Sparrowhawk attacks a Magpie in Sussex

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  • Опубліковано 16 сер 2008
  • Sparrowhawk takes out a magpie in my garden in Sussex,
    If your squeemish, a doo gooder or don't approve of this video, please just remember, IT'S NATURES BALANCING ACT - FOR ONE ANIMAL TO SURVIVE, ANOTHER MUST DIE.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @TheVanzak
    @TheVanzak 5 років тому +26

    Magpie controls the population of small birds, while sparrowhawk controls the population of magpie. Foodchain

  • @JODIMAR45
    @JODIMAR45 7 років тому +23

    My message to that magpie would be 'What goes around comes around' !!

  • @yourdaddy6030
    @yourdaddy6030 2 роки тому +5

    Amazing job on this video. Usually people make the mistake of getting too close trying to get the best shots and the raptor ends up flying away. Seems like you were a good distance and got some amazing footage. Cheers!!

  • @SONORSQ2guy
    @SONORSQ2guy 8 років тому +10

    The Magpie's voice got weaker as the Sparrowhawk's claws dug deeper. Great video footage thanks for sharing it.

  • @sarahtates
    @sarahtates 7 років тому +14

    It's the circle of life. The Sparrowhawk may have chicks to feed. It's sad but the only positive thing to take away is most things don't kill for fun. They kill to survive.

    • @eddiehowland
      @eddiehowland  7 років тому +1

      Sarah Tates someone finally talking sense

    • @si4632
      @si4632 7 років тому

      yeah but its rather annoying when people state the bloody obvious isnt it lol

    • @TimMik135
      @TimMik135 5 років тому

      Sarah Tates damn straight! You don't see sparrowhawks setting up magpie factory farms!!

    • @arch.remleelavuap9290
      @arch.remleelavuap9290 5 років тому

      So its ok to kill people in order to survive! Bad Sarah!

    • @s2mgd329
      @s2mgd329 3 роки тому

      Well, cats do kill for fun.

  • @elphabama
    @elphabama 8 років тому +13

    Fantastic film work and thank you for putting it on this site

  • @joezappa3402
    @joezappa3402 15 років тому +2

    Beautiful photography, editing, and close ups. This is something that most of us rarely get to see in nature. Thank you for sharing and posting.

  • @antigravity000
    @antigravity000 13 років тому +2

    Amazing how much energy and patience is involved in hunting like this. Great video. You can just see the horror in the magpie's eyes, and the rapid breathing of trying to escape stands out so much!

  • @davidellis5964
    @davidellis5964 8 років тому +17

    good bloody job the amount of eggs and fledglings the Magpie takes and kills its payback time.

    • @xxxpetz5xxxxxxpetz5xxx15
      @xxxpetz5xxxxxxpetz5xxx15 8 років тому

      +David Ellis you are so hard!

    • @AlphaDwg
      @AlphaDwg 5 років тому

      sparrowhawk take its fair shair too. it's just the circle of life. Something will come along and eat the sparrowhawk too or take it's babies

    • @danivarius
      @danivarius 5 років тому

      David Ellis I totally agree!

    • @yourdaddy6030
      @yourdaddy6030 2 роки тому

      The magpie is just trying to survive like any other bird or animal for that matter. They are efficient and ruthless. But they don't do it for kicks. They do it to feed themselves and their chicks. I feel so dapper I'm rhyming like a rapper. Holy shit that was lame.

  • @carlosbarreto4695
    @carlosbarreto4695 8 років тому +10

    Of course that, by empathy, I feel sorry for the preyed bird. It sucks to be a prey.
    But as the british ethologist Richard Dawkins said before: Nature is not cruel, only pitilessly indifferent.

    • @si4632
      @si4632 7 років тому

      dont listen to that moron dawkins

    • @countercuIture
      @countercuIture 3 роки тому

      @@lIllIlllIlIllIlllIlIllIlllIl I don't think we were ever prey

    • @yourdaddy6030
      @yourdaddy6030 2 роки тому

      Just watch a couple videos of magpies preying on smaller birds and animals after this. You won't feel nearly as bad. Nature has a way of evening stuff out.

