Beautiful camera work. I think there may actually be three species here, Common Buzzard ( Buteo buteo) an immature Goshawk ( Accipiter Gentiles) and what looks like an immature Rough Legged Buzzard (Buteo lagopus) , the bird with the pale head and mostly white tail. They breed throughout Scandinavia.
Beautiful footage:- In order Rough Legged (lighter colour, black elbow patches, black belly band) Common Buzzard (black wing tips) Goshawk on carcass (fierce yellow eyes, light feathery legs, aggressive)
Fascinating interaction with that Goshawk in control of the situation. Your Musvak(dark) is what we refer to in Canada as a Red Tailed Hawk and the Fjellvak(light) resembles our Ferruginous Hawk but I only had a quick glimpse. So many subspecies! Interesting once Goshawk had them both away from prey decides her crop is full enough and takes off. Cheers , Apprentice Falconer Canada
The Ferruginous Hawk ( Buteo regalis )is very much like the Common Buzzard (Butous butous). The Buzzard prefers carrion, where as the Ferruginous Hawk seems to be more proactive in his food choices.
Not entirely true, both will choose carrion over live prey (as do eagles and any bird with more than 1 braincell) but the CB will hunt adult rabbits regularly if that is their available prey. I watched them do just that last week in fact! Red Tails are used widely over here, Ferruginous not so much as they are less useful off the fist at short range plus our brown hares are a little too big for their comparatively small feet. Ferrutail hybrids are fantastic on hares though.
Myxomatosis wiped out the population of rabbits in UK and that is when the Common Buzzard developed its reputation as a carrion eater. Something I read years ago so double check. As a falconer in United States I fly a Harris's Hawk and a Red-tailed Hawk which more properly should be called Red-tailed Buzzard. Ferruginous hawks may have small feet but have an insanely powerful grip. I believe the small foot may have evolved to aid in yanking prairie dogs out of holes.
You have the "fjellvak" in Canada too, it's called Rough-legged Hawk! Or Rough-legged Buzzard in Europe, it's one of a few raptors native to both continents
Rough legged buzzards also exist in Canada. Common buzzards don't but are very similar. Red tail and ferruginous are related but not the same (bigger, different calls and plumage).
Hi Arnicadesembets, i use manual focus. It helps with a good 7inch monitor with focus peaking but it is also a lot off pratice as they fly very fast;-)
Fantastic video came over from Trond’s channel have hit the like button and pressed the bell full watch time and supported your channel am looking forward to following you keep up your excellent work
3 Beautifull birds of preyspecies. Common Buzzards, a Young very dominant Goshawk, and a Mountain Buzzard. Was there a dead animal among the branches in the Grass?
Im from central europe, and here everybody spits on Buzzards saying that they are lazy, slow and weak hunters. The thruth is that Buzzards win almost every fight against northern Goshawks and others birds of prey similar in size. They are useless in falconry but they are very very good fighters on the ground, often having dozens of fights over carcasses. Just look on youtube videos and you will see that Buzzards are much more stronger fighters then Goshawks, they also often steal prey from Owls attacking juvenile Ospreys, fighting Herons and there are also videos of attacks on people! Goshawk is better hunter but Buzzard is better fighter.
They have their uses, just not particularly well suited to being flown off the fist at the quarry most falconers want to catch on the kind of farmland they have access to. I imagine they would be a well matched bird for smaller American Leporids in more open spaces. Where I live the increased CB numbers have had a massive impact on hare numbers as they are ruthless with juveniles, even up to a decent size. Seen some impressive stoops which made me think of CBs a bit differently, they definitely didn't look lazy or useless!
Sorry but just not true at all. Where I am from in North Yorkshire, England, we have fair numbers of both birds. No Buzzard matches a female Goshawk. Not even close. Too fast, aggressive and strong. Totally different birds. Are you sure your Goshawks are not Sparrowhawks? They are often mis-identified. The complete difference in their prey species should tell you how different these birds are.
Goshawks have different sizes according to the regions and of course male or female. And in nature, size matters. So, it is hard to generalize. Here was no question the young Goshawk was more aggressive. It was also big.
That's amazing! Was that music playing out there while it happened? But presumably really fast so that when you converted footage to slo-mo the music changed to correct time? I'm speechless!
@@steinareileraasnaturefilms thank you my friend for answering me ... I appreciate it .... can you provide me the Hide Name or Website ... thanks again
read in a birding book that you can tell by the eye color. adult buzzards have coffee brown eyes. juvenile buzzards have light grey irises. goshawks have yellow eyes, males red..
