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Author Topic: I had a vesiter in my back yard.  (Read 589 times)

Offline John Rist

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I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« on: Yesterday at 02:14:06 PM »
Wow! A mean but majestic bird.
John Rist
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Offline Mike Morrow

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 02:58:56 PM »
Chow time!

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Offline Paul Taylor

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 02:59:26 PM »
Young eagle?
Paul
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As my coach and mentor Jim Lynch use to say every time we flew together - “We are making memories

Offline BillLee

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 03:11:00 PM »
I used to live in East Texas on a large piece of  property. Mostly wooded, a little lake near the house. We enjoyed the wildlife that we frequently saw there. In 2020 we moved into a nice subdivision near Dallas, and one day as I was mowing the yard, this fella came by for a mouse-feed and a photo shoot.
Bill Lee
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Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #4 on: Yesterday at 03:29:16 PM »
8 lives to go.  I didn't think Texas has Eagles.  I was wrong, so was the cat.

Ken
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Offline bill bischoff

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #5 on: Yesterday at 04:08:16 PM »
According to my books, and the fact that it has attacked another bird, it seems to be a sharp-shinned hawk.

Online Dave_Trible

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #6 on: Yesterday at 04:21:11 PM »
Thats a hawk.   Did you get it's AMA number?   Here in Kansas we have many sparrow hawks,  some eagles and the 'dirty' birds,  red headed turkey buzzards- they eat any rotten nasty road kill they can find,  then upchuck on anything that gets too close.   They will also just stand over their road kill and let you run over them before they will leave their meal.   No fear at all.  The sparrow hawks were a protected species-not sure if they still are.   We had a couple that kept coming into our store when I was working.   They'd fly in over customers' heads when the automatic doors opened and hide in the ceiling rafters.   The company hired a business to remove them.   Because they were protected they couldn't kill or harm them.   They gave us all lasers to blind and irritate them.   They usually headed for the exit when you hit them with the laser.   Eventually they moved on.

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Offline Colin McRae

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #7 on: Yesterday at 04:22:54 PM »
A Coopers hawk on our bird bath in our front yard. San Francisco Bay Area.

Offline Colin McRae

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #8 on: Yesterday at 04:29:01 PM »
Also, Bald Eagles. This one in my neighbor's tree.

Offline Dan McEntee

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #9 on: Yesterday at 05:13:44 PM »
Thats a hawk.   Did you get it's AMA number?   Here in Kansas we have many sparrow hawks,  some eagles and the 'dirty' birds,  red headed turkey buzzards- they eat any rotten nasty road kill they can find,  then upchuck on anything that gets too close.   They will also just stand over their road kill and let you run over them before they will leave their meal.   No fear at all.  The sparrow hawks were a protected species-not sure if they still are.   We had a couple that kept coming into our store when I was working.   They'd fly in over customers' heads when the automatic doors opened and hide in the ceiling rafters.   The company hired a business to remove them.   Because they were protected they couldn't kill or harm them.   They gave us all lasers to blind and irritate them.   They usually headed for the exit when you hit them with the laser.   Eventually they moved on.

Dave

      I had to deal with birds in warehouses and building just about everywhere I ever worked. Like you experienced, I was taught to turn all the lights out too make it as dark as possible and open one door, and they would fly to the light, and that works very well.  Where I live in North St. Louis County, I am just about dead center between the Mississippi and the Missouri Rivers and can see everything from large owls to Bald Eagles and everything in between. Bald Eagles mostly in the winter as they like to fish at the Chain of Rocks section of the Mississippi. We have a rabbit population here that can get out of hand and I rely on the hawks ( not sure what breed but there are usually a pair of them that can be seen now and then) and the local owls to keep them in check. My wife and daughter got to witness a rabbit being taken by a hawk or an owl one evening and expected me to do something about it!! I told them to invite it back for seconds!! I have been lucky enough to have seen the large owls strike without warning and complete silence from time to time. They can be incredibly fast going across the ground and you can not hear them. They will watch from the surrounding trees, and then fly around cars and trucks, using them as cover to nail their dinner. I was pushing a dirt bike across my yard back to my big shed one evening and a large hawk about knocked me down as it was pouncing on a mouse at the base of the porch steps. Lots of the red headed turkey vultures also, and even an occasional wild turkey!! We get deer, foxes, groundhogs, racoons, possums, and there have been many reports of coyotes and I think I have seen them late at night at a distance, so we don't let our small dog out by herself at any time. I have found carcasses of dead possums in my yard that have been killed, and completely gutted, leaving only the skeleton and skin by something, and I suspect it was a coyote. I wouldn't know what else it could be. And I even had to dispatch a snake that my wife found in her garden that was devouring an adult rabbit, whole!! I let it finish, and then dispatched the snake, so I hope it enjoyed it's last meal!! River otters have worked their way up Cold Water Creek from the Missouri River, gotten into the local Park lake and really had their way with the fish population!!  All this wild life and I live in the suburbs!! For the most part, I love the avian kind of wild life, but the rest I could do without!
 