    • @yourdaddy6030
      @yourdaddy6030 2 роки тому

      @@si4632 or that dipshit "yes"

  • @cloudycider
    @cloudycider 12 років тому +1

    This is the most amazing thing I've seen yet on UA-cam! This is nature at it's cruellist I know, but wow it is still fantastic to see this hawk in action. What a natural killer. Have you part two. We live in the heart of the forest and often hear this cry. Now I know what it is. Thank you for showing this.

  • @Gman6755
    @Gman6755 13 років тому +2

    Eddie, outstanding video!! That was nature at it's finest! That magpie put up a hell of a fight for sure!! I assume the hawk won out in the end and got it's meal. You must have been on top of those birds to get those great close-ups! Well done!

  • @453421abcdefg12345
    @453421abcdefg12345 8 років тому +32

    If this Sparrowhawk make a regular habit of killing Magpies it can only be good for the local songbird population, they are the very worst killers of small birds and also egg takers, the Magpies need taking out by whatever means possible.

    • @hassanyousifabdul
      @hassanyousifabdul 8 років тому +7

      +Englishman French They are very noisy too, and I've seen some Magpies eating small chicks alive!.

    • @si4632
      @si4632 7 років тому +2

      shes a beauty

    • @andychauhan6544
      @andychauhan6544 6 років тому +1

      godsadog haha!...good one, btw they're the noisiest too...these frenchified english.

    • @Ronin.Samurai
      @Ronin.Samurai 6 років тому

      Englishman French oh boo boo. That’s nature deal with it

    • @alisalauzon9291
      @alisalauzon9291 5 років тому

      Steal eggs too did not know that.

  • @Biggles-gm6tm
    @Biggles-gm6tm 10 років тому +3

    It is indeed a balancing act, though did find myself wishing that the Sparrowhawk would get on with it and stop looking around! One wonders how many times the Magpie had done that to other birds, but then its as natural to both of them as us eating a bowl of cornflakes.

    • @peabase
      @peabase 10 років тому

      I have to second that. Magpies see a bowl of cornflakes in a songbird's nest. I've seen huge bands of magpies obliterate songbirds from an area for years. It makes it extra hard to spare them during nesting season, when the law forbids culling.

    • @Biggles-gm6tm
      @Biggles-gm6tm 10 років тому

      peabase I know, keep emotion out of it though. Worst thing you can do is become anthropomorphic about it. They don't think like humans and they're not being cruel, they're all just being birds..

    • @peabase
      @peabase 10 років тому

      Biggles Wingman It's human agriculture that sustains unnaturally large magpie populations. I feel that as the instigators, we owe it to nature to keep some songbird nesting areas corvid-free. The magpies will still take their toll, but at least the songbirds stand a chance.

    • @Biggles-gm6tm
      @Biggles-gm6tm 10 років тому

      peabase Yes good argument,but its not just magpie populations, pretty well everything is out of kilter as a result of our input. Where do you draw the line.? I agree that corvid populations are unnaturally high and songbirds suffer, but this is a symptom not a cause. We need to change the way we do things. Your answer may be a good short term fix but its not the ultimate answer. Song bird population is in free fall which is really worrying but shooting magpies is a sticky plaster really. Umm, more raptors? They're not too picky either. If you have a solutions you'll make millions.

    • @peabase
      @peabase 10 років тому

      Biggles Wingman Big raptors are the answer, actually, and they are making a slow but sure comeback. I was surprised to hear my neighbour claim that the crow and seagull carcasses we've been finding aren't the work of a mink, but that of a white-tailed eagle. I'm sceptical, but despite our all efforts, we haven't managed to trap any mink. I wish it to be true, because it would also keep another invasive species in check: catus domestica.

  • @mickyleachlover
    @mickyleachlover 8 років тому

    Incredible footage. I live in West Sussex. A Sparrow Hawk took a Wood Pigeon in my back garden. It took an hour and twenty minutes to subdue and eat it's fill. I cleaned up afterwards and disposed of the carcase but my wife had missed it all. At 6.30am next morning she noticed the Sparrow Hawk on one of our bushes. It had returned to look for the pigeon for breakfast. This upload may not be to everyones taste but shows true nature as it is meant to be.

