Nice and so beautiful video. Thanks for sharing & big like
@peterbrown88807 күн бұрын
Wow!! Fantastic footage of an amazing bird.
@FocusedNatureAndWildlifeByAJ10 күн бұрын
Beautiful video ❤
@wingsanddaydreams10 күн бұрын
Such an amazing sighting of these beautiful owls! New subscriber here ✨
@FocusedNatureAndWildlifeByAJ11 күн бұрын
Wow, wonderful video and duck 🤩
@user-yf4ru7ow7f18 күн бұрын
Большое спасибо Вам за соловушку!
@RuthJohnstonaworldofgoodsАй бұрын
Adorable with loads of energy
@ramonastrempel9200Ай бұрын
😢 det er veldig trist.
@imaneayadi6975Ай бұрын
ما شاء الله روووعة
@RuthJohnstonaworldofgoodsАй бұрын
I didn't know they "sang". Beautiful and fascinating. Thanks for capturing it on video.
@SamyAzizi27002 ай бұрын
Goshawk are cannibals
@Bagsgsikseerktl2 ай бұрын
Where is this
@dav61312 ай бұрын
I can understand that a Goshawk could easily kill a Sparrowhawk, but how would it catch one- I'm thinking manoeuvrability not speed!!!
@user-mo9zw3dp4iАй бұрын
The only chance a goshawk would have of catching one …is if the sparrow hawk is feasting on a kill
@sniperkota2 ай бұрын
Nice share ❤
@erkg30172 ай бұрын
Better than most vids on this platform! E
@ramonastrempel92003 ай бұрын
great, how easy these big animals run and how long steps they make. Have an nice weekend!
@jonathanhicks1403 ай бұрын
I’m waiting for the first comment from the anti’s that this must be a gamekeeper’s tame sparrowhawk & therefore this is targeted raptor persecution…..🥴😂😂
@jonathanhicks1403 ай бұрын
Apologies, should read tame Goshawk…..
@fufffufffuff3 ай бұрын
Fantastic video 😊
@dontmissthelittlethings4 ай бұрын
We see a few piping plovers here, great video.
@SteffenVadla5 ай бұрын
Flott video!
@SteffenVadla5 ай бұрын
Flott, kjekt å se!
@securethebag16136 ай бұрын
Its a hawk eat hawks world
@diegofernandezmartinez4456 ай бұрын
Hi. Do you know if the woodcock in the first clip was bobbing like that before you used your lamp on it ? I'm trying to figure out if woodcocks show this bobbing behaviour when it's dark or only during the day/when dazzled by artificial lights. I've been watching numerous woodcocks at night using a thermal imaging camera and, for now, have only ever witnessed bobbing behaviour during the day.
@oslobirder6 ай бұрын
It started bobbing after I put the lamp on it as far as I can remember
@diegofernandezmartinez4456 ай бұрын
@@oslobirder Thank you. This is very interesting. I still need to find and watch jack snipes feeding at night to see if they bob in the dark. If they don't, it could corroborate the hypothesis that the bobbing behaviour is mainly/only used in light conditions and therefore probably a response to the stress of being seen by predators or an intraspecific communication method, although I've witnessed isolated woodcocks and jack snipes bob like this so communication is less probable...
@oslobirder6 ай бұрын
I have read somewhere that the reason behind bobbing is to show predators that you have been sighted. I have also a Common Snipe bobbing kzread.info/dash/bejne/d6GkxNSyoMS3mJs.htmlsi=SFyFn9zeFCKawNb0
@diegofernandezmartinez4456 ай бұрын
@@oslobirder Yes I saw your video of the Common Snipe, it's great ! Did that snipe see you or were you in a hide ? Indeed, it could very well be a form of stotting which could have evolved because it shows the predator that the bird is fit and aware of its presence. However, in most cases, species like Common and Jack Snipe or Woodcocks respond to the presence of a potential predator by freezing and rely on their camouflage before flushing if the predator gets too close. They only exhibit the bobbing behaviour when they are relaxed enough to walk and/or feed, not when they are scared of a predator closing in on them. And I can't really imagine how a predator (aerial most of the time) would be deterred from attacking a small bird bobbing on the ground, makes it even more conspicuous and doesn't say anything about its ability to escape... Either way, it's a fascinating topic. Thank you for your videos.
