I love how the momma comes back with ANOTHER Bird just to see her kid hasn't even touched the other one. Its like a mom getting ready for dinner only to find their kid hasn't eaten their sandwich cause it has the crusts on
They stash food, they won't pass up the opportunity because they just had food, they will just eat again. Today it's 2 in a row but maybe tomorrow it's nothing
@@amandarios448 Yes, they will have food caches stored around the place with prey saved up for a 'rainy' day. Izzi has been seen to stash food in corners of the scrape...only to be removed by Xavier or Di a short time later. :-)
Just to let you know, that is Dad who is delivering meals not Mom. In falcons, the males are smaller and that male is about the size of those chicks. My guess is that the chick is a female and it is dad bringing in food.
"Or maybe across the belly, spilling your intestines. The point is, you are alive when they start to eat you. So you know, try to show a little respect." - Alan Grant, Jurassic Park
There's no heaven. All a bunch of lies created to tame the weak of intelect in a way they don't interfere in the smart one's business by believing they go to heaven if they behave "properly".
@@MarcosSilveira I agree with you no matter what kind of religion it is. All religions are just in order to keep people in fear, and those who disagree with them were sent to the fire or chopped off their heads..And yet I think that in the universe not only our planet is inhabited by people. Just looking at the sky and seeing all these stars...
@@KostyaTM actually, religion was conceived as a way to explain the world and universe around us, provide agreed upon social mores, and so on. The funny thing is you’re doing the same thing despite the obvious disdain for religion. Anti-religious people are some of the most ideological and religious people you will ever find, tied usually by religious diehards and fanatical fundamentalist loonies. After all, both are completely sure they are right and usually wallowing in ignorance. Want an example? The first people to propose life on other planets were theologians. It was fundamentalists that burned them at the stake-today anti-religious people refuse to recognize they even existed, essentially finishing the work the fundamentalists started. Good job....
Imagine being out with your family and friends and you get picked off by a larger predator who is faster and stronger than you. Then you get beaten badly to a pulp where you are still alive but you can’t fight back or run away. Damn nature, you scary!
Its kind of macabre, but I always think its funny how confused baby hawks are when parents bring them live prey because they don't know how to kill yet and just look at it like, "Why is my food screaming?"
@@KostyaTM Survival of your species is put to the test everyday that leaves no room for second guessing. Being an apex predator is a violent life, you sleep, hunt, fight, kill and eat your enemies as they die in your hands every single day. But there is a psychological effect for animalistic behaviour, because why can beasts bears, lions, killer whales be tamed to live harmoniously?
@@jakenorthbriz No matter how much you remake the predators, no matter how much you do them good or what you yourself consider necessary for these animals, they will still do as they see fit, they will be subject to their own instincts and lifestyle in the wild, one wrong move can become dangerous...In our country, there is an expression "No matter how much the wolf you feed, it still looks into the forest"
He was trying to eat his tongue out!! Poor little bird! That confused little falcon chick was pretty cute though! "Now how am I gonna eat this? It's making noise and moving all over the place!"
Yeah I guess that's why the parent brings it to them alive sometimes so they can practice hunting and eating moving prey.. at least that's what one of these channels said in a similar event
That's because baby birds are used to being fed food from the parent birds beak. So it was learning how to exchange upwards in the food receiving process.
@@mickeyscott1054 There is such an expression in Russian...When you want to agree with your interlocutor or answer his question in the affirmative, you say "aha" colloquial use instead of a neutral "yes."
I believe this is the father, named Xavier, bringing unprepared prey and later returning to finish off the kill. The mother, named Di, is much larger, and with different colouring. The chick is named Izzi. It was only one that survived out of a clutch of three eggs. A second egg hatched but the chick was too weak to survive. The third can be seen in this video and did not hatch. Siblicide was not involved. Peregrine Falcons do not commit siblicide - it's usually quite harmonious in the nest when there is more than one chick. Izzi is still hanging around and getting in the way after 10 months (to do the day). He is still demanding food and stealing food from his parents, even though he can hunt for himself.
Reminds me of the Bald Eagle cam. I think it was the father that brought in a duck that he hadn’t killed and the moment he turned away to tend to the others the duck flew off.
Except this is the father, who in this nest can be a little clueless. The mother is much much larger and brought 'prepared' prey (de-feather) and fed the chick. The chick in this nest is, unfortunately, still hanging around after 10 months and still demanding food. It can hunt for itself but it will take the food from its parents (like, steal the food from its parents). The new breeding season is here and the parents are bonding and mating and their youngster from last year is still getting in the way,
Thats fucked up. Imagine being in that situation. Get delivered to a giant baby that doesn't know how to kill properly yet, then the daddy just waiting/blocking at the entrance like....you're not coming out of this bud.
