Absolutely phenomenal footage! Buzzards are one of my favourite birds of prey and I adore their 'mewing' calls. I have a few public videos of Buzzards and got a huge thrill out of watching and filming them in the nest and in-flight calling and mewing. However, I have never witnessed anything quite like this, but I imagine it happens regularly when birds are hungry. (just very rare to see and rarer still to film) I thoroughly enjoyed watching every second of this Adam. 👍◕‿◕
@@tonythomas951 Hi Tony, I have to say that you are mistaken, my friend. Buzzards (Buteo buteo) ARE 100% Birds of Prey. I am honestly not trying to be smart or anything, I just know this from studying them for over 40 years! I don't usually add a link to a video but I need to prove I'm not pretending to be knowledgeable. Here is a video of a family of Buzzards I filmed earlier this season >> th-cam.com/video/uAv_Zw6UZ04/w-d-xo.html If you feel like it, have a quick look and then see if it helps to change your mind. (I'm just being friendly btw) 👍
@@tonythomas951 Hi Tony, please don't take this the wrong way, but a Buzzard (Buteo buteo) IS 100% a Bird of Prey. I am part of a raptor protection group and we have been watching and helping to protect Buzzards for decades. I wouldn't normally drop a link in, but as it is to show I know what I am talking about in this case if you want to, please have a quick look at this >> th-cam.com/video/uAv_Zw6UZ04/w-d-xo.html from earlier this season. Hopefully, this should help to convince you.
Fantastic footage. Never seen a heron ruffle it's feathers before. Amazing how the buzzard natural knows it can deal with this particular species that's towering over it.
You can't doubt your ability in nature, if you do doubt everyone going to hustle you and you starves to death, you allways has to try to defend whats yours so everybody knows it's comes with a cost and a risk to harass you.
That's how you know birds of Prey like the buzzard ain't a push over to these larger birds. Great to see it hold it's ground with ease and confidence regardless of its size
Vultures are not birds of prey. Buzzard is not a correct term. I just learned that not long ago. And to me the little brown fellow looked like some type of hawk, a bird of prey, as you said.
@@madhatt3r93 Herons and egrets are the same thing, although have some differences. In general, the difference between herons and egrets are plumage colors and size.
Heron: I'm getting a piece of that meat if it's the last thing I do! Buzzard: Go ahead, you long necked goose! Try to get it! Buzzard friend joining in: Hey, what's up my buzzard? Buzzard: This SOB thinks he can bully me! Buzzard friend: See yah chump! Heron: I'm leaving you stinky pigeon! The hell with you!
The grey heron claims his part of prey, but the buzzard defends it. Amazingly the raven, what is heard in the background, does not attack the buzzard. Ravens like to steal foreign prey. Very nice video.
Actually, I learned something new because of this video! I thought buzzard was a slang name for the turkey vulture but that's all...never knew the word buzzard also applied to birds of prey. Interesting!
@@CorneiliusLibowitz well that is confusing to me. If there is no difference between birds that mostly hunt and kill its prey, and ones that mostly hunt carrion and eat that, why would they come up with the 2 designations in the first place. Maybe it's a taxonomic thing. I thought it was a behavioral thing. It is to me. I'll never elevate a Buzzard to "Bird of Prey". You ever hear of a team being named after a scavenger? I think it is rare. But you are right, Britannica says scavengers are birds of prey. Apologies if I offended. What about seagulls?
@@TheezeDaze Vultures are raptors, and raptors are considered "birds of prey".... Vultures share key characteristics with the regular predators (eagles, hawks, ospreys, falcons etc) which are hooked, flesh tearing beaks and large, needle-sharp, flesh-gripping talons..... Seagulls, crows, ravens, kingfishers, herons etc are all predatory birds, but they aren't considered birds of prey.....It doesn't matter if you don't elevate vultures to "birds of prey" status.....it's what science classifies them as.....
Very nice video, very interesting! The hungry heron seems to have a big respect of the Bussard, must bee a good reason for that. For me it seems like the heron is much bigger , stronger and has a massive long and dangerous beak. But maybe the bussard can easy wound him deathly with his claws.....It´s a very beautiful and amazing video, thanks for uploading!