It was very dangerous. The goshawk could simply kill and devour them. On the ground, a goshawk will crush anyone. In addition to very large eagles and an eagle owl.
Buzzards are generally much more dominant on the ground. Goshawks are forest dwelling ambush predators, without decent cover they are at a disadvantage to other birds of prey. Not saying a goshawk couldn’t theoretically hold its own against a buzzard but I don’t it would bother picking a fight without the element of surprise
What wonderful footage to view, the interaction of beautiful raptors never ceases to amaze me. Thanks for posting and sharing your stunning footage.
Beautiful camera work. I think there may actually be three species here, Common Buzzard ( Buteo buteo) an immature Goshawk ( Accipiter Gentiles) and what looks like an immature Rough Legged Buzzard (Buteo lagopus) , the bird with the pale head and mostly white tail. They breed throughout Scandinavia.
Indeed I agree !
The scientific name of the palearctic goshawk is actually now Astur gentilis.
That was amazing! Beautiful capture!
What a capture!!!! Incredible behaviour as well !! Massive thumbs up from me 👍👍
Simply beautiful! Great capture of this rarely seen moment!
Wow, wonderful video. Beautiful videography, great editing, and a musical score that is dramatic but not overbearing. Subscribed. Thank you.
What a great video. Some really cool shots of these birds and the music fits well. Really enjoyed this.
Beautiful footage:-
In order
Rough Legged (lighter colour, black elbow patches, black belly band)
Common Buzzard (black wing tips)
Goshawk on carcass (fierce yellow eyes, light feathery legs, aggressive)
Wow great footage!!
Absolutely stunning footage.
Goshawk has that piercing yellow eye, the one to rule them all.
I really enjoyed watching the video.
🤩Spectacular! 👍
Great capture 😍
Nice! Looks great.
Beautiful video !!!
Great video! Thank you for sharing.
Seriously ! Finally some decent background music ! Usually have to mute most TH-cam videos. The music is perfect for this video.
Really lovey shots of the birds thank you. Such beautiful animals.
Awesome footage!
Beautiful images!
Fascinating interaction with that Goshawk in control of the situation. Your Musvak(dark) is what we refer to in Canada as a Red Tailed Hawk and the Fjellvak(light) resembles our Ferruginous Hawk but I only had a quick glimpse. So many subspecies! Interesting once Goshawk had them both away from prey decides her crop is full enough and takes off. Cheers , Apprentice Falconer Canada
The Ferruginous Hawk ( Buteo regalis )is very much like the Common Buzzard (Butous butous). The Buzzard prefers carrion, where as the Ferruginous Hawk seems to be more proactive in his food choices.
Not entirely true, both will choose carrion over live prey (as do eagles and any bird with more than 1 braincell) but the CB will hunt adult rabbits regularly if that is their available prey. I watched them do just that last week in fact!
Red Tails are used widely over here, Ferruginous not so much as they are less useful off the fist at short range plus our brown hares are a little too big for their comparatively small feet. Ferrutail hybrids are fantastic on hares though.
Myxomatosis wiped out the population of rabbits in UK and that is when the Common Buzzard developed its reputation as a carrion eater. Something I read years ago so double check. As a falconer in United States I fly a Harris's Hawk and a Red-tailed Hawk which more properly should be called Red-tailed Buzzard. Ferruginous hawks may have small feet but have an insanely powerful grip. I believe the small foot may have evolved to aid in yanking prairie dogs out of holes.
You have the "fjellvak" in Canada too, it's called Rough-legged Hawk! Or Rough-legged Buzzard in Europe, it's one of a few raptors native to both continents
Rough legged buzzards also exist in Canada. Common buzzards don't but are very similar. Red tail and ferruginous are related but not the same (bigger, different calls and plumage).
nice work
That looks like a Rough legged buzzard, buzzard and goshawk, but its looks ssoo cool ❤
Beautiful
Even juvenile Goshawks are just built different
Learnt something here.
Amazing! Thanks.
hello Steinar, great video ! i have also the gh5 and i wonder how do you focus when the buzzard is coming flying ? manual focus ?
Hi Arnicadesembets, i use manual focus. It helps with a good 7inch monitor with focus peaking but it is also a lot off pratice as they fly very fast;-)
Fantastic video came over from Trond’s channel have hit the like button and pressed the bell full watch time and supported your channel am looking forward to following you keep up your excellent work
3 Beautifull birds of preyspecies. Common Buzzards, a Young very dominant Goshawk, and a Mountain Buzzard. Was there a dead animal among the branches in the Grass?