But she displayed no compassion for the injured bird by killing it quickly, instead allowing it to scream and suffer. So this creature is either sadistic, or has no capacity to feel such emotions. That being the case, if it has no emotions then it can also not feel love or hate or anything else. It would simply just be responding to stimuli, acting on instinct which is hardwired into it's brain. So if it's chicks died it would simply fly off and try again, with no mourning or sadness at it's lost children. Is this the case? Birds can certainly feel fear (as this vid shows) - so if they can feel fear, what other emotions can they feel?
@@ejkalegal3145 pretty sure the bird is left somewhat alive so that the chick is exposed to some form of practice killing its prey. The chick simply cannot be spoon fed, then expected to survive. I don't think it was personal. 😅
@@ejkalegal3145It's not sadistic, it's teaching it's child to eat moving prey. It's pretty common. These animals do not have the capacity to be sadistic or have compassion. They don't even understand the finality of death or the idea that they could try to imagine what it's like to be in the other bird's shoes. They don't even have shoes! But seriously you got to stop looking at this through a human lens. They don't have capacity for empathy.
@@ejkalegal3145scientists do use the term emotions to describe animals state of mind but it's important not to confuse that with human emotions. You're right they can get fearful and confused and excited... But they don't think about it like that. They're just trying to survive. They don't understand that their prey is having a bad time. It's irrelevant to them. They simply do not have the capacity to think like that. It's good that you do It shows you have empathy but births just don't so We shouldn't judge.
" now now don't be picky. And stop playing with your food. Now eat up,c'mon. Your dad will coming home soon. (Muttering hope he didn't stop by his mates again)"
He was just bored alone in the nest, his parents flew away but his brother was gone so he found himself a new friend, one of the parents returned and ruined the holiday
It's kind of interesting to see it go for the beak, even though that's probably the worst place. I wonder if it's due to them being used to taking food from their mother's beak.
Mama bird: dont forget to feed the kids tonight , make sure its fully cooked Dad: yeah yeah but I got a game to watch later on at the homie nest ...im sure little one can kill it on its own....oh shit... better finish this before mama finds out
imagine being that small bird chilling flying around, probably chirp2 at some female bird along the way and then suddenly everything turned dark and now ur in an eagle nest getting eaten by a big fatt white eagle chick
The falcon mom was surprised to see the bird still alive and kicking ... It focused on it as soon as it arrives and put the finishing touch on the bird ... Falcon chick was panicking from all the screaming the bird was letting out didn't know what to do.
I just had an imagination, imagine if you were just chilling and all of a sudden something catches you and you get thrown into their house while getting beat up by a giant baby.
I love how Xavier’s all like “Son, why haven’t you killed the bird I brought back for you” And the chick is like “It’s screaming at me father, I don’t know what to do.”
@@KostyaTM he must’ve been working in the black market(considering his violent tendencies) , that’s why he’s been downgraded by god to become a smaller creature on earth. 😂
Kinda reminds me of our farm cats when I was younger. Momma cat would bring back live mice, ground squirrels, and young rabbits for the kittens to practice on. At least the kittens didn't waste time like this baby falcon.. There were a few times she'd dump live prey in my lap, step back and just look at me, and I'd be like really! lol ofc I'd toss it to the kittens, who'd rip it apart like a pack of served wolves lol. It was always funny when one of them would be at it, and another kitten would approach, and they'd start growling and snarling to back off. When they weren't busy ripping rodents apart, they were the cutest damn fluff balls.
The cat's favorite pastime is to bring prey into the house and brag, if it is also a pity to bring a live bird. And if there are rodents, then you run away yourself..lol
Yeah. I still remember the screaming of that big fat rat captured by my cat and brought to her kittens, the lil bit of hunting practice and only sounds of chewing and broken bones. After some around 3-4 minutes the only thing they've left of that rat was a tail
Fun fact: Only one chick grows in eagle and falcons nest. The other ones are usually pushed outside by the first born. I got my pet eagle when I was waiting under the tall coconut tree,it fell from the tree to a comfy place. I live in a country where its legal to make them pets.
This is not true. Peregrine Falcons do not commit siblicide. For evidence check out the the history of the channel from where this video came from and last year's breeding season for 'Melbourne CBD Falcons' (another site that will soon start live streaming Peregrin Falcons that live on a high rise building in Melbourne, Australia). The falcon chick in this video had one sibling who ended up being too weak to survive. Three eggs were laid in the clutch and the third egg did not hatch and can be seen in this video.
@@Matagu1 In this case it's not even a fact - peregrine falcons do not commit siblicide. Other birds of prey do - ospreys, for example. Also we cannot judge nature by our own standards. It's just the way it is and the way nature survives. It's up to humans to change their ways to ensure that nature can survive.
@@KostyaTM Do you not understand empathy?... it's just putting yourself into the perspective of another being. Obviously, you know it'll be painful and scary, it's in the video, but it's the thought of something like this befalling you in real life when one would never expect it. It's real but a scary thought
@@RipsharkTV There is no point in imagining and presenting yourself in their place. We are not masochists and perverted to think about it .. isn't it?
