Posted on 07/16/2019 10:34:50 AM PDT by ransomnote
In 1988 I was hauling to a road job in northern az
we were traveling on a rough desert trail for a short
to the job and traveling slow.
The driver about a half mile ahead of me called me on
the cb and said he had just been dive bombed by an eagle,
he said the eagle hit his windshield and then went to
the ground, thinking he had killed it he was going to
stop but then looking through his mirrow he saw that
the eagle had gotten up and was taking off again.
When I got there the eagle also dived for my windshield
but swerved just in time to miss me, guess he decided them
trucks were to tough.
After that he would just set and glare at us as we passed,
kind of a scary feeling.
Crows supposedly will communicate with other crows so that they’re all aware a person is on their s... list.
Wonder where their nesting areas are...When i was stationed at Altus AFB, we had to be careful during certain seasons because a number of hawks had their nests in the trees ... once was lined up on the edge of a fairway, along a tree line, when I happened to look up and saw a set of eyes over a beak tucked in between some sturdy looking wings and being preceded by a set of talons extending my way...ducked just in time, did a “hop-set” and whacked the ball in the general direction and moved away from the trees...
If we didn’t get too close to the nesting areas, they left us alone.
She was also the wife of Lieutenant General Frederick Browning, father of the British Airborne forces, portrayed by Dirk Bogarde in "A Bridge Too Far."
Thanks you are right, when the incident I recalled Hitch was already filming:
In August 1961, Capitola residents awoke to a scene that seemed straight out of a horror movie. Hordes of seabirds were dive-bombing their homes, crashing into cars and spewing half-digested anchovies onto lawns.
Famed film director Alfred Hitchcock even used the incident as research material for his then-in-progress movie The Birds, in which flocks of deranged birds inexplicably attack a coastal town.
No. Red-winged blackbirds have always been aggressive.
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