  • @thehonorablejiveturkey6068
    @thehonorablejiveturkey6068 3 роки тому +2

    Cooper's hawk, Sparrow hawk, Red Tail hawk and Im sure their others. I learned a lot watching these videos

  • @jonnyweston
    @jonnyweston 9 років тому +14

    Magpies are the biggest killer of localised small birdlife in most areas, with their overbearing overdominent nature sweeping through, stealing nests, killing eggs and generally destroying all in their paths.
    When I moved into my house nearly 14 years ago now, I used to have a lot of finches, bluetits, robins, sparrows, thrushes etc around my house..... now we only have magpies.
    Progressively the magpie has killed through nearly all of the species here.
    Its about time the sparrowhawks diverted their attention to the Magpies.

    • @theenglishman9596
      @theenglishman9596 5 років тому +2

      #jonny get yourself a powerful air rifle, I destroyed 8 in 5 minutes in my oak tree in the front garden.

  • @species2521
    @species2521 10 років тому +12

    Thank you for your video. I don't think it's bad you filmed it. What's frustrating about what's happening there is they've recently found the magpie to be self-aware, as intelligent as a chimpanzee or dolphin, and with an equally proportioned brain to a human and a highly developed forebrain in particular. They use tools, plan, socialize, even have some evidence of language. They're considered among the most intelligent 5-10 animals, and likely the most intelligent bird by a wide margin. I learned this after discussing with my wife, PhD student in psychology studying animal consciousness. So it's sad to see a larger, stronger bird making something suffer that probably has an internal cognitive experience of life that's a lot like us humans. But this does happen in nature, all the time. I'd still hoped the magpie might have a way of escaping, but the hawk seems to have an inescapable iron grip on the poor bird. Intelligence wouldn't do it much good there.
    Just curious, but did the magpie make it or was it eaten in the end?
    All the best my friend. And again, thanks for your bravely posting this. It is valuable and should stay up, even if it's gory.

    • @goshawk1974
      @goshawk1974 10 років тому +6

      Dude you're too smart to be a UA-camr. Shouldn't you be spitting the Atom somewhere?

    • @CoNvdMerwe
      @CoNvdMerwe 10 років тому +3

      Nope the Magpie wont survive this.

    • @y0bama
      @y0bama 7 років тому +1

      Cool Biology Internal cognitive experience? Just because we can't measure a particular type of cognition doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Don't you think that less complex organisms also have a deep desire to live and to avoid pain? Equally just because it might be self aware, or recognises itself in a mirror, is more similar to primates, does not mean it experiences life more profoundly, that sounds very bias. Natural selection can be cruel, but it's not as cruel as what the meat industry does on a daily basis.

    • @alysonstainsby8513
      @alysonstainsby8513 7 років тому

      Cool Biology derrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

    • @SpaceboyGT
      @SpaceboyGT 6 років тому

      Cool Biology all that dam screamin is his defense. in the end 😭😭 it's still screamin

  • @Orjonast
    @Orjonast 12 років тому +1

    Good thing you didn`t interfere! A magpie is pretty much the biggest prey a sparrowhawk can handle, so it`s really a touch & go if it can actually make the kill. And usually younger, desperate (female) hawks will go for it by the time they start to fend for themselves. Chasing it away would mean almost certain death for the hawk, as it spends a huge amount of energy on a chase like this.

  • @jonesytoo
    @jonesytoo 8 років тому

    Brilliant photography Eddie. I currently have an infrared camera set up on a feeding station in my garden in the Cotswolds to film foxes and hedgehog's. I can see them live, but at the moment I don't have the ability or equipment to video the interaction between them and my cat's. Only some dodgy video from my mobile phone. Fascinating stuff as the foxes are terrified by my cats and when the cat attacks the foxes run for their lives!

  • @mark747captain
    @mark747captain 8 років тому +6

    Good stuff. I love birds but, detest Magpies with a passion. I was prompted to Google this as I have just had a Sparrowhawk in my garden for the first time with its quarry in its talons but being bullied by 2 of those shit things, it eventually left having dropped what it had caught. I can't believe how close you got to that beautiful animal.

    • @glynn36
      @glynn36 7 років тому

      Mark Harper well said. I hate magpies as well. They are nothing bit scavenging, theiving bastards.

    • @s2mgd329
      @s2mgd329 3 роки тому

      @@glynn36 and you are nothing more than a dumbass.

  • @mikefoley3785
    @mikefoley3785 8 років тому +6

    That magpie is very young. An adult would have been much more difficult to hold down in this manner.

    • @veng3r663
      @veng3r663 5 років тому

      Yes adult Magpies have a MUCH stronger grip with their claws than you would first expect...