*Imagine the agony of that bird, wings broken and eaten alive. This is equivalent to you having your hands and feet cut off and on the mercy of a cannibal ready to eat you while you're fully awake and alert. I bet you'd be screaming hard as well like what that bird did.*
Feel bad for that little bird but it is nature. And the falcon chick is having a hard time to finish it. 'Ok this is too much for me. I'll wait for parents' Parents 'Hey why aren't you eating? come here'
It's a bit grim.... but I don't feel sorry for the rotten prey here. That is an introduced species - a major pest. They breed like rats, invades houses and they aggressively drive off native species from nesting sites [that are impacted by human action on the land too].
@@BTW... if it wasn't for fucking humans the poor little bird wouldn't be here. Its not the birds fault some stupid humans released them. This however is natural falcons eat little birds like this but she should of killed it first. Not only was the falcon baby struggling but the poor little chick was petrified.
@@aylasthyston611 is wrong, in more than one way. I stated "pest" and "introduced". You didn't even bother to google search the bio-security pest alerts issued by every Australian State Authority regarding this species - European Starling. It's not only Australia, this species is also considered an invasive, introduced, pest on the North American Continent. You will learn more than the facts of the matter pertaining to an Australian context IF YOU DO research before parroting misinformation... but I suspect you are ignorant and lazy, so... these quotes follow: Are starlings a pest in Australia? "The starling is a significant economic pest overseas and in Australia, causing severe damage to high-value fruit crops, especially cherries and all varieties of grape. They consume and spoil livestock feed, affecting intensive cattle, pig and poultry production." Do starlings carry disease? "Starlings carry a host of diseases, many transferable to livestock, but several that can infect humans. Five bacterial diseases, two fungal diseases, four protozoan diseases, and six viral diseases may potentially be transmitted to humans and other animals by starlings." Are starlings invasive? "European Starlings are one of the world's most successful invasive species. Known to compete with native bird species for nest sites, they may also compete with ground-foraging insectivores and other grassland species."
Imagine being slowly killed by a tiny cloud.
Still, he needs to get bigger to do it.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣
lmfao
🤣🤣🤣 Nice joke bro 👍👍👍
I love how the momma comes back with ANOTHER Bird just to see her kid hasn't even touched the other one. Its like a mom getting ready for dinner only to find their kid hasn't eaten their sandwich cause it has the crusts on
It must be hard to eat something that’s screaming back at you. He just looks like he doesn’t know what he is doing…
I think this is the father, Xavier, in this video. The mother, Di, is much larger and slightly different colouring.
They stash food, they won't pass up the opportunity because they just had food, they will just eat again. Today it's 2 in a row but maybe tomorrow it's nothing
@@amandarios448 Yes, they will have food caches stored around the place with prey saved up for a 'rainy' day. Izzi has been seen to stash food in corners of the scrape...only to be removed by Xavier or Di a short time later. :-)
Bread is crust
I love how the mom came back in with another bird and the baby said "Mom I can't eat it. It's making noises. Help me"
Mom said look how it should be done and immediately it became quiet...
Just to let you know, that is Dad who is delivering meals not Mom. In falcons, the males are smaller and that male is about the size of those chicks. My guess is that the chick is a female and it is dad bringing in food.
@@jordanjtbraun Nestling Izzi detailed information on the channel for video th-cam.com/video/qbPu_rcU79c/w-d-xo.html
I thought it was saying, "can I start with the eyes?" I'm not sure I don't speak bird all that well.
@@Gary-And-His-Demons I'm not sure about the eyes, but it was definitely aimed at the lips ... lol
*mom leaves
Baby falcon- takes foot off prey "hey sorry about that, mom scares me too"
Yet she returned to his aid, unlike the starling.
This is the father bringing the prey in this video. The mother of this particular chick is much larger.
@@travelphotos7662 she's a thicc lady hahahaha
@@KostyaTM can you not lol
@@Liyahhbabyyy she thicc tho
If i was that bird, I'd limp my way out and fall to my death to avoid getting eaten.
@Overlord Laharl C'mon lighten up! 😏
Only the get snatched up mid air and brought back lol
@@JazzieHERO lol. Sounds like my luck 😂
@@JazzieHERO lol
I thought that tooo
"Or maybe across the belly, spilling your intestines. The point is, you are alive when they start to eat you. So you know, try to show a little respect."
- Alan Grant, Jurassic Park
The falcon would consider it a great respect if the starling independently made himself a hara-kiri
That's exactly what came to MY mind...
Dr Grant was right all along haha
They are all living until they are killed.
Raptors 😂 I love it.
Those falcons build some pretty impressive nests.
I would say that people helped... The nest is installed on the water tower of Charles Sturt University near Orange New South Wales. Australia.
