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Author Topic: Rob Palmer - amazing wildlife photographer  (Read 2922 times)
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ezsha
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« on: 08-May-11, 12:25:07 AM »

Last year, Rob Palmer brought you the photos of the playful burrowing owl brothers in Colorado.

His website, titled falconphotos.com, is full of fantastic pictures!

For example, a peregrine going after ducks,


a young moose,


and battling bald eagles.


Enjoy!
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Annette
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« Reply #1 on: 08-May-11, 01:15:39 AM »

 bow
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MAK
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« Reply #2 on: 08-May-11, 05:41:56 AM »

 bravo
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« Reply #3 on: 08-May-11, 09:31:53 AM »


For example, a peregrine going after ducks,



After looking at this picture, I think a duck could fly faster if it flew backwards.
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ezsha
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« Reply #4 on: 08-May-11, 09:54:45 PM »


For example, a peregrine going after ducks,



After looking at this picture, I think a duck could fly faster if it flew backwards.

You reminded me of a shadow study done sometime before 1959... I found the following quote:
Quote
In The Masks of God: Primitive Mythology (New York: Viking, 1959), Joseph Campbell recounts a curious phenomenon of animal behavior. Newly hatched chickens, bits of egg-shells still clinging to their tails, will dart for cover when a hawk flies overhead: yet they remain unaffected by other birds. Furthermore, a wooden model of a hawk, drawn forward along a wire above their coop, will send them scurrying (if the model is pulled backward, however, there is no response)

If I remember correctly, the wooden model going forward threw a shadow that looked like a raptor, and got a huge defensive response; going backward, it threw a shadow that looked like a duck and got no response...

Animal transformers... in addition to speeding up, it change species if it flies backwards?  A 'duck hawk' being pursued by a 'hawk' duck? Cheesy
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