    • @charleswidjaja8313
      @charleswidjaja8313 5 років тому

      @Adam Al - Earthy ,brid

    • @charleswidjaja8313
      @charleswidjaja8313 5 років тому

      @@veng3r663 g

  • @megashorts
    @megashorts 15 років тому +1

    Great footage! We see Sparrowhawks in our area quite a few times each year, those that come to our gardens are often too late to catch a kill but we do see some flying towards woodland with little birds in their claws.

  • @GRPLiningServices
    @GRPLiningServices 12 років тому

    Awesome footage. To the uploader please. What camera did you use and how far away from the battle were you?

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  11 років тому +3

    I think adding any kind of music would detract fom the raw brutality of nature.

    • @yourdaddy6030
      @yourdaddy6030 2 роки тому

      Great job bro. No music necessary.

  • @jhhayesii
    @jhhayesii 10 років тому +5

    That may be but I would have helped the Magpie. It took quite a while for that bird to die. Can YOU relate to the terror and fear!

    • @I3R0K3N7FEET
      @I3R0K3N7FEET 10 років тому +4

      helped the mapie?
      I would have caught and fed the sparrowhawk and kept it as a pet.. :3

    • @Ronin.Samurai
      @Ronin.Samurai 6 років тому +2

      John Hayes you have no right to interfere with nature. It needs to eat as we;l. Leave nature alone

    • @theenglishman9596
      @theenglishman9596 5 років тому

      #ayes you are a ignorant townie, you watch too many stupid tv programmes.
      #13rok3n you too are a imbecile it is illegal to harm or capture sparrow hawkes in Great Britan

  • @tomtalker2000
    @tomtalker2000 14 років тому

    This is some INCREDIBLE footage. Kudos, to whomever was capturing this on film. I've been in the avian field, for nearly 25yrs now, and it still never ceases to amaze me, the sheer beak power the "Corvid" family of birds possess. Indeed as one other poster commented about, this was in fact large prey, for this particular hawk to catch, but not impossible either.

  • @species2521
    @species2521 10 років тому

    Just curious - did the magpie make it in the end or ever get any kind of upper hand? It looked so hopeless for it.
    Appreciate the post. Thank you.

  • @Teeb2023
    @Teeb2023 10 років тому +7

    *+Michael Koser*
    "There is no such raptor known as a sparrow hawk. That is a coopers hawk. Still a cool video."
    Don'tcha just love internet experts? Mr Koser, read a book once in a while, preferably one that includes birds that aren't indigenous to *your* country.

    • @CoNvdMerwe
      @CoNvdMerwe 10 років тому

      Bwhahaha what happened to Mr Michael Koser`s original post, saying this isn`t a Spar and a Coopers? I also wanted to give him some educational advise.

    • @walkercatlett9820
      @walkercatlett9820 8 років тому +7

      Yes there is such a thing as a Sparrowhawk, they are a European accipiter and this was in Europe

    • @williamstephens9945
      @williamstephens9945 6 років тому +3

      Yes, there is such a raptor as a Sparrowhawk - I see them quite often here in the UK.

    • @coryboy345
      @coryboy345 6 років тому +4

      You have no idea what the hell you are talking about Anthony....

  • @seanspady5236
    @seanspady5236 10 років тому +5

    i would have saved the magpie

    • @eddiehowland
      @eddiehowland  10 років тому +7

      Which is like saying you would have helped kill the hawk.... by starving it.

    • @seanspady5236
      @seanspady5236 10 років тому +4

      Yes, I would have

    • @paulbowness8125
      @paulbowness8125 10 років тому +4

      Anguis Helper
      I'd have killed the magpie and fed it to my dog.

    • @seanspady5236
      @seanspady5236 10 років тому

      paul bowness So, cruel!

    • @paulbowness8125
      @paulbowness8125 10 років тому +2

      Anguis Helper
      Not as cruel as you wanting to starve the poor Sparrowhawk. Sparrowhawks have to eat something....what do you suggest, they order Pizza?

  • @jbmurphy4
    @jbmurphy4 13 років тому

    @eddiehowland
    Thats amazing. I never knew a sparrowhawk would try to kill something as big&tough as a magpie!
    When you shot the magpie did the sparrowhawk come back quickly to feed?