@@KostyaTM That was a joke.😅
Impressive for a bird. Drywall’s a little sloppy, though.
@@jizzmatic2000 Well, for so many years the plywood has faded and the birds have helped
Underrated joke 😅
Bird: [Screaming in absolute terror and pain]
Flacon Chick: "i have forgotten the process of eating."
At least the falcon chick is being raised by a loving mother.
But, and somewhere, they were left without care mom
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Instinct. Not love. Birds act on pure instinct and programming. They don't love anymore than an insect or your Roomba does.
Ever watch a kid struggle to open a ketchup packet? Yeah here ya go..
😂😂😂😂
Heaven: You have to suffer on earth before to get here
Bird: ... Is this enough???
know what the bird answered, we can when we get there ourselves
There's no heaven. All a bunch of lies created to tame the weak of intelect in a way they don't interfere in the smart one's business by believing they go to heaven if they behave "properly".
@@MarcosSilveira I agree with you no matter what kind of religion it is. All religions are just in order to keep people in fear, and those who disagree with them were sent to the fire or chopped off their heads..And yet I think that in the universe not only our planet is inhabited by people. Just looking at the sky and seeing all these stars...
@@KostyaTM there are religions that are not based on fear... and not based on heaven or hell
@@KostyaTM actually, religion was conceived as a way to explain the world and universe around us, provide agreed upon social mores, and so on. The funny thing is you’re doing the same thing despite the obvious disdain for religion. Anti-religious people are some of the most ideological and religious people you will ever find, tied usually by religious diehards and fanatical fundamentalist loonies. After all, both are completely sure they are right and usually wallowing in ignorance. Want an example? The first people to propose life on other planets were theologians. It was fundamentalists that burned them at the stake-today anti-religious people refuse to recognize they even existed, essentially finishing the work the fundamentalists started. Good job....
Imagine being out with your family and friends and you get picked off by a larger predator who is faster and stronger than you. Then you get beaten badly to a pulp where you are still alive but you can’t fight back or run away. Damn nature, you scary!
Nature is nature, and I would not compare, because they have different morals of life.
KostyaTM Not all. Some humans are dangerous animals too.
@@TheViewer01 Yes, there are only these are not people, but creatures that are worse than animals. After all, animals do so in order to survive.
So cute*
Poor little things :'(((( So cruel, it hurts even watching this
I love how confused the little guy is, it knows by instinct what to do but its yet too weak to do it in a efficient manner.
Its kind of macabre, but I always think its funny how confused baby hawks are when parents bring them live prey because they don't know how to kill yet and just look at it like, "Why is my food screaming?"
We are so use to talking Disney animals but this is the real world.
Correctly noticed in real life, not everything is as rosy as in the cartoon
and thats a big problem.
@@lindinleAlas, life is hard but fortunately short
@@KostyaTM not you what the OP said. most people dont realize the reality.
I mean, Donald is pretty savage.
Geezus. A baby bird trying to kill and eat an adult bird of another species.
This is the nature of the falcon and starling one hunter another prey
thats how the mafia work
@@ghostoperationswithcheukgu9844 Yeah, air mafia in action😉
@@KostyaTM 🤣
Cool huh?
Nature is tough on the weak. That baby is learning no mercy at a young age
It is true that it is not his fault that he has it in his genes.
There is no such things like "mercy" and etc... these are humans concepts, in nature, there is just, life and death.
I agree, but the video is watched by people with human emotions.
@@KostyaTM Survival of your species is put to the test everyday that leaves no room for second guessing. Being an apex predator is a violent life, you sleep, hunt, fight, kill and eat your enemies as they die in your hands every single day. But there is a psychological effect for animalistic behaviour, because why can beasts bears, lions, killer whales be tamed to live harmoniously?
@@jakenorthbriz No matter how much you remake the predators, no matter how much you do them good or what you yourself consider necessary for these animals, they will still do as they see fit, they will be subject to their own instincts and lifestyle in the wild, one wrong move can become dangerous...In our country, there is an expression "No matter how much the wolf you feed, it still looks into the forest"
He was trying to eat his tongue out!! Poor little bird! That confused little falcon chick was pretty cute though! "Now how am I gonna eat this? It's making noise and moving all over the place!"
Falcon to starling, I did everything I could, now you lie in the corner until mom comes back...
Lol
Yeah I guess that's why the parent brings it to them alive sometimes so they can practice hunting and eating moving prey.. at least that's what one of these channels said in a similar event
That's because baby birds are used to being fed food from the parent birds beak. So it was learning how to exchange upwards in the food receiving process.
She came back was just like, “ugh you spoiled brat, so I have to do everything for you?! FINE, this is the last time!” 😂
It's good that your father was not at home, otherwise you were left without dinner at all ... said mom😋
I told you not to play with your dinner. You wait till your father gets home.
Aga with your friends@@mickeyscott1054 and show you how real men act.
@@KostyaTM Aga ?
