water before he could make it to shore, but the bird never actually made contact, it merely followed him.
If this is the case, this needs to be spread to reddit then. Many are spreading this account over there now.
Should like to have seen these birds in action.
That guys voice sounds like the guy who talks on the phone in the movie Phone Booth.
Two buzzards were eating a carcass. One said to the other “I don’t know about you, but I’m having a ball”
Two buzzards sitting on a fence just waiting, the less impatience one, stated"'DAMN THIS SHIT, WAITING IS FOR THE BIRDS I GOING TO KILL ME SOME MOTHER F-------"
i suffered a concussion while walking to work from a magpie attack, striking the back of the head. Their was no warning, I reported it to the counsel but not until a 10yr old was attacked and nearly died from head injuries they issued an alert advising people to avoid walking in the residential area. I ended up with stitches and few days off work.
Not surprisingly, cassowary is the most dangerous one.
It's a native of Australia where the majority of lethal creatures reside.
@@CZ350tuner yea, and there are some of them in Florida USA as well.
dude... ur talkin about how brutal swans are, and your footage is just of peaceful swans chillin. I'm Audi!
The cassowary definitely is the most dangerous bird. I've seen what damage they can cause,killing two dogs,one was disembowelled and the other had its skull smashed on one size from a kick. A man barely escaped the attack
Rick Smith a man in florida just recently got killer by its pet cassowary
We live with cassowarys in the surrounding rainforest and to be fair alot more of them get killed by cars and dogs than people or pets are killed by cassowarys still i wouldnt fuck with one
Kayaker: Um, how did I get here?
St. Peter: You pissed off a swan bro!
Sasquatch Soap. “Your Balls Will Thank You!”
Umm most of those photos were not of the Australian magpie that's a Canadian? one I think
Kez C yes Australian ones are more big and have a bigger beak
Wonder where those guys come from? I'm an Aussie and have nursed many a baby magpie back to health. They are very smart and can be very loving to people but during breeding season they go insane trying to defend their nests and young. One of the many I've hand raised (I'm a wildlife carer) walked me to work, after release , for a couple years (except during breeding season) then she turned up with her own babies, it was the sweetest thing. Don't get me wrong though she was the exception to the rule. I've only released 2 birds that kept coming back. My first one as a carer, a wattle bird and that magpie. Most you never see again. 😕
The wattle bird comes back every spring to show off his new babies. It's super cute the mama was a bit stand offish but after many years she has gotten used to coming and showing off the new lot of babies
He makes it sound like these birds are some crazy serial killers lol.
There is no such creature as the "Great Northern Loon", Its actual name is, wait for it...the "Common Loon".
I feel like this is a training video for a apocalypse where birds takeover the world
Let me dabble in that sausage lil homie
The first bird looks like a perfect dinner lol
Holy crap, I didn't know birds had killed people.
Their dinosaur instincts live.
Lizards-like feet. Proof that lizards evolved from birds.
Richard Rogers
You're not a science person, are you?
@@NighthawkX02
A good chance as much as you. Do you take everything literally?
Wait til you hear about Haast's Eagles. We rendered it mercifully extinct 500 years ago, but it was less of an eagle and more of a fucking fighter jet. It mainly preyed on moa, which are flightless birds now also extinct because humans, which weighed 500 goddamn pounds. As these fighter jets with scythes for limbs could easily prey on an animal that stood 12 foot tall and weighed 500 lbs, they were equally able to prey on humans. That's right, it wasn't just an accidental killing here or there. We were fucking food to them.
8:53 The way he says bananas.
Feels like I am playing call of duty type game where I am getting briefed of mission. Awesome video 🤟🙂👍💯
How many birds stuck in your vocal cord while voice over this video 😂😂😀
fact check: loons haven’t killed anyone 😂😂😂
Haven't found anything that talks about a loon attack to someone's heart. What a weird video. I was gonna turn it off bc this is a guy probably just reading a BuzzFeed article with stock footage, but his voice... It's Malibu, but edgy.
This dude sure sounds like “BATMAN” 😁😂😎🙌🏼💯
was expecting to see my two lovebrids in this video
Cassowary reminds me of a Monster Hunter boss. :p
Fack!!! I can't stop laughing at the poor dude that got turtle dropped on his bald head lololol
Casaway : I'm the most dangerous bird
Larry : Hold my French Lick .
Not sure why this video called the hawk a buzzard. It's a Buteo and I'm a falconer in the US. I've trapped and trained these birds as juveniles and within 3 weeks they were returning to me at the tweet of a whistle and they became so gentle and playful. I never had fear of them but they weren't living as wild animals either..
Y'all forgot Dee from Always Sunny In Philadelphia.
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣 shut up bird! Lmfao!
Hahaha! Nice!
Slight error regarding where cassowaries are found. Not North Western Australia but in the North Eastern of Australia, it's found in Northern tropical Queensland.
what about the secretary bird, the maribu stork?
Yes they are also very dangerous..
I think I need to buy a hat to be safe from the Lammergeier!
I’m weezing, how can you take this seriously. Amazing.
“This *_VICIOUS_* predator can easily swim away from it’-...”
*view of a swan just chillin’*
i guess 858 cats disliked this?
A herring gull tried to steal my sandwich once but I held on and threw it away out of spite (and because I didn't feel like eating it after the seagull grabbed it).
Missed the biggest bird, the Thunderbird.
Most elusive and rarely seen giant bird with a wingspan as long as twenty feet, they have been filmed perching on large branches in the Amazon.
There remains are rarely found spending most of there lives flying in the stratosphere above commercial airlines can travel thousands of miles without landing using the strong upper atmosphere wind currents to carry them around the world.
They’re considered extinct by most they certainly are not.
There remains are extremely difficult to find because when they get too old to fly they simply dive into the ocean to die.
It’s name comes from the Native American tribes that actually drew them and wrote about how there massive wings sounded like thunder when flapping.
Documents stating they have been known to carry infants away weighing up to 20lbs which are now considered fables.
The only one documented in recent history was photographed dead with several people standing within its wing span dating back in the late 19th century.
So.... yeah, the Thunderbird would kick all them other birds asses.
The way the narrator explains feels like I'm watching a boxing match intro where the host introduce a boxer and its records.