  • @sliehgtofhand
    @sliehgtofhand 11 років тому

    Good footage, really well done. Sparrowhawks are awesome. And I love the way it puts its talons right in the magpie's beak... it's like "shhhhh"

  • @GrimsbyRanger
    @GrimsbyRanger 13 років тому

    Amazing footage, thanks for posting. Friday afternoon I witnessed a Sparrowhawk take a Dove from my lawn, felt quite honoured seeing such a beautiful bird visit my garden in its quest for food. Didn't realise one would take a Magpie, thanks again.

  • @bazzabaz
    @bazzabaz 14 років тому

    Great video, I saw a sparrowhawk today standing on a wall just a few feet away from me in Sussex, the first time I'd seen one so close.

  • @guywigmore7826
    @guywigmore7826 9 років тому

    I saw this happen in a car park in my village yesterday - at least 100 metres from the woods. I couldn't see what species the victim was, but the sparrowhawk was plucking a lot of white feathers out of its chest.

  • @putin88100
    @putin88100 14 років тому

    @eddiehowland
    so how did it end?? did you kill the magpie or did the hawk manage to do so?
    it looked like it was a juvenile magpie, still the hawk hat serious trouble to kill it... dont think they usually hunt prey of that size. He really risked to get injured by the magpie.
    thanks for the post!

  • @JODIMAR45
    @JODIMAR45 14 років тому

    I don't know whether i would have quite worded it like that but you are absolutely right!...My message to that Magpie is 'WHAT GOES AROUND,COMES AROUND'!

  • @ShotTower1
    @ShotTower1 11 років тому +1

    Huh? He didn't film a serial killer taking out a victim here, he filmed a natural event and the footage is really rather incredible. I've never seen a sparrowhawk taking out a magpie.
    Thanks Eddie Howland for this footage.

  • @mikethejoiner
    @mikethejoiner 13 років тому +1

    Brilliant footage mate. It lets people know what is really happening in the natural world like there back garden. A magpie is easy for them to catch but very difficult to kill & eat, a blackbird or chaffinch is a bit more difficult for them to catch but easy to kill. What you caught on the film is not rare but that wee hawk must have been very desperate. Good show...

  • @francescacesarini6941
    @francescacesarini6941 9 років тому

    U are right... sometimes people forget that animals are not what we see in disney's movies.. stop humanising animals and love them for what they are. Thanks for posting this clip.
    p.s. I'm pretty sure u haven't feel that great looking at the show ;)

  • @user-jr9eb1nf1x
    @user-jr9eb1nf1x Місяць тому

    Sparrowhawk is like beautiful angel who eliminate the evil

  • @Smudger40k
    @Smudger40k 8 років тому

    we had a sparrow hawk do this in our garden, wasn't pretty but its a rare thing to see in person, nice work getting your camera on it!

  • @rbuxto
    @rbuxto 11 років тому

    Just this one reply then you can all emulate the bird and tear me to shreds. I can't deny it's a good piece of film, capturing something most of us don't get to see. To get things correct though, the filming was post 'take out'. There's no shot of the chase or capture, simply a dwelling on the gory aftermath - with soundtrack.

  • @fujinmage
    @fujinmage 9 років тому

    Magpie: sorry bro, I wont steal food from you ever again!!!!
    Sparrowhawk: Stop moving while I eat you... Bro

  • @MonteCarloGaz
    @MonteCarloGaz 9 років тому

    Well done Sparrowhawk, Magpies need to be kept in check !!

    • @abc1234567a1
      @abc1234567a1 9 років тому

      Crows, Ravens, and Magpies> Eagles Hawks and Falcons.

  • @peterboneg
    @peterboneg 10 років тому

    Wow, this is a lot better than my sparrowhawk video.

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  13 років тому

    @cozmium Hiya, thanks for the comment. I agree to a point about us interfering and being compassionate, but think about it, if we interviened we would indeed be helping the magpie... but being cruel to the hawk by depriving it of a meal. Cant be compassionate to both as by interfering we would change the nature of things and if every one did this the whole food chain would be well and truley screwed up.

  • @thedoctorswife
    @thedoctorswife 13 років тому

    Amazing video. I had one in my garden today that had brought down a jackdaw. They tussled in the garden for a few minutes but the jackdaw managed to escape. The kids wanted me to go and chase it away but it's nature. Not my place to interfere

  • @putin88100
    @putin88100 14 років тому

    so how did it end?? did you kill the magpie or did the hawk manage to do so?
    it looked like it was a juvenile magpie, still the hawk had serious trouble to kill it... dont think they usually hunt prey of that size. He really risked to get injured by the magpie.
    thanks for the post!