@@mickeyscott1054 There is such an expression in Russian...When you want to agree with your interlocutor or answer his question in the affirmative, you say "aha" colloquial use instead of a neutral "yes."
10/10 Mother came in and handled business. Both those birds went out in complete terror lol
I think it’s nice that the mother stopped the birds suffering instead of just letting it suffer more like other birds
That bird suffered for about 10 minutes and the only reason she killed this because she was hungry and had to feed her baby lol
@@jessicahill6418 ... But also because the screaming could attract other predators.
@@GarrisIiariand it could annoy the Neighbor's
I believe this is the father, named Xavier, bringing unprepared prey and later returning to finish off the kill. The mother, named Di, is much larger, and with different colouring. The chick is named Izzi. It was only one that survived out of a clutch of three eggs. A second egg hatched but the chick was too weak to survive. The third can be seen in this video and did not hatch. Siblicide was not involved. Peregrine Falcons do not commit siblicide - it's usually quite harmonious in the nest when there is more than one chick.
Izzi is still hanging around and getting in the way after 10 months (to do the day). He is still demanding food and stealing food from his parents, even though he can hunt for himself.
Yes, I saw today's video on the Cilla Kinross channel of Izzi demanding food from Xavier
Nature is brutal
Travel Photos thanks for the info on this nest.
Of course it's the dad! 😂 This is such a dad thing to do. "Hey kid heres a live bird. You have to learn how to kill. Good luck!"
Typical zoomer. Lol
Baby is like : C'mon bruh dont make this harder than it has to be.
Parent: Note to self - make sure the prey is dead before leaving again.
Yes, otherwise it will inadvertently fly out and the whole hunt will go in vain
Reminds me of the Bald Eagle cam. I think it was the father that brought in a duck that he hadn’t killed and the moment he turned away to tend to the others the duck flew off.
@@Sirvikrail Nature was more supportive of the duck there than the starling here.
The mother: I have to do everything by myself here...
funny if it weren't so sad...
😂😂
Except this is the father, who in this nest can be a little clueless. The mother is much much larger and brought 'prepared' prey (de-feather) and fed the chick. The chick in this nest is, unfortunately, still hanging around after 10 months and still demanding food. It can hunt for itself but it will take the food from its parents (like, steal the food from its parents). The new breeding season is here and the parents are bonding and mating and their youngster from last year is still getting in the way,
That bird is screaming like, "HEEEEEELP... I AM ALIVE IN HERE" lol
What fascinates me, is that mom falcon can have a bird whenever she wants...
She got speed and sharp claws
Mom: comes back looking at the previous prey.
Baby: Mom its moving.
MOM: don't worry.
It is fascinating how the little chick is trying to eat without having any idea of what to do.
Thats fucked up. Imagine being in that situation. Get delivered to a giant baby that doesn't know how to kill properly yet, then the daddy just waiting/blocking at the entrance like....you're not coming out of this bud.
Why imagine something, you can just turn on the film and watch about the great cannibals...
circle of life. aint gotta like it. just gotta respect it.
The kid's gotta learn to learn how to kill...
It is what it is
Coming to humanity near you when food and water become scarce - just like it's beginning now - enjoy -
The mother knew she had paralyzed the prey and it was no danger to her chick.
Quite intelligent.
But she displayed no compassion for the injured bird by killing it quickly, instead allowing it to scream and suffer. So this creature is either sadistic, or has no capacity to feel such emotions. That being the case, if it has no emotions then it can also not feel love or hate or anything else. It would simply just be responding to stimuli, acting on instinct which is hardwired into it's brain. So if it's chicks died it would simply fly off and try again, with no mourning or sadness at it's lost children. Is this the case? Birds can certainly feel fear (as this vid shows) - so if they can feel fear, what other emotions can they feel?
@@ProducerO read the comment beyond the first sentence.
@@ejkalegal3145 pretty sure the bird is left somewhat alive so that the chick is exposed to some form of practice killing its prey. The chick simply cannot be spoon fed, then expected to survive. I don't think it was personal. 😅
@@ejkalegal3145It's not sadistic, it's teaching it's child to eat moving prey. It's pretty common. These animals do not have the capacity to be sadistic or have compassion. They don't even understand the finality of death or the idea that they could try to imagine what it's like to be in the other bird's shoes.
They don't even have shoes! But seriously you got to stop looking at this through a human lens. They don't have capacity for empathy.
@@ejkalegal3145scientists do use the term emotions to describe animals state of mind but it's important not to confuse that with human emotions. You're right they can get fearful and confused and excited... But they don't think about it like that. They're just trying to survive.
They don't understand that their prey is having a bad time. It's irrelevant to them. They simply do not have the capacity to think like that. It's good that you do It shows you have empathy but births just don't so We shouldn't judge.
Mom: "Here's your food. It might cry and beg for mercy while you're eating it alive. Enjoy."