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Online Brett Buck

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #10 on: Yesterday at 06:26:12 PM »
Also, Bald Eagles. This one in my neighbor's tree.

       There are bald eagles that hang round the Napa flying circle, plus a bunch of hawks (one of which David had to dodge today). They all sit on the guy wires to the radio antennas.

    When we are at the old circle, there was a telephone pole, and the resident bald eagle would perch on top of it, the claws were "palming" the top of the pole. Huge. You wouldn't want to mess with him, but he clearly didn't see model airplanes as a food source or threat, he mostly ignored us and occasionally swooped down into the weeds and grabbed something. They are supposed to eat fish, maybe he hung around by the river but I never saw him over there.

      Brett

Offline Colin McRae

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #11 on: Yesterday at 06:42:56 PM »
       There are bald eagles that hang round the Napa flying circle, plus a bunch of hawks (one of which David had to dodge today). They all sit on the guy wires to the radio antennas.

      Brett

I've been flying at the Napa circle every week and am aware of the various birds around. (lots of them!)  I have seen various raptors on the nearby tower guy wires plus circling around. Not seen a raptor near the circle 'yet', but lots of Canadian geese flying back and forth between the river and golf course near the flying circle, sometimes directly over the circle.

Once a flock of maybe 8 geese flew right over the circle at maybe 30-40'. Luckily, I was low practicing inverted level flight. If I was doing any other maneuver, it might have been interesting.

(I'm glad David didn't have an issue with his model!)

Online Brett Buck

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #12 on: Yesterday at 06:56:49 PM »

Once a flock of maybe 8 geese flew right over the circle at maybe 30-40'. Luckily, I was low practicing inverted level flight. If I was doing any other maneuver, it might have been interesting.

(I'm glad David didn't have an issue with his model!)

   The geese are either too dumb or too stubborn to change, they just assume we will get out of their way. I think a Eather 13-4 3-blade spun by a PA75 to the head/neck area will not end well for anyone!

    I also noted the remains of a white plastic spinner over on the upwind side - know anything about that?

     Brett

Offline Colin McRae

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #13 on: Yesterday at 07:06:01 PM »
    know anything about that?

     Brett

I do know something about that. Probably from my Brodak Shark that I had an 'event' with a couple months ago. Dam outside squares!!

All repaired and back on the horse.




Online Brett Buck

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #14 on: Yesterday at 07:48:47 PM »
I do know something about that. Probably from my Brodak Shark that I had an 'event' with a couple months ago. Dam outside squares!!

All repaired and back on the horse.

    For reference, I have probably build 100ish stunt models of various types over the years. I have 3 left.

      Brett

Offline Colin McRae

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #15 on: Yesterday at 07:59:02 PM »
    For reference, I have probably build 100ish stunt models of various types over the years. I have 3 left.

      Brett

That actually does make me feel better.

As I learn most of my 'events' have been on grass. Asphalt is another story! But the mishap parts are easier to locate. ;D

Offline Dan McEntee

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #16 on: Yesterday at 10:37:21 PM »
   The geese are either too dumb or too stubborn to change, they just assume we will get out of their way. I think a Eather 13-4 3-blade spun by a PA75 to the head/neck area will not end well for anyone!

    I also noted the remains of a white plastic spinner over on the upwind side - know anything about that?

     Brett


    As far as geese go, I'll just vote for too dumb!! Their only purposes in life are to eat, make more geese, and crap all over the place!! We get them at Buder Park in the fall. Besides the risk of flying into one or a whole squadron of them, they crap all over the place!! Sometime the square pad we fly off of the most is so well covered it takes a broom or leaf blower to clear it all off!!  They walk around the grass eating bugs and such, and then walk over to the black top to make their deposits!!
    We these other birds around here that I'm not sure what they are. I think they are called barn swallows. I have heard them called night hawks also because the tend to come out at dusk. I used to fly a lot in the evening right up until it was too difficult to see the airplane, and these birds would come out and chase the model around the circle. They would circle high, and then dive into the circle and actually keep up with the airplane for a half a lap or so, then pull off. I have never hit one, but a flying buddy of mine did once. Right at the top of a wing over, he hit one head on. Stopped the engine cold, and the plane came to a dead stop also, turned nose down and hit as his feet and it shattered to pieces! The bird landed right next to the airplane, dead as a hammer! That's the only time I ever saw anyone hit one, but I don't fly in the evenings much anymore.
  Type at you later,
   Dan McEntee
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Offline John Park

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Re: I had a vesiter in my back yard.
« Reply #17 on: Today at 02:23:11 AM »
Like all other predators, hawks will go anywhere they can find food.  From my fifth-floor office in the heart of London, I used to see kestrels doing their best to reduce the city's pigeon population.  Their success rate was pretty good, and I think any WW2 fighter pilot would have recognised and approved of their tactics.
You want to make 'em nice, else you get mad lookin' at 'em!


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