SuiSui1
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 4, 2020
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It would freak me the fuck out to have a bunch of buzzards sitting on my roof. I know they perform an important service to nature, but they still creep me out.Walking today, took bird pics with the shittiest phone.
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Huge batch of buzzards.
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Gathering around a fish.
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Bald eagle comes in and tells them to fuck off.
A lot of times vultures aren't even by anything dead, they're just hanging out. They're very social birds and at night roost in huge numbers together (sometimes 60-100+ birds). When they're hanging out riding thermals together like that, it's called a kettle.It would freak me the fuck out to have a bunch of buzzards sitting on my roof. I know they perform an important service to nature, but they still creep me out.
When I was out birding (pics posted upthread) last week I saw a massive column of turkey vultures circling over a field. Like 30-50 birds... there must have been something large and rotten out there. Ugh.
Since I took those pictures I've been seeing two eagles every day. Not the same two. One day I saw a mature bald eagle and what was likely the 2 year old I posted previously. The next day two mature bald eagles. The day after that a golden eagle and a bald eagle. Then a bald eagle and a juvenile bald eagle, and so on... I'm gonna have to change my Indian name to Ronnie Twoeagles.
In other news, guess who had to put a hormonal foot-humping dinosaur in horny jail today?
is there some particular metric for when they go after dead-ish things? sometimes they'll be all over some roadkill and others they wouldn't touch it with a ten foot poleA lot of times vultures aren't even by anything dead, they're just hanging out. They're very social birds and at night roost in huge numbers together (sometimes 60-100+ birds). When they're hanging out riding thermals together like that, it's called a kettle.
I would imagine its if they're hungry and how accessible the roadkill is. Plus most vultures, with the exception of some new world species with a good sense of smell like turkey vultures, rely on eyesight to find carrion, so if it can't be seen from above they might not be able to find it.is there some particular metric for when they go after dead-ish things? sometimes they'll be all over some roadkill and others they wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole
Vultures are very good.It would freak me the fuck out to have a bunch of buzzards sitting on my roof. I know they perform an important service to nature, but they still creep me out.
When I was out birding (pics posted upthread) last week I saw a massive column of turkey vultures circling over a field. Like 30-50 birds... there must have been something large and rotten out there. Ugh.
Since I took those pictures I've been seeing two eagles every day. Not the same two. One day I saw a mature bald eagle and what was likely the 2 year old I posted previously. The next day two mature bald eagles. The day after that a golden eagle and a bald eagle. Then a bald eagle and a juvenile bald eagle, and so on... I'm gonna have to change my Indian name to Ronnie Twoeagles.
I want to give it scritches.