That's a hard core lesson right there.
Gotta learn sometime lol
Dam
Imagine you on your way to feed your babies and get snatched up by a Falcon to be fed to her baby 😅. This is truly the circle of life
I know, it’s so cute
Say that with a smile in WW3 when ye are on the menu.
"Oh Jesus Christ, mum! Not another bird! Can't we have a mouse or frog or something now and again?"
Alas, they mainly brought him birds and even parrots...( sometimes parents brought cicadas th-cam.com/video/7pLDsFFraAk/w-d-xo.html
" now now don't be picky. And stop playing with your food. Now eat up,c'mon. Your dad will coming home soon. (Muttering hope he didn't stop by his mates again)"
He was just bored alone in the nest, his parents flew away but his brother was gone so he found himself a new friend, one of the parents returned and ruined the holiday
"Shut up and eat".
@@jibranbaloch7650 poor vidieo
It's kind of interesting to see it go for the beak, even though that's probably the worst place. I wonder if it's due to them being used to taking food from their mother's beak.
The protruding parts of the beak and paws that he could grab onto to pull
Maybe it was like _"How am I going to eat this, it has feathers all over the place... but this mushy thing inside the beak here looks edible!"_
Looks like he was fascinated by the birds tongue and trying to grab it
I have no idea but it seems like a reasonable deduction. Every time it's eaten in the past it's come out of a beak like that.
This was more horrific than any slasher movie ever made.
Then we have to make a film on these grounds
Snakes: _has joined the lobby._
Dad came home and was like "Watcha' doin', boy? You're supposed to eat that thing, not scalp it!"
😂😂😂😂😂😂
When your kids don't finish their food and you end up eating it.
I love how fluffy it is lol. I also like how eagles will puck and feed to thier young ones and the hawk is just like here you go..figure it out haha.
Chick: mom I can't open this coconut.
Mother: fine, I will open this
Chick: maybe I can open the second one
Getting eaten by a cute, giant chick....
Unlucky, but such is the fate of a starling...
So fucking adorable
It's not cute. Look at them eyes. Devel eyes.
Terrible!
10:13 Well. That was swift and brutal. The bird's dying cry even echoed.
I use to think to fly free like a bird was so nice. But the bird world is so vicious.
Yes, not a bird of prey flying should constantly think and be on guard that a threat constantly hangs over its life. .. It's horrible.
Just be the bigger bird, you'll be fine. Nothing messes with an owl so long as you can survive past fledging.
Mama bird: dont forget to feed the kids tonight , make sure its fully cooked
Dad: yeah yeah but I got a game to watch later on at the homie nest ...im sure little one can kill it on its own....oh shit... better finish this before mama finds out
Dad seems like a good hunter.
Food: Cute fluffy!
Baby: Ma, food is talking.
Kids always play with their food, never fails.
Crazy how quick the mother caught the second bird
Caring as if she has more than one chick
It goes without saying that both parents flew in prey.
@Hailey Kulstad It looks like an adult starling so maybe she caught in the air
And the starlings snatch smaller birds from their nests. So goes the cycle of life..
Beautiful view outside the nest. Looks like a golf course.
nest coordinates www.google.ru/maps/@-33.2443804,149.1118992,3a,15y,119.22h,92.5t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sNK3wYrreIoMj3i1rXzdGjw!2e0!7i13312!8i6656
Watching babies eat is so adorable. What a cutie pie he is.
Well, mom surely shut that poor bird up real quick when she came back! She likes a nice & quiet nest.
Yes, she did so, although when she returned, she was perplexed that the starling was alive 9:59
" I like my birds well done not rare mom." - Baby Chick
Mother Falcon returns : 😑😑😑... "Stop playing with your food! What you say? You don't know how to kill it?!?!? Fine! I will do it myself"
Thank you, it was a really wonderful voiceover of the events taking place in the nest...lol
The mother falcon be going thanos mode
Imagine being a full grown adult and dragged around like a ragdoll by a toddler.
imagine being that small bird
chilling flying around, probably chirp2 at some female bird along the way and then suddenly everything turned dark and now ur in an eagle nest getting eaten by a big fatt white eagle chick
Let's look at it exclusively from the point of view of birds...no one in their right mind will even think about it not that to represent
Loool
He's not fat, he's fluffy
@@crisdanai right..at least someone guessed lol
Ummmmmm it’s not an eagle.
Is it just me or is that baby agiant.
The falcon mom was surprised to see the bird still alive and kicking ... It focused on it as soon as it arrives and put the finishing touch on the bird ... Falcon chick was panicking from all the screaming the bird was letting out didn't know what to do.
Yes, and I also think so about his mother, but the chick knew, but because of his age, he himself could not butcher the starling
Imagine eating someone that still cry.
The absolute panic it goes into once the parent returns... Brutal man
It was euphoria, after a long and unsuccessful attempt to cope with the food myself.