Common Buzzards are fierce fighters. They are going against anything that threatening them. They are not very good hunters tho but great fighters when it comes to defending territory or prey.
@@alexanderlejon9958Late but I’d have to disagree on buzzards being ‘bad hunters’. Compared to vultures, their design is better equipped, for mentality alone: resilience and perseverance. That and their stronger beaks, claws, and vision, even the smallest common buzzard. I had to go out of my way to discover buzzards, as for some reason society loves gushing about vultures. They’re blind cowardly rats with wings with a good sense of decay😂 I’d say sight rules over smell in terms of good hunting skills.
Fascinating game of poker there. Must say, I did wonder whether the Heron was going to pull it off with that stabbing beak but it was shown the door. Good for you, Mr Buzzard. Excellent photography by the way. Pin sharp.
Last winter I was shooting similar situation in that same spot, heron did use his beak once. It was looking scary, he hit the buzzard in the chest but it ended well for te raptor. Thanks mate :)
Interesting. I have a personal grudge against Herons. They have almost decimated the population of fish in my pond and made them extremely skittish as result. Yes, that is nature, but by the same token, I would argue that it is natural to remove the threat but they are protected. That's an unfair fight in my book! On the filming, the quality is top notch professional standard. Focus wobbled on the young fluffball Buzzards in the background but I guess that's the dilemma of a sharp focus zoom.
MartinJG100 I sucked at filming back then, I was doing mostly photos. No image stabilisation, bad tripod. I know the issues with herons and private ponds. My friend had the same problem and he dacided to hide near his pond with an modified air gun, wait for a heron and shoot it. I said to him that it is a bad idea because first of all it is illegal, and second if he shoots the bird, another one will come and take his place. Guess what, I was right, it's like fighting windmills. ME personally I would be happy that herons or other birds are sitting by my pond, but none the less I understand your frustration.
Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins! HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
Sammie Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins! HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
The Monkey King Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins! HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
I once saw a Heron & a Hawk battle over dinner. Didn't see who caught the prey but did see the Heron kick the crap outta the Hawk & eat his victory dinner. I was shocked by the result & gained huge respect for the Blue Heron's capabilities. Until then I'd only witnessed them fishing. That fight & TH-cam contributors have taught me they have FAR more in their arsenal than their impressive fishing skills!
Zeles YOU, STILL BELIEVE IN FUCKING DINOSAURS?????? SERIOUSLY, DO SOME RESEARCH. AND ASK YOURSELF, WHY HAVENT THEY FOUND ONE GENUINE SKULL OF ANY ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF SUPPOSED SKELETONS THEY SUPPOSEDLY DUG UP. NOT ONE SKELETON HAS A REAL BONE SKULL. CHINAS HAD FACTORIES PRODUCING FAKE BONES, FOR OVER A HUNDRED YEARS. RESEARCH IT.
James Pyles sounds like you need to do some research. I collect skulls, sometimes ill find a dead deer or whatever with no skull, just teeth and the lower eye socket bones, Sometimes you'll find animal and half the bones are gone. Hell I found a coyote skull a couple years ago, 2 leg bones near it and the whole front half of the skull from the back of the sockets to the nose was gone, almost always find teeth though. Skulls get very brittle.
Beautiful pictures! Great scene! thank you for sharing! I see herons mostly stiff like a stick waiting for mice or voles. Nice to see some action here! ,-)
@@joshuacarter8709 Thank you for the good information. Both of you know your birds! Buzzards in North America, Iran, India and Africa are quite distinct. Love to learn something new!
@Rod Loucks Like I say, two people have pointed out my mistake, And I appreciate this. In California, this would be a hawk, a raptor, even by the shape of its wings. But I'm no ornothinololgist and don't claim any expertise.
@Rod Loucks The birds you refer to as buzzards are New World vultures of the order Cathartiformes. Buzzards (of the genus Buteo) and hawks (of the genus Accipiter) are both of the order Accipitriformes.
Kocham te cierpliwosc Czapli,wedkuje i spedzam duzo czasu posrod natury,fascynujacy jest jak i wiele gatunkow ptakow,ale ta cierpliwosc jest niemozliwa o ostroznosci nie wspomne.
