FALCON ATTACK NESTCAM | Merlin Falcon Family Part 1/3
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- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- This is the first part of a series of three called Merlin falcon family. I rigged my GoPro by the nest to see these merlin falcons upclose, while I was sitting in a camouflage for a couple of hours and days watching them with a camera and a telephotolens. This was filmed about 900 meters above sea level in Norway.
Part 2: • CHICKS IN THE NEST | ...
Part 3: • FALCONS LEAVING THE NE...
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Falcon now understands what 'big brother' is all about.
austin1839 It’s like that movie, 1984.
The Falcon's face when seeing the camera like wth????!!!!! Lol. This falcon is about that life😂😂😂😂😂 Beautiful video
All 3 of your movies are first rate.... A very well shot view into this beautiful little falcons private life....nice to hear minimal music too...the bird song was lovely...
Very nice, beautiful location for a nest.
Adorable insight into the Merlin on its nest! I remember stumbling upon a gorgeous newly fledged Merlin, which had clearly just eaten a big meal, on a nearby grouse moor. It had nestled down atop the heather and gazed at me quizzically...full to busting. I wished it luck and left it in peace! Well done sir, grrreat footage!!!! 200 likes and mounting!
Hawk : no cameras please! No comeras! *Hawk punches camera* goes viral
He/She a going to report aliens spying on the nest...then by the time investigators arrive,The bird cam will have been removed!
Wonderful film of fabulous birds .
Nice footage . If I can give you an advice, if next time you find a nest with any rope, cord or anything the birds can get tangled into, just remove it, its a death trap.....these birds was very lucky to not to die a terrible death.
Very nice video! I love wild birds. Thank you. 谢谢你!
Wow great job making these!!!! And lol !those closeups of the falcon pecking at the camera are adorable and funny
0:28 .. hey what the HELL ARE YOU DOING HERE! 😂
Don't mess with my babies, you hear me
The reason it attacks the camera coz it sees itself in the lenses with its sharp eyes ,
thinking this is an enemy or a stranger ..
The mother bird realized that those thing was not coming from nature... means dangerous.... lol... anyway it's a cool video... thanks...
Amazing. Nice food pass.
Beautiful
Brilliant. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
wow you have a beautiful camera.
falcons are basically high speed chickens
She is right, someone is watching her...
It’s wonderful!
It's not good idea, this is stressful for the bird. Also, it might hurts beak or talons.
Breeding season must be quiet...
Whoever put a camera beside the falcon's nest seem to have no idea if human touches any part of the nest with a hatchling, the mother falcon will abandone the hatchling. Its in their natural selection process
Alan Caldoza, your opinion is a product of old lies you were once told, human scent on these birds do nothing. If it did no birds would ever be banded for research. We call them lies old mother's tales.
@@hebdomatical its called "Natural Selection Process" its been what animal kingdom us all about. You dont know anything about the wild. Why dont you try climb up a Monkey eating eagle's nest and see for yourself what the female eagle will do to you if you dare to touch her egg(s). Even on wild mammals the same law of Natural Selection Process applies to them. Your new belief from animal shelters can get you killed in the wild.
@@killingfields1424 Well, lets get flaming here. You bring up a "new" subject of messing with something much larger (eagles) than these Merlins or any falcon. Keeping to the subject of your original post of human scent causing Merlins to abandon their young is a long held and repeated refrain from the ignorant. If touching the nest or touching the young themselves would cause the parent Merlins to abandon the young we would never see any of these nestlings grow up to fly as immature or adult birds. Hence the simple act of banding the birds would lead to their elimination from the planet. It is easy to see that is not true as there are plenty of banded birds flying all over the world of all types of species. Most often those people dealing with a nest of birds above the size of the Peregrine Falcon included use personal protective gear (helmets, heavy jackets) and another person to guard/fend off the parents while whatever function they might be accomplishing at the nest. As you said and changed the subject with the eagles, yes, they can be very, very dangerous - not something you would find me doing. By the way I have personally handled every North American Falcon from the Gyrfalcon down to the North American Kestrel, sans the Merlin . Do you care to continue to arrogantly assert your ignorance? I do have one correction to make to my original post, I should have said "Old Wives Tales". Logic dictates a change of your opinion and an apology if you are man enough?
It's blocking the hawk's line of sight for potential danger. A blind spot. That's not good.
Our environment is so polluted you can see the blue plastic crap in the nest.
Birds really don't like cameras or video cameras .
The Truman Show (1998)
a bit camera shy at first...
I will poop on the lens if i am the falcon
Lol😄😄😄