I was driving up the road to my own house Friday evening at dusk when I spotted activity on the left side of the road ahead. I drove up slowly and saw a young Sparrow Hawk holding down a pigeon which he must have just brought down and he plucking him while it was still alive! The lights of my car was on them but the hawk persisted in tearing at the stricken bird even as it wrestled to break free. I was really afraid that a car would drive up and hit both of them so I pulled in, put on my indicator and stayed there for about 10 minutes watching the grisly scene. Cars had to slow down to pass me and when they pulled back in to the left they had passed the birds on the ground.
Then, without appearing to eat much of the pigeon who was dead at this stage, the hawk just took off and flew over my car. He was cagey of me being there, and kept an eyey on me, but I felt better that I had probably saved his life. He would live to kill another day .
Feed the birds
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- Jimmy Armfield's cardigan knitter
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- Barlow Boy
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Re: Feed the birds
I know it's nature, but I would have had to get out and scare away the hawk to save the pigeonWhite Knight wrote:I was driving up the road to my own house Friday evening at dusk when I spotted activity on the left side of the road ahead. I drove up slowly and saw a young Sparrow Hawk holding down a pigeon which he must have just brought down and he plucking him while it was still alive! The lights of my car was on them but the hawk persisted in tearing at the stricken bird even as it wrestled to break free. I was really afraid that a car would drive up and hit both of them so I pulled in, put on my indicator and stayed there for about 10 minutes watching the grisly scene. Cars had to slow down to pass me and when they pulled back in to the left they had passed the birds on the ground.
Then, without appearing to eat much of the pigeon who was dead at this stage, the hawk just took off and flew over my car. He was cagey of me being there, and kept an eyey on me, but I felt better that I had probably saved his life. He would live to kill another day .
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- Jimmy Armfield's cardigan knitter
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Re: Feed the birds
I did think about it briefly BB. However I felt it would have been hard on the young hawk as it is a difficult and dangerous thing to bring down a bird and keep them under control. It costs them a considerable amount in energy so they need to feed off the kill to make it pay.
Also we have tons of pigeons around us, so losing one wouldn't make a difference. The hawks are the ones under pressure from a numbers point of view.
I do admire your humane reaction, I'm more primeval in my outlook on these things .
Also we have tons of pigeons around us, so losing one wouldn't make a difference. The hawks are the ones under pressure from a numbers point of view.
I do admire your humane reaction, I'm more primeval in my outlook on these things .
Last edited by White Knight on 27 Aug 2017, 21:21, edited 1 time in total.
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- Jimmy Armfield's cardigan knitter
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Re: Feed the birds
....... and feathers for a pillow!johnh wrote:BB, so that you could have pigeon pie?
- Barlow Boy
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Re: Feed the birds
Mrs B is a vegan, and whilst she doesn't push her views on me, I can do without a pigeon pie and feather duvet
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Re: Feed the birds
Was a large hawk type bird (would say 8 to 10inch) on our garden fence the other morning.
On a different note had a Pigeon kill itself by flying at speed into our kitchen window a couple of days ago. Hit it so hard I was surprised it didn't smash the glass.
Buried in the garden with a nice plant next to the grave.
On a different note had a Pigeon kill itself by flying at speed into our kitchen window a couple of days ago. Hit it so hard I was surprised it didn't smash the glass.
Buried in the garden with a nice plant next to the grave.
Keep your face always toward the sunshine - and shadows will fall behind you.
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Re: Feed the birds
That's more like itSelby White wrote: Buried in the garden with a nice plant next to the grave.
When you retire, you switch bosses - from the one that hired you, to the one that married you.
Re: Feed the birds
Over the years we had several birds fly into our patio windows. We stuck silhouettes of predator birds, hawks etc., on the window and had no more problems.Selby White wrote:Was a large hawk type bird (would say 8 to 10inch) on our garden fence the other morning.
On a different note had a Pigeon kill itself by flying at speed into our kitchen window a couple of days ago. Hit it so hard I was surprised it didn't smash the glass.
Buried in the garden with a nice plant next to the grave.
PS Spelt silhouette without looking it up in the dictionary.
I once played against Don Revie.
Re: Feed the birds
BB I would have been tempted too, but WK is spot on. The pigeon, like all birds are really susceptible to stress and even if it hadn't been injured (being hit in the air at speed by a rapture can cause internal injuries) the shock may well have killed it within a day or two. Even a small cut from the beak or talons can mean the end over a day or two. I've rescued quite a few birds who appeared fine but were dead the following morning. Birds also hide illness so as not to attract predators. At this time of year it may have been a 1st year bird and as WK says the kill may have been enough to keep it alive but the fact that it took little may suggest it was a parent bird still feeding a fledgling, it's near the of year the chicks become independent but not unheard of. If so it would have returned when it quietened down for more.Barlow Boy wrote:I know it's nature, but I would have had to get out and scare away the hawk to save the pigeonWhite Knight wrote:I was driving up the road to my own house Friday evening at dusk when I spotted activity on the left side of the road ahead. I drove up slowly and saw a young Sparrow Hawk holding down a pigeon which he must have just brought down and he plucking him while it was still alive! The lights of my car was on them but the hawk persisted in tearing at the stricken bird even as it wrestled to break free. I was really afraid that a car would drive up and hit both of them so I pulled in, put on my indicator and stayed there for about 10 minutes watching the grisly scene. Cars had to slow down to pass me and when they pulled back in to the left they had passed the birds on the ground.
Then, without appearing to eat much of the pigeon who was dead at this stage, the hawk just took off and flew over my car. He was cagey of me being there, and kept an eyey on me, but I felt better that I had probably saved his life. He would live to kill another day .
I try to think of a predators (even watching lions etc) young starving to death slowly rather than the relatively quick death the victim has.
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