I saw an aerial fight between a Marsh Harrier and Heron on Sunday, I thought it was two harriers dancing at first but when I got my scope out the heron was upside down. Too far away to photograph, but I'm giving serious consideration to digiscoping.
Hello! Thanks for your videos! Sometimes you want to photograph a bird sitting on a tall tree. Some people advise buying a used camera with a removable lens and buying a lens with a large optical zoom, while others say that you can save money and buy an adapter for binoculars or a monocular for your smartphone. What do you advise?
Laziest parents too, when they get too "stressed" awww poor Heron, they kill the youngest chick so they don't have to feed it... Also so they don't have to forage 12 hours a day like every other parent they throw up food they have already collected. If the food is too big for the chicks, they starve. Not one fuck is given by a parent Heron....
Thought a buzzard was a vulture? We have lots of hawks, eagles and herons around where I live. Eagle larger than a heron? Close in mass, probably. A big heron's a massive bird.
Buzzards aren't small. A common adult has a wingspan of 4 ft and can weigh 2 lbs. But that's still small compared to an adult heron who can grow up to 4-5 ft in length.
If you're talking about 1:44 then it was another grey heron. We don't have bald eagles in Europe, but we do have white-tailed eagles which are in the same genus of birds
Tough little buzzard. Awesome footage man.
Fascinating the way the buzzard pulls back as if retreating, only to actually use the distance to make a leap attack!
2:27 - "This guy bothering you, Harold?"
Heron's are badass, but even a badass knows another badass. It's extremely cautious around the raptor
Absolutely phenomenal footage! Buzzards are one of my favourite birds of prey and I adore their 'mewing' calls. I have a few public videos of Buzzards and got a huge thrill out of watching and filming them in the nest and in-flight calling and mewing. However, I have never witnessed anything quite like this, but I imagine it happens regularly when birds are hungry. (just very rare to see and rarer still to film) I thoroughly enjoyed watching every second of this Adam. 👍◕‿◕
Buzzards are not birds of prey.
@@tonythomas951 Hi Tony, I have to say that you are mistaken, my friend. Buzzards (Buteo buteo) ARE 100% Birds of Prey. I am honestly not trying to be smart or anything, I just know this from studying them for over 40 years! I don't usually add a link to a video but I need to prove I'm not pretending to be knowledgeable. Here is a video of a family of Buzzards I filmed earlier this season >> th-cam.com/video/uAv_Zw6UZ04/w-d-xo.html If you feel like it, have a quick look and then see if it helps to change your mind. (I'm just being friendly btw) 👍
@@tonythomas951 Hi Tony, please don't take this the wrong way, but a Buzzard (Buteo buteo) IS 100% a Bird of Prey. I am part of a raptor protection group and we have been watching and helping to protect Buzzards for decades. I wouldn't normally drop a link in, but as it is to show I know what I am talking about in this case if you want to, please have a quick look at this >> th-cam.com/video/uAv_Zw6UZ04/w-d-xo.html from earlier this season. Hopefully, this should help to convince you.
@G E T R E K T Ye but what does that have to do with this?
@G E T R E K T ok
Fantastic footage. Never seen a heron ruffle it's feathers before. Amazing how the buzzard natural knows it can deal with this particular species that's towering over it.
You can't doubt your ability in nature, if you do doubt everyone going to hustle you and you starves to death, you allways has to try to defend whats yours so everybody knows it's comes with a cost and a risk to harass you.
He just looks at him, like you really want to try me.
@@darrylb9228great herons can stand their ground against eagles, this buzzard wouldn’t have stood a chance in an actual confrontation
Heron slowly reaching for a piece: "can I just have a little-"
Bird of prey: "gET YOUR OWN FOOD"
Black-crowned Night Heron & Great Egret Hunting Together. Check it out here; th-cam.com/video/fTIteoD_Y9U/w-d-xo.html
This is phenomenal footage, thanks Adam
Heron: *WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN MY SWAMP?*
Buzzard: *YOU SHALL NOT PASS !!!*
Superb footage, very impressive. (And the raptors are definitely Common Buzzards).