@oslobirder6 ай бұрын
I was in my car but had been seen I am sure
@OrigamiPhoenix7 ай бұрын
I just realized brown creepers have pointed tail feathers with reinforced shafts so they can prop themselves up in the same way woodpeckers do.
@SailorPupitar7 ай бұрын
Aw man
@HelloSirHowCanIScamYouToday7 ай бұрын
Size matters among the predator birds
@birdgangs7 ай бұрын
I read that firecrests favour breeding close to northern goshawk nests as they predate Sparrowhawks which are their potential predators.
@CratosLine7 ай бұрын
Awesome bro
@angelikazimmermann39947 ай бұрын
🥰😇😊😍☺️🤩😘
@DBoer8 ай бұрын
Wow, stunning images! 👍
@WildlifeClips3658 ай бұрын
Wow they really are small. Never seen one in UK
@patmckeane65889 ай бұрын
Not enough songbirds left as they are too well protected and now too many watched a sparrowhawk take down a kestral
@neilfoster88236 ай бұрын
Your understanding of the natural world leaves a lot to be desired
@peregrinepete5 ай бұрын
@@neilfoster8823 you have no knowledge of wildlife or nature
@liberaldriller98844 ай бұрын
Which is why his comment got some likes and you and op got zero 😂
@seanmacgowan6169 ай бұрын
Delighted with that. Hard enough for me to find a Med Gull in Ireland but I believe they are common enough visitors. Was really scared you had found a cross. That would really have wrecked my head!
@ramonastrempel92009 ай бұрын
nice view from the different perspective and without feathers or wings. God tur og lykke til
@TheJacksnipe11 ай бұрын
Congrats!
@ramonastrempel9200 Жыл бұрын
Cool! I like that sound
@ninoteskera Жыл бұрын
😴😴
@ninoteskera Жыл бұрын
😊😊
@markmoore4088 Жыл бұрын
Huge feet and thick legs on that gos!
@folkq Жыл бұрын
Spectacular film!
@folkq Жыл бұрын
Lovely film, a wonderfully atmospheric and intimate insight of this species' cryptic behaviour.
@phryxe Жыл бұрын
Superzoom from a car? 🤔😃
@oslobirder Жыл бұрын
Not the superzoom this time but the DSLR resting on the window
@phryxe Жыл бұрын
I wonder if you find these with the thermal spotter, hearing it or both? 🤔 Thanks by the way for the thermal imaging inspiration in birding! 👍
@oslobirder Жыл бұрын
I normally find them by hearing them. I haven’t used the thermal imager to find them but I’m sure it would work
@danielodalen9206 Жыл бұрын
Trodde ugler sover om dagen jeg 🤔
@johnnyace2287 Жыл бұрын
Kor i Oslo!?
@janinymanwildlife4563 Жыл бұрын
Great find! You find owels easy ofen when other birds warning of someting up in the tree 🙂
@janinymanwildlife4563 Жыл бұрын
Great video 😃 i have the grey-headed woodpecker on my feeder every year and its amazing to watch 😃
@ramonastrempel9200 Жыл бұрын
great ! pygmy owl constantly calling, tits + more and finally a hazelgrouse, ikke sant? God helg og tusen takk as I enjoyed this from the distance 🤩
@phryxe Жыл бұрын
I wonder what kind of torch you would need to be able to photograph like this in darkness?!
Пікірлер
Nice and so beautiful video. Thanks for sharing & big like
Wow!! Fantastic footage of an amazing bird.
Beautiful video ❤
Such an amazing sighting of these beautiful owls! New subscriber here ✨
Wow, wonderful video and duck 🤩
Большое спасибо Вам за соловушку!
Adorable with loads of energy
😢 det er veldig trist.
ما شاء الله روووعة
I didn't know they "sang". Beautiful and fascinating. Thanks for capturing it on video.
Goshawk are cannibals
Where is this
I can understand that a Goshawk could easily kill a Sparrowhawk, but how would it catch one- I'm thinking manoeuvrability not speed!!!
The only chance a goshawk would have of catching one …is if the sparrow hawk is feasting on a kill
Nice share ❤
Better than most vids on this platform! E
great, how easy these big animals run and how long steps they make. Have an nice weekend!