  • @dolfette
    @dolfette 12 років тому

    amazing clip! i just saw a sparrowhawk in my tiny, paved back yard. i googled 'sparrowhawk' and this was the first clip that came up. now i'm just having a giggle at the outraged responses.

  • @BASEJOCK11
    @BASEJOCK11 4 роки тому

    I love when they start plucking them. The prey gets so terrified when they start getting plucked lol

  • @psu893
    @psu893 10 років тому +1

    Today a view from my garden while i just wanted to enter my back door. Sparrow hawk passes me 2 meters from me 30 centimeter from the ground. Go's in like 90 degrees angles up by my gate 180 degrees over it 90 degrees dive over the road crosses the street another 90 degrees by the fence of my neighbor with an 180 degrees angle over that fence.
    Some birds on that side of the wall were surprised....

    • @robrichardson8232
      @robrichardson8232 10 років тому +1

      Cor bet they were with all thoses angles..lol

  • @stoner63reflex65
    @stoner63reflex65 4 роки тому

    I love birds of prey. Eagles, Hawks, owls. Ah just beautiful.

  • @eadecamp
    @eadecamp 9 років тому

    From all the damage those things do, I'm perfectly happy to watch a magpie suffer. I wonder whether the hawk will just keep it pinned there and take all the fight out of it before lunch.

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  14 років тому

    @tomtalker2000 Thank you. I didnt know what to do, but the noise the magpie was making was distressing. I only interviened when it was obvious the magpie could not recover. The hawk NEVER let go and i pushed it aside to get a headshot. It was still carrying on ripping at it hours later.

  • @iamthegame09
    @iamthegame09 14 років тому

    In a way you'd feel like helping the Magpie but on the other hand you know the sparrowhawks gotta eat too! Awesome video btw :)

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  15 років тому

    Thank you. Much apreciated.
    Eddie

  • @rtrain67
    @rtrain67 13 років тому

    One of the most fascinating videos I have ever seen on youtube. I felt bad for the magpie mostly because it was a slow and painful death. The hawk was just beautiful with those incredible eyes. Humans prey on other humans in different ways but are even more vicious than that hawk because they do it out of greed. The hawk is just trying to survive.

  • @mick8ncc
    @mick8ncc 10 років тому

    Its nice to see a Magpie on the receiving end for once.Both these predators kill far too many small songbirds.Unfortunately i dont think a Sparrowhawk would be able to do the same to an adult Magpie.Yes that a young one it got there.

  • @DonPechito
    @DonPechito 13 років тому

    Wow, this sparrowhawk got some balls, it looks smaller than that magpie,and the magpie's beak is 3 times larger than the hawk's and still this latter displays great technique to stay out of its reach !! Do sparowhawks usually feed on magpies, or this is really an exception ??
    Anyway, THANKS for posting this, mother nature is amazing and for once, it looks like it was a pro cameraman who film this !

  • @sunaJH
    @sunaJH 7 років тому +1

    This is nature,
    and it is brutal,
    imagine hawks terrorizing their prey round the clock 24/7
    for as long as they have been around,
    makes you look at hawks differently

  • @jimquantic
    @jimquantic 13 років тому

    @eddiehowland After watching the entire clip, I wondered how it ended--looked almost like a stalemate? Nice camera work, appreciate the video and audio.

  • @MrLaptopus
    @MrLaptopus 14 років тому

    @eddiehowland Did it actually eat the magpie or not?

  • @prettyprudent5779
    @prettyprudent5779 6 років тому +1

    You just stood there and watched.

    • @eddiehowland
      @eddiehowland  6 років тому +4

      Yes . Its nature. Who am I to stop a wild bird from feeding? What would you have done? I am also cameraman. Do you complain when you see bbc documentaries of wild animals feeding and killing?

    • @danivarius
      @danivarius 5 років тому

      Yes he did; sparrow hawk did a great job!