Spectacular! It's the grit that matters not the size!
This is an example of the importance of having boundaries.
It's footage like this that reminds me how plausible the "birds are descendants of dinosaurs" is.
Bird are maniraptorian dinosaurs
@@brunoduran8726 yep
Related to dromaeosaurids and troodontids
Thank you for sharing this most awesome nature video!
@0:13 he's like "What? What does this guy want from me?"
That's amazing footage - great capture!
Adam- coś pięknego!- Gratulacje jak najbardziej szczere i zasłużone :)- oglądam po raz kolejny...:))
A really fortunate video, you were in the right place at the right time, and shot it well.
That's how you know birds of Prey like the buzzard ain't a push over to these larger birds. Great to see it hold it's ground with ease and confidence regardless of its size
Vultures are not birds of prey. Buzzard is not a correct term. I just learned that not long ago. And to me the little brown fellow looked like some type of hawk, a bird of prey, as you said.
@@bigwu100 in the uk are called buzzards, buzzards in the uk are called vultures
@@bigwu100 This is a buzzard, not a vulture. The common buzzard is related to red-tailed hawks.
Wow, that's really great footage!!! Thank you very much for sharing!
Bardzo piękny ten filmik! :)
wow, the way the heron erects its feathers is impressive! especially the head and chest ones!
+Darius Berghe cool "hair"
No need of hair gel
dari www xnxx com
I THINK these are called egrets, but im not sure 😅 the feathers i mean
@@madhatt3r93 Herons and egrets are the same thing, although have some differences. In general, the difference between herons and egrets are plumage colors and size.
It’s incredible how you captured these rare moments
Heron: I'm getting a piece of that meat if it's the last thing I do!
Buzzard: Go ahead, you long necked goose! Try to get it!
Buzzard friend joining in: Hey, what's up my buzzard?
Buzzard: This SOB thinks he can bully me!
Buzzard friend: See yah chump!
Heron: I'm leaving you stinky pigeon! The hell with you!
Hawk: I’m in a hawkish mood today
Heron: I’m in a heronish...nah, doesn’t work.
The grey heron claims his part of prey, but the buzzard defends it. Amazingly the raven, what is heard in the background, does not attack the buzzard. Ravens like to steal foreign prey. Very nice video.
There is no buzzard in this video idiot!
Amazing!!! Great footage of those magnificent birds.
Fantastic footage, thanks for sharing!
Nice capture Brian.
It's a tough life for birds! Very nice video.
Świetne video 👏👏👏 niby 9 lat już ma ale dobry materiał jest ponad czasowy. Pozdrawiam🙂
Fantastic footage/interaction! Thank you for sharing!
As much as we love Herons, I love the little guy's spunk and determination! We just recently rescued a Heron from a fishing line, see the video ...
3:05 lol hawk has just about enough of the heron's shenanigans
Great bit of filming there Mister.Looks like you probably got a bit chilly waiting for that!!
The big bird ain't so tough lol. I love how the buzzard literally pushed the heron back with it's feet.
Awesome footage and crystal clear camera!
Actually, I learned something new because of this video! I thought buzzard was a slang name for the turkey vulture but that's all...never knew the word buzzard also applied to birds of prey. Interesting!
Turkey vultures are birds of prey....
@@CorneiliusLibowitz vultures/buzzards are almost if not exclusively scavengers. Birds of prey, hunt and kill and occasionally scavenge.
@@TheezeDaze Then i guess you better contact Encyclopedia Britannica and tell them they're wrong.........
www.britannica.com/animal/bird-of-prey
@@CorneiliusLibowitz well that is confusing to me. If there is no difference between birds that mostly hunt and kill its prey, and ones that mostly hunt carrion and eat that, why would they come up with the 2 designations in the first place. Maybe it's a taxonomic thing. I thought it was a behavioral thing. It is to me. I'll never elevate a Buzzard to "Bird of Prey". You ever hear of a team being named after a scavenger? I think it is rare. But you are right, Britannica says scavengers are birds of prey. Apologies if I offended. What about seagulls?