I’m waiting for the first comment from the anti’s that this must be a gamekeeper’s tame sparrowhawk & therefore this is targeted raptor persecution…..🥴😂😂
Apologies, should read tame Goshawk…..
Fantastic video 😊
We see a few piping plovers here, great video.
Flott video!
Flott, kjekt å se!
Its a hawk eat hawks world
Hi. Do you know if the woodcock in the first clip was bobbing like that before you used your lamp on it ? I'm trying to figure out if woodcocks show this bobbing behaviour when it's dark or only during the day/when dazzled by artificial lights. I've been watching numerous woodcocks at night using a thermal imaging camera and, for now, have only ever witnessed bobbing behaviour during the day.
It started bobbing after I put the lamp on it as far as I can remember
@@oslobirder Thank you. This is very interesting. I still need to find and watch jack snipes feeding at night to see if they bob in the dark. If they don't, it could corroborate the hypothesis that the bobbing behaviour is mainly/only used in light conditions and therefore probably a response to the stress of being seen by predators or an intraspecific communication method, although I've witnessed isolated woodcocks and jack snipes bob like this so communication is less probable...
I have read somewhere that the reason behind bobbing is to show predators that you have been sighted. I have also a Common Snipe bobbing kzread.info/dash/bejne/d6GkxNSyoMS3mJs.htmlsi=SFyFn9zeFCKawNb0
@@oslobirder Yes I saw your video of the Common Snipe, it's great ! Did that snipe see you or were you in a hide ? Indeed, it could very well be a form of stotting which could have evolved because it shows the predator that the bird is fit and aware of its presence. However, in most cases, species like Common and Jack Snipe or Woodcocks respond to the presence of a potential predator by freezing and rely on their camouflage before flushing if the predator gets too close. They only exhibit the bobbing behaviour when they are relaxed enough to walk and/or feed, not when they are scared of a predator closing in on them. And I can't really imagine how a predator (aerial most of the time) would be deterred from attacking a small bird bobbing on the ground, makes it even more conspicuous and doesn't say anything about its ability to escape... Either way, it's a fascinating topic. Thank you for your videos.
I was in my car but had been seen I am sure
I just realized brown creepers have pointed tail feathers with reinforced shafts so they can prop themselves up in the same way woodpeckers do.
Aw man
Size matters among the predator birds
I read that firecrests favour breeding close to northern goshawk nests as they predate Sparrowhawks which are their potential predators.
Awesome bro
🥰😇😊😍☺️🤩😘
Wow, stunning images! 👍
Wow they really are small. Never seen one in UK
Not enough songbirds left as they are too well protected and now too many watched a sparrowhawk take down a kestral
Your understanding of the natural world leaves a lot to be desired
@@neilfoster8823 you have no knowledge of wildlife or nature
Which is why his comment got some likes and you and op got zero 😂
Delighted with that. Hard enough for me to find a Med Gull in Ireland but I believe they are common enough visitors. Was really scared you had found a cross. That would really have wrecked my head!
nice view from the different perspective and without feathers or wings. God tur og lykke til
Congrats!
Cool! I like that sound
😴😴
😊😊
Huge feet and thick legs on that gos!
Spectacular film!
Lovely film, a wonderfully atmospheric and intimate insight of this species' cryptic behaviour.
Superzoom from a car? 🤔😃
Not the superzoom this time but the DSLR resting on the window
I wonder if you find these with the thermal spotter, hearing it or both? 🤔 Thanks by the way for the thermal imaging inspiration in birding! 👍
I normally find them by hearing them. I haven’t used the thermal imager to find them but I’m sure it would work
Trodde ugler sover om dagen jeg 🤔
Kor i Oslo!?
Great find! You find owels easy ofen when other birds warning of someting up in the tree 🙂
Great video 😃 i have the grey-headed woodpecker on my feeder every year and its amazing to watch 😃
great ! pygmy owl constantly calling, tits + more and finally a hazelgrouse, ikke sant? God helg og tusen takk as I enjoyed this from the distance 🤩
I wonder what kind of torch you would need to be able to photograph like this in darkness?!
Go birdy