The bird for breakfast was saying, Get the falcon out of here.
I just had an imagination, imagine if you were just chilling and all of a sudden something catches you and you get thrown into their house while getting beat up by a giant baby.
Lol, where did the little falcon think its meals came from???
Yes, for his age, she was too lively...lol
That is a starling mimicking the sound of a falcon-possibly trying to throw the chick off. Starlings and crows can mimic sounds just like parrots.
No way. That;s just the sound starlings make when they're in pain and scared.
@@shiva72945 - your comment is an opinion. Most blackbirds operate like this but you come here typing "no way"
I love how Xavier’s all like “Son, why haven’t you killed the bird I brought back for you”
And the chick is like “It’s screaming at me father, I don’t know what to do.”
“Mmmm, newborn chicks. You can never eat just one!”
That's why mom took care and brought another one..
Delicious
“Junior! Stop playing with your food!! Starving falcons in China would be happy to have that!”
Everytime the bird attempts to flee, it ends up on its back, staring junior right in the beak.
Mother bird returns to nest: "You still haven't eaten your food?"
Baby bird: *stares blankly*
Mother bird: *sighs* "Fine. I'll show you how to do it."
Bird was begging for mercy.
The shock killed the baby starling, that’s the thing with falcons, the chicks have to be fed dead food until they can hunt
Once a wise person said.
"There are no accidents"
This is the way of life
The parent was like: If you're gonna play with your food, then I AM gonna eat it.😂
Mom flew back in like "Oh shit hes still alive 😭😭 sorry son... *proceeds to kill small bird*
Fresh out of med school and trying to perform a surgery 🤣
Lol, yeah did not wait for the curator's doctor, but nothing good came of it..
The human doctor that died and was reborn a baby falcon 🤣 .. “hmm I’ve never been a Vet before but let’s try it out.”
@@cheusingher8734 Apparently, the operation was unsuccessful. It's good that he is no longer a doctor!
@@KostyaTM he must’ve been working in the black market(considering his violent tendencies) , that’s why he’s been downgraded by god to become a smaller creature on earth. 😂
@@cheusingher8734 Apparently, he still has a penchant for violence. So next life will be a worm closer to hell
Kinda reminds me of our farm cats when I was younger. Momma cat would bring back live mice, ground squirrels, and young rabbits for the kittens to practice on. At least the kittens didn't waste time like this baby falcon.. There were a few times she'd dump live prey in my lap, step back and just look at me, and I'd be like really! lol
ofc I'd toss it to the kittens, who'd rip it apart like a pack of served wolves lol. It was always funny when one of them would be at it, and another kitten would approach, and they'd start growling and snarling to back off. When they weren't busy ripping rodents apart, they were the cutest damn fluff balls.
The cat's favorite pastime is to bring prey into the house and brag, if it is also a pity to bring a live bird. And if there are rodents, then you run away yourself..lol
Yeah. I still remember the screaming of that big fat rat captured by my cat and brought to her kittens, the lil bit of hunting practice and only sounds of chewing and broken bones. After some around 3-4 minutes the only thing they've left of that rat was a tail
@@sergeypopov801Ugh I'm even scared to imagine this crunching of bones. lol
@@KostyaTM Weird comments....
And this is why cats are responsible for nearly 40 extinctions and counting. Thanks.
Aww it's so white and fuzzy it's like a little cotton ball!
I really starting to believe this is hell.
Why?
@@joelempania6385 , eating alive no fun
It is. This is the devil's Kingdom. Heaven is on the other side of the ice walls
Only food I had that fought back was taco bell! Merciless!!
Alas, in my country there are no such restaurants for me to experience this too..lol
@@KostyaTM what country are you from just wondering about the fast food comnent
Very underrated… also very true.
What good practice for the baby falcon. Hard to not feel bad for the little birds but this is facts of life. And the circle goes around!
Like another predator can come along and eat them.....
Its unfair, thats an adult bird being fed to a much larger baby bird...its like a full grown man being fed to a baby that is twice his sizE!
Falcon cloud chick thing:How do I even-
Live bird:ÆEEEE
Falcon cloud chick thing:OMG SHUT UP
Well that's 10 and a half minutes of straight DAMN.
Dad came back like " .... Dude tf you been doing ? Nothing huh ? Get your fatass back and let me handle this" all with another bird in his fist😂
Sounds like my great ,great grandfather. When he was warming up to walk-around
Everyone sees their own..lol
Falcon Mom: "I brought this to you to eat, not to practice kissing!"
Fun fact: Only one chick grows in eagle and falcons nest. The other ones are usually pushed outside by the first born.
I got my pet eagle when I was waiting under the tall coconut tree,it fell from the tree to a comfy place. I live in a country where its legal to make them pets.