@@TheezeDaze Vultures are raptors, and raptors are considered "birds of prey".... Vultures share key characteristics with the regular predators (eagles, hawks, ospreys, falcons etc) which are hooked, flesh tearing beaks and large, needle-sharp, flesh-gripping talons..... Seagulls, crows, ravens, kingfishers, herons etc are all predatory birds, but they aren't considered birds of prey.....It doesn't matter if you don't elevate vultures to "birds of prey" status.....it's what science classifies them as.....
Amazing - it's like a game of chances. A beautiful and rare sight.
it just like us trying to survive it's is amazing to see to this happen to survive
nice video of this elegant heron trying to rob buzzard's prey. thanks for sharing
Beautiful Footage and perfect angle !
that was one epic fight,can not wait for the rematch.
th-cam.com/video/3uh9W2Es7Ng/w-d-xo.html
🥰🥰🥰
Brilliant filming .Well done Buzzard..
I feel like those two have met before.
th-cam.com/video/3uh9W2Es7Ng/w-d-xo.html
🥰🥰🥰
Great video eat your heart out Attenborough . Well done capturing a fantastic video
Buzzard: Hey Heron, what's up with you?
Heron: Gimme that you moron, i'm hungry!
Stunning bit of footage! 😊 👏
10th attempt from Heron
Hawk: M8, I've about had it
Excellent piece of footage mate - very commendable.
Very nice video, very interesting! The hungry heron seems to have a big respect of the Bussard, must bee a good reason for that. For me it seems like the heron is much bigger , stronger and has a massive long and dangerous beak. But maybe the bussard can easy wound him deathly with his claws.....It´s a very beautiful and amazing video, thanks for uploading!
Common Buzzards are fierce fighters. They are going against anything that threatening them. They are not very good hunters tho but great fighters when it comes to defending territory or prey.
@@alexanderlejon9958Late but I’d have to disagree on buzzards being ‘bad hunters’. Compared to vultures, their design is better equipped, for mentality alone: resilience and perseverance. That and their stronger beaks, claws, and vision, even the smallest common buzzard.
I had to go out of my way to discover buzzards, as for some reason society loves gushing about vultures. They’re blind cowardly rats with wings with a good sense of decay😂 I’d say sight rules over smell in terms of good hunting skills.
Fascinating game of poker there. Must say, I did wonder whether the Heron was going to pull it off with that stabbing beak but it was shown the door. Good for you, Mr Buzzard. Excellent photography by the way. Pin sharp.
Last winter I was shooting similar situation in that same spot, heron did use his beak once. It was looking scary, he hit the buzzard in the chest but it ended well for te raptor. Thanks mate :)
Interesting. I have a personal grudge against Herons. They have almost decimated the population of fish in my pond and made them extremely skittish as result. Yes, that is nature, but by the same token, I would argue that it is natural to remove the threat but they are protected. That's an unfair fight in my book! On the filming, the quality is top notch professional standard. Focus wobbled on the young fluffball Buzzards in the background but I guess that's the dilemma of a sharp focus zoom.
MartinJG100 I sucked at filming back then, I was doing mostly photos. No image stabilisation, bad tripod. I know the issues with herons and private ponds. My friend had the same problem and he dacided to hide near his pond with an modified air gun, wait for a heron and shoot it. I said to him that it is a bad idea because first of all it is illegal, and second if he shoots the bird, another one will come and take his place. Guess what, I was right, it's like fighting windmills. ME personally I would be happy that herons or other birds are sitting by my pond, but none the less I understand your frustration.
3:04 FALCON KICK!
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Heron: ah ah
Common Buzzard: Effff Youuuu Kick!
Heron : Ahhhhhhhhh!
Buzzard did an Eric Cantona kick 😉
Amazing shots! I'm impressed! 👏👏👏📷👍
Imagine two different species of dinosaurs doing the same thing in their time.
That's immediately what my mind jumped to!
These ARE technically dinosaurs
Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins!
HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
Sammie Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins!
HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
The Monkey King Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins!
HE Loves you! Come to HIM!