  • @DonPechito
    @DonPechito 13 років тому

    Wow, this sparrowhawk got some balls, it looks smaller than that magpie,and the magpie's beak is 3 times larger than the hawk's and still this latter displays great technique to stay out of its reach !! Do sparowhawks usually feed on magpies, or this is really an exception ??
    Anyway, THANKS for posting this, mother nature is amazing !!

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  15 років тому

    Thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  • @thashiznitfoshizable
    @thashiznitfoshizable 8 років тому

    Great vid bud.. I seen one of these chase a pigeon to slam into my kids bedroom window then it stripped it off its wings and flew away with the wee torso

  • @ZB33ZY
    @ZB33ZY 13 років тому

    lol its like "hey im gonna eat you but until you shut up i'm gonna pull all your feathers out"

  • @stephaniegreaves7801
    @stephaniegreaves7801 11 років тому

    Fantastic footage. I have a sparrow hawk at my stable yard, and though have seen it hunting woodpeckers and found its discarded meals when I disturb it, I am yet to see an actual kill. Thanks for sharing!

  • @knutfure7596
    @knutfure7596 Рік тому

    Incredible good film!
    Strange the sparrow hawk was not harrased by other magpies during this long, noisy killing prosess.

  • @probablygraham
    @probablygraham 13 років тому

    That's an incredible clip.
    I live in Germany and the magpies are bullying their way through the gardens here. All the other birds fly away and the magpies have decimated a family of sparrows, so it's quite refreshing to see a sparrowhawk being able to kill a magpie. I thought they had no natural enemies (in terms of birds).

  • @looks911
    @looks911 12 років тому

    He's like SHUT THE FUCK UP AND LET ME FINISH MY MEAL !!!

  • @NeidalRuekk
    @NeidalRuekk 7 років тому

    That glare the Sparrowhawk has! Glad I'm not on the other end of that! Besides, it's different to see a raptor giving a crow a hard time. Usually, crows are the punks that heckle raptors no matter what. Good footage

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  11 років тому

    Thank you - I apreciate that.

  • @austin1839
    @austin1839 3 роки тому +1

    The only way for the Magpie to survive being eaten is to take out one of the Sparrowhawk's eyes with that long pointy beak.

  • @karlfalckh3498
    @karlfalckh3498 3 роки тому

    Magpie: "let me go, I'll never kill baby bunnies again I promise.''

  • @Marmalade000000
    @Marmalade000000 8 років тому

    At some moments in the vid, it was as if that sparrowhawk looked straight at you like, "What are YOU looking at?!"

  • @darkmossie633
    @darkmossie633 14 років тому

    Nature is very cruel, but the morning chorus as they call it , (most asleep, and never hear it) is wonderful
    Leonard Cohen, American poet and singer, says they , the birds are saying
    and singing "START AGAIN" at every new
    dawn, every day-they still have hope
    I think he is is trying to say, we should think like these beautiful creatures

  • @noelbullard4676
    @noelbullard4676 7 років тому

    Did the magpie get away or did it get eaten

  • @Z3n1tHL0rD
    @Z3n1tHL0rD 4 роки тому

    Great video, it seems that you can see what the beast was thinking

  • @BrandonTobatto
    @BrandonTobatto 11 років тому

    So did the bird actually get eaten or get away?

  • @onlineWOF
    @onlineWOF 14 років тому

    Excellent footage. I have footage of a sparrowhawk in my garden doing exactly the same thing with a live pigeon. Its from a VHS-C camcorder though, dont know if its possible to get it on to UA-cam.

  • @alrune8
    @alrune8 15 років тому

    Magpies are lesser corvids and are not that difficult to catch for Sparrowhawks but, like in this scene, Magpies often screech to alert other Magpies to their help. It's their primary defense and also it annoys the raptor to no end.
    Crows on the other hand are much more defensive but Goshawks often take them down.

  • @crowrosive
    @crowrosive 12 років тому +1

    my guess is this is a juvinelle sparrowhawk , because she looks very stumped at how to finish her prey. I do feel sorry for the magpie espicially for such a stressful death but such is nature and my guess would be if the spoarrowhawk didnt manages to finish this kill shed die due to the energy wasted

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  15 років тому

    dsmyth1955.
    Thank you for your comments on my filming. Much apreciated.
    Eddie Howland

    • @ronanportley4409
      @ronanportley4409 3 роки тому

      Superb filming!!-I caught a sparrowhawk on camera today but not in this league-cudos👍

  • @stefvuho78
    @stefvuho78 12 років тому +1

    That's one of the most amazing videos here, I watched it time and time again wondering how such a small raptor could have a go at one of the most widespread and dangerous passerines in Europe.
    I walked my dog out the other day and saw a raptor - pigeon sized, flying away with a blackbird. I keep on wondering whether it could have been a male Sparrowhawk - it was very similar to a Wood Pigeon. It flew ever so low, virtualy at 2ft off the ground and very close to my flat. Could it be possible?