Rough legged buzzard
Im from central europe, and here everybody spits on Buzzards saying that they are lazy, slow and weak hunters. The thruth is that Buzzards win almost every fight against northern Goshawks and others birds of prey similar in size. They are useless in falconry but they are very very good fighters on the ground, often having dozens of fights over carcasses. Just look on youtube videos and you will see that Buzzards are much more stronger fighters then Goshawks, they also often steal prey from Owls attacking juvenile Ospreys, fighting Herons and there are also videos of attacks on people! Goshawk is better hunter but Buzzard is better fighter.
They have their uses, just not particularly well suited to being flown off the fist at the quarry most falconers want to catch on the kind of farmland they have access to. I imagine they would be a well matched bird for smaller American Leporids in more open spaces.
Where I live the increased CB numbers have had a massive impact on hare numbers as they are ruthless with juveniles, even up to a decent size. Seen some impressive stoops which made me think of CBs a bit differently, they definitely didn't look lazy or useless!
Sorry but just not true at all. Where I am from in North Yorkshire, England, we have fair numbers of both birds. No Buzzard matches a female Goshawk. Not even close. Too fast, aggressive and strong. Totally different birds. Are you sure your Goshawks are not Sparrowhawks? They are often mis-identified.
The complete difference in their prey species should tell you how different these birds are.
Goshawks have different sizes according to the regions and of course male or female. And in nature, size matters. So, it is hard to generalize. Here was no question the young Goshawk was more aggressive. It was also big.
That's amazing! Was that music playing out there while it happened? But presumably really fast so that when you converted footage to slo-mo the music changed to correct time? I'm speechless!
I don't know which is a buzzard or a goshawk. Please let me know.
goshawk has yellow eyes
いい顔つきですね。
Where was this video shot at? Location???
Stavanger, Norway.
I actually think there as an immature goshawk and a rough legged buzzard + buzzard
Aw right boys. There's plenty to go around. Quit fighting.
Fun fact: these guys are solitary by nature. They don’t do sharing. They’re hawks, not vultures
Damn, ever heard of a joke...??
Cheek kite ?? Benefits
Hello
Thanks for sharing more than great video ... where was that?
Is a privet place or a Hide that i can book ?
Thanks again have a nice day
Thanks :-) its an private hide close to Stavanger, Norway.
@@steinareileraasnaturefilms thank you my friend for answering me ... I appreciate it .... can you provide me the Hide Name or Website ...
thanks again
Who wins most fights buzzard or goshawk
So which was the buzzard and which were the hawk. They both looked like hawks.
Hi the goshawk is the left bird in the tumbnail. Its an juvenile goshawk...
Eagles have a somewhat yellow beak & they also have a slight downward tip at the start of their beaks.
@@metoo6247 There are no eagles in this video. Hawks and falcons can also have yellow beaks with a downward tip.
read in a birding book that you can tell by the eye color. adult buzzards have coffee brown eyes. juvenile buzzards have light grey irises. goshawks have yellow eyes, males red..
😍
Who is who
Wow. As a layman, all three looked same type of prey birds to me.
the buzzard tail feather are like a fan
Goshawk yellow eyes
It was very dangerous. The goshawk could simply kill and devour them. On the ground, a goshawk will crush anyone. In addition to very large eagles and an eagle owl.
Buzzards are generally much more dominant on the ground. Goshawks are forest dwelling ambush predators, without decent cover they are at a disadvantage to other birds of prey. Not saying a goshawk couldn’t theoretically hold its own against a buzzard but I don’t it would bother picking a fight without the element of surprise
I always thought Buzzards were vultures?
In US buzzard is colloquial for vulture. All the buteos, including the powerful Red-tailed Hawk and Ferruginous Hawk are really buzzards.
gh5 better the gopro 7 ?
Hi i dont have the gopro7, but you can not put any long lens on it so gh5 is defintlivy better for wildlife.
Giang rộng hai cánh và bay lượn nhẹ nhàng , thật đẹp !
👍👍👍
Редкие кадры
Hallo my friend,
is this your footage?! th-cam.com/video/ve6TSKWa02E/w-d-xo.html
Transkript: 00:33 - 00:37
Kind regards, Thomas
Hi, yes it is :)
3 buzzards.
Gosthawk?
Juvenile goshawk to the left in the tumbnail...
I think ppl need to get facts straight
A buzzard would destroy a gosshawk
Here speaketh a man who has never met a gos.
I have read an article about goshawks being quite difficult to br tamed because it is one of the most aggressive raptors in the world.
Which one is goshawk and which one is buzzard
?
@Shay Ogun not true, Red Tail hawks prey on Goshawks far more than vice versa..love both but it is a fact
@@tomlorenzen4062 European goshawks are bigger than american ones
Great footage!