I once saw a Heron & a Hawk battle over dinner. Didn't see who caught the prey but did see the Heron kick the crap outta the Hawk & eat his victory dinner. I was shocked by the result & gained huge respect for the Blue Heron's capabilities. Until then I'd only witnessed them fishing. That fight & TH-cam contributors have taught me they have FAR more in their arsenal than their impressive fishing skills!
When a T-Rex tries to steal a Velociraptors meal...
Your footage is very good. I love it
Thank You :)
i think if we want to know how dinosaurs acted we just have to look at these guys
+Papwithanhatchet You're gay lol
+galaxymaster Dinosaurs probably didn't roar like lions like they do in movies lol
Zeles yea, and Santa Claus is real. 😄
Zeles YOU, STILL BELIEVE IN FUCKING DINOSAURS?????? SERIOUSLY, DO SOME RESEARCH. AND ASK YOURSELF, WHY HAVENT THEY FOUND ONE GENUINE SKULL OF ANY ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF SUPPOSED SKELETONS THEY SUPPOSEDLY DUG UP. NOT ONE SKELETON HAS A REAL BONE SKULL. CHINAS HAD FACTORIES PRODUCING FAKE BONES, FOR OVER A HUNDRED YEARS. RESEARCH IT.
James Pyles sounds like you need to do some research. I collect skulls, sometimes ill find a dead deer or whatever with no skull, just teeth and the lower eye socket bones, Sometimes you'll find animal and half the bones are gone. Hell I found a coyote skull a couple years ago, 2 leg bones near it and the whole front half of the skull from the back of the sockets to the nose was gone, almost always find teeth though. Skulls get very brittle.
Beautiful pictures! Great scene! thank you for sharing! I see herons mostly stiff like a stick waiting for mice or voles. Nice to see some action here! ,-)
Super filmik! :)))
Watch how the red tail hawk stands its ground firmly and confidentially and the other one so big and talks a big game but didn't even do much! Lol
It's a common buzzard, not a red-tailed hawk, it's like the Eurasian equivalent of the red-tailed hawk.
tout simplement superbe!!!
merci pour ce moment!! Maginifique et beau boulot !!! ;-))))
I love this video....omg...the big bird looks so confused n mad...while the other shorty chills...lol...
This is to class videoing. That is one stubborn Buzzard.
That's not a buzzard moron!
Amazing video! I love watching nature, discover and decompress...
Not a buzzard, but rather it's a hawk. Very amusing interaction!
In the uk it’s buzzard
You know the name actually given to that bird is "common buzzard (buteo buteo)"? And yes in the UK they are referred to as buzzards
@@joshuacarter8709 Thank you for the good information. Both of you know your birds! Buzzards in North America, Iran, India and Africa are quite distinct. Love to learn something new!
@Rod Loucks Like I say, two people have pointed out my mistake, And I appreciate this. In California, this would be a hawk, a raptor, even by the shape of its wings. But I'm no ornothinololgist and don't claim any expertise.
@Rod Loucks The birds you refer to as buzzards are New World vultures of the order Cathartiformes. Buzzards (of the genus Buteo) and hawks (of the genus Accipiter) are both of the order Accipitriformes.
- а что ты ешь? Можно и мне попробовать?
- Не мешай мне обедать!
:)
All the people arguing that this buzzard is a hawk simply because they've only ever heard of buzzards being synonymous with vultures, lol.
FlowingDepths the funny part is knowing the difference between buzzards, vultures, AND Hawks. Then you can lol at everyone 😒 silly bunz
Read the intro! This was shot in Poland, and in Europe hawks are commonly referred to as buzzards. This is a red tail hawk!
@@carlwilliams6977 no, it´s a Mäusebussard- commom buzzard-buteo buteo! We have many of these in Europe.
Ryn--They're arguing it's a hawk BECAUSE IT IS MORON!
Not Too Sure These Days صيد عزير سماك
AMAZING footage!!!
Poszczęściło mi się. Dzięki :)
Wow. Unbelievable behavior. Very interesting. thank you for your work. nice video. thumb up and subscribed!
3:04 The action starts! Funny!
Rewelacyjna obserwacja! Film tak genialny że powinien być publikowany w TV. Gdzie udało Ci się podejść taką niepowtarzalną scenę?