This is not true. Peregrine Falcons do not commit siblicide. For evidence check out the the history of the channel from where this video came from and last year's breeding season for 'Melbourne CBD Falcons' (another site that will soon start live streaming Peregrin Falcons that live on a high rise building in Melbourne, Australia). The falcon chick in this video had one sibling who ended up being too weak to survive. Three eggs were laid in the clutch and the third egg did not hatch and can be seen in this video.
This is not a FUN fact. Its called "Horrible" fact.
@@Matagu1 In this case it's not even a fact - peregrine falcons do not commit siblicide. Other birds of prey do - ospreys, for example. Also we cannot judge nature by our own standards. It's just the way it is and the way nature survives. It's up to humans to change their ways to ensure that nature can survive.
Brb I'm going to wait under a tree now
The bird never tried to get away . . .
Imagine the horror being captured, flown up high to some crazy looking things nest and then picked apart while still alive
You don't need to imagine anything, just observe their life and nature.
@@KostyaTM I think imagine means imagine yourself in that situation. First -person.
@@NYCNUF Why do this because the answer is already known in advance
@@KostyaTM Do you not understand empathy?... it's just putting yourself into the perspective of another being. Obviously, you know it'll be painful and scary, it's in the video, but it's the thought of something like this befalling you in real life when one would never expect it. It's real but a scary thought
@@RipsharkTV There is no point in imagining and presenting yourself in their place. We are not masochists and perverted to think about it .. isn't it?
“So this is how it ends, a big giant baby kills me, figures.”
Falcons are just born badasses
But there are still exceptions, even among adult falcons. th-cam.com/video/Aa-mfwDrAiE/w-d-xo.html
MOM, you were supposed to eat that, BABY, but it bit me mom
I can’t imagine if a Raven come in for dinner.
and elsewhere in another nest is a mom heartbroken over two missing chicks.
*Imagine the agony of that bird, wings broken and eaten alive. This is equivalent to you having your hands and feet cut off and on the mercy of a cannibal ready to eat you while you're fully awake and alert. I bet you'd be screaming hard as well like what that bird did.*
@Young Soldier23 still a bird eating another bird.
@@Chestnut1998
So? That's no cannibalisms. Is it cannibalisms for a person to eat a cow? They're both mammals.
@@MrNote-lz7lh different species, not the same.
More like at the mercy of a rabid gorilla; even worse
Hawks number in the thousands but the starlings and sparrows number in the billions. So I say, bring it on.
Mum delivers live prey
Baby: Errr....
Mum: Go figure
Chick: But I can't do it without your help
Mom: Why haven't you eaten your dinner?
Baby: It keeps screaming at me!
Feel bad for that little bird but it is nature.
And the falcon chick is having a hard time to finish it. 'Ok this is too much for me. I'll wait for parents'
Parents 'Hey why aren't you eating? come here'
your mother is a nature.
It's a bit grim.... but I don't feel sorry for the rotten prey here. That is an introduced species - a major pest. They breed like rats, invades houses and they aggressively drive off native species from nesting sites [that are impacted by human action on the land too].
@@BTW... if it wasn't for fucking humans the poor little bird wouldn't be here. Its not the birds fault some stupid humans released them.
This however is natural falcons eat little birds like this but she should of killed it first. Not only was the falcon baby struggling but the poor little chick was petrified.
@@BTW... another thing the video uploaded has said in one of their comments it is a starling. Starlings are not an invasive species.
@@aylasthyston611 is wrong, in more than one way. I stated "pest" and "introduced".
You didn't even bother to google search the bio-security pest alerts issued by every Australian State Authority regarding this species - European Starling.
It's not only Australia, this species is also considered an invasive, introduced, pest on the North American Continent.
You will learn more than the facts of the matter pertaining to an Australian context IF YOU DO research before parroting misinformation... but I suspect you are ignorant and lazy, so... these quotes follow:
Are starlings a pest in Australia?
"The starling is a significant economic pest overseas and in Australia, causing severe damage to high-value fruit crops, especially cherries and all varieties of grape. They consume and spoil livestock feed, affecting intensive cattle, pig and poultry production."
Do starlings carry disease?
"Starlings carry a host of diseases, many transferable to livestock, but several that can infect humans. Five bacterial diseases, two fungal diseases, four protozoan diseases, and six viral diseases may potentially be transmitted to humans and other animals by starlings."
Are starlings invasive?
"European Starlings are one of the world's most successful invasive species. Known to compete with native bird species for nest sites, they may also compete with ground-foraging insectivores and other grassland species."
That little falcon chick will have to remind their mom or dad that they don't want their food raw next time
somewhat surprised as he was Way too young here to manage any defeather much less a kill.
Yes it is true, it was not difficult for an adult falcon to deal with him, he was also surprised to see a live starling
It also looks like it still had the instinct to go for the beak, like it was grabbing food from its parents.
@@piranhaplantX If you look closely, he knew what to do. He just didn't have the strength to tear him apart.
Meanwhile, the other egg just sits there, and probably dies