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  11 років тому

    Thank you

  • @megashorts
    @megashorts 15 років тому

    Yeah, some Magpies nowadays are quite agressive. We had one in our garden yesterday that went upto a Pigeon from behind, clamped it's beat on to the Pigeon's tail and the Pigeon struggled but got away but there was a pile of feathers left after.

  • @MsRoxas101x
    @MsRoxas101x 11 років тому

    So do all Sparrowhawks grip onto the birds head while ripping its feathers out?

  • @dmh9312
    @dmh9312 3 роки тому

    Been playing this to the magpies around my house through a guitar amp they're not one bit happy. I am though. Nice to watch them squirm.

  • @123TauruZ321
    @123TauruZ321 10 років тому

    This same thing is what is happening to every one of us every day, rich people taking a little of our "feathers" (money) with us having no chance of doing anything about it but complain. Where are it's companions to attack the sparrowhawk? If they just understood that then they wouldn't have to be eaten.

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  14 років тому

    @NiteLiter It was an ols Canon XM1 3 chip Mini DV video camera. I now use a full size shoulder mounted broadcast quality JVC GY HD 201 camera. Stills were done on a Nikon D300 with 18-200

  • @liborsionko
    @liborsionko 11 років тому

    You forget just how subjective and misguided people can be when viewing a quite natural act like this. It's happening everywhere (though concerningly less so than ever) all the time under their noses. People need to no only realise this but, importantly, that in the grand scheme of thing we would cease to be without it.

  • @danivarius
    @danivarius 5 років тому

    This was quite refreshing to watch; usually magpies decimate the local bird population by killing their chicks & taking eggs; they’re a menace! Nice to see one on the receiving end for once! 👍👍

  • @bampamaddog583
    @bampamaddog583 5 років тому

    Siding with one creature over another? This isn't the human world. The magpie is the magpie, and the hawk is the hawk.

  • @krotonex
    @krotonex 14 років тому

    Mi meraviglio che qualcuno rimane scandalizzato da episodi come queso che in natura succedono normalmente e continuamente.Ogni essere umano carnivoro,dovrebbe comunque assistere almeno una volta nella vita a come muore un pollo,un agnello oppre un manzo;ed a scuola dovrebbero sempre spiegare ai bambini che la fettina di petto di pollo che mangeranno a pranzo,due giorni prima apparteneva ad un animale che saltava,zampettava e cantava.Complimenti per questo video,crudo ma reale.

  • @tkpearson43
    @tkpearson43 12 років тому

    Absolutely correct. Fantastic video, even if quite difficult to watch due to the slow death of the Magpie. Congratulations.

  • @countercuIture
    @countercuIture 3 роки тому

    I hate people that don't understand that this is how nature is. They act like it's your duty to stop it as if it's something terrible. It's the real world and other animals aren't fortunate enough to think about feelings because they need to think about surviving

  • @TheWadge
    @TheWadge 13 років тому

    A lot of hate for magpies here! I enjoy them. Beautiful coats, and great character. He's the only bird that's picky enough to grab the food we put out for the birds and dunk it in the bird bath to soften it up! I understand people's dislike of them raiding birds' nests though. Great to watch. But birds of prey are my favourite birds. I see them circling above often here, but have only seen them in the garden 2/3 times.
    BTW - the sparrowhawk here looks wild. This honestly happens in the UK.

  • @eddiehowland
    @eddiehowland  12 років тому

    @GRPLiningServices Thanks for that. The camera was a Canon XM1. A 3 chip DV camcorder. A bit dated now but an excellent camcorder. I still geep it as a backup. Had items broadcast on TV news and BBC real rescues from it!! Look on my website for more info on my current equipement and to see my usual line of filming, lol.
    Distance ranged from 30ft (ist shot) right up to about literally a few feet from them. Hawk kept looking at me, with "the look", but he wasnt giving up his dinner!!