Nawet nie ma litości nad ofiarą
Waiter: One carcass coming up. Will that be cash or credit? Heron: Put it on my bill.
Kocham te cierpliwosc Czapli,wedkuje i spedzam duzo czasu posrod natury,fascynujacy jest jak i wiele gatunkow ptakow,ale ta cierpliwosc jest niemozliwa o ostroznosci nie wspomne.
great footage. where I live that would be a hawk.
Yes Sandra I'm loving your new hairdo (carries on eating)
when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object
th-cam.com/video/3uh9W2Es7Ng/w-d-xo.html
🥰🥰🥰
Truly AMAZING footage!
Little Hawk: You wait till I grow up, I can eat you.
Incredible footage great job 👏
the loook on the buzzard.. priceless.. like: wuutaaafuuck!? since when did u drop the fish thing yoo..
I saw an aerial fight between a Marsh Harrier and Heron on Sunday, I thought it was two harriers dancing at first but when I got my scope out the heron was upside down. Too far away to photograph, but I'm giving serious consideration to digiscoping.
The word 'fight' is brought into question here.
Tolong jelaskan maksudnya apa? Penyimpanan apa.
Did you watch the whole video
Obviously they fight over that meal. Did you watch the video?
Handbags
Thumbs up for your capture. This brown bird is really nervous.
4:04 heron not found
Very fantastic & very good video
1:28 "What the hell is your problem?!"
"You fucker are eating my babies!"
X Xxx@@oldtimer7635
Hello! Thanks for your videos! Sometimes you want to photograph a bird sitting on a tall tree. Some people advise buying a used camera with a removable lens and buying a lens with a large optical zoom, while others say that you can save money and buy an adapter for binoculars or a monocular for your smartphone. What do you advise?
Buy a used camera and a lens, like 400mm or 150-600mm. You will be able to see more details, much better image quality.
@@AdamosFF thank you!
about time see a heron not get his way they are the bullies of the bird world.
They even look like a snooty bird lol
fusionmechanic1 l was about to say that, you read my mind
Laziest parents too, when they get too "stressed" awww poor Heron, they kill the youngest chick so they don't have to feed it... Also so they don't have to forage 12 hours a day like every other parent they throw up food they have already collected. If the food is too big for the chicks, they starve. Not one fuck is given by a parent Heron....
Jesse in FLA!
There is a YT vid of s heron getting too close to otter parents and a pup.... doesn’t end well for the heron....
Merci de partager ce moment. C'est qualité professionnelle.
The Heron was trying to impose his height on other hawk or what ever other bird was but other bird not buying.
Amazing moment to capture, hope you got some nice pictures too!
@Valentino A yes I do :) I had situations like this, six winters in a row :)
Anyone who grew up in a large family and is a slow eater can relate.
The big one I am waiting for is Heron vs Mink!
Guys, clearly it's a black-nosed dolphin.. likely a cub of about 7 years old.
You people know nothing about wildlife..
Jacob Smith Lmao!!😂😂
*NO,*
It's a beared dragon :
Recently experts found out that dolphins are in reality gay sharks, did you know that?
Jacob Smith apparently not as much as you think you do
Buzzard: Yo, you wanna take this inside??
Heron: You're lucky I have a herniated disc or I'd fuck you up
3:43 Scares the fuck out of him
The hawk isn't giving up his dinner, to no heron. Lol
1:27 eagle is thinking, what the fuck?!
radutzu37 It's not an eagle it's a buzzard,a hawk. eagles would be bigger than the heron
Ok, thanks (^^,)
Thought a buzzard was a vulture? We have lots of hawks, eagles and herons around where I live. Eagle larger than a heron? Close in mass, probably. A big heron's a massive bird.
Buzzards aren't small. A common adult has a wingspan of 4 ft and can weigh 2 lbs. But that's still small compared to an adult heron who can grow up to 4-5 ft in length.
dutzu37
Wow, would like to see end of this! Were bald eagles who came by in between.? They looked much bigger!
If you're talking about 1:44 then it was another grey heron.
We don't have bald eagles in Europe, but we do have white-tailed eagles which are in the same genus of birds