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Most of you would never believe it but Manhattan is filled with several types of hawks as well as falcons and owls. Lots of food here and high perches for them. Perfect habitat.
At the top of Harlem Hill in Central Park there are nesting areas. Hawks and Falcons sit atop the traffic lights and just watch the joggers and cyclists. One day a Peregrine grabbed a pigeon out of the air about 20 feet in front of me. Amazing to see such a bird so close. |
I was buzzed by a bald eagle on the way to the polls on Election Day in 2016. Other than seeming ominous it was much like the OP’s encounter.
A few months after that I was riding to work in the dawn light and came upon a freshly killed turkey on the bike trail. She was likely done in by a bobcat or coyote, though it’s fun to think it was a cougar. She had an intact unlaid egg in the remains. Another omen, surely. Riding by the crime scene on the way home, the carcass had been dragged uphill a bit and no sign of the egg. |
One morning I was putting along on the San Luis Rey MUP and a roadrunner came trotting up the bank and turned onto the path right in front of me. He was doing the same speed I was and trotted down the path for about 15 yds. before turning back down the embankment.
Last week I was riding down Coast highway on a section along the bluff just above the beach and as I was looking down at the surf an osprey flew up level to me. He was carrying what appeared to be a juvenile white sea bass in his talons. He was going the same direction and about the same speed I was. I studied him for a bit before he veered offshore. |
Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 21556387)
And don’t get me started on the aggressive Magpies we encountered during the trip.
I know Australia magpies are a different species from Irish magpies, but are Cascades magpies a different one again? |
All the magpies in the northern hemisphere are related, though there are local species or subspecies. Near my old home there was a neighborhood flock of yellow billed magpies. They didn't ever do anything noteworthy in front of me but they were very distinctive.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...an_Antonio.jpg By Bill Bouton - Flickr: Yellow-billed Magpie, Pica nuttalli, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/inde...curid=19556089 |
Yeah, the Irish one's a bit different. They have a reputation for liking shiny things and stealing bits of foil and metal and occasionally jewellery to line their nests.
The Aussie one, by contrast, is, like most of their wildlife, a bit of a bloody bastard; |
Originally Posted by tyrion
(Post 21555103)
The bird probably stopped because you weren't in proper drafting formation.
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...705ffc5e0b.jpg |
Originally Posted by one4smoke
(Post 21556835)
You know why the right line of the formation is longer than the left??
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Originally Posted by tyrion
(Post 21556853)
That's just the way they do it in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, the left side is longer.
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While working in Louisiana a few years ago, I joined a local group ride. I was told to be prepared for a group sprint as we headed down a certain country road. As we passed an otherwise unspectacular house on this road, two Great Pyrenees...and a really pissed off goose...vectored out of the yard and chased the group down the road, the goose the definite pack leader, honking and flapping and slapping its webbed feet on the the road as fast as they could carry it. The dogs were definitely in it just for the fun but the goose had certain murder in its frenetic fury. What a hoot.
Keith |
Originally Posted by Leinster
(Post 21556597)
We must not have many Aussies on BF, because from the stories I've heard of their magpies they'd fill up this thread pretty quick. I never encountered it myself.
I know Australia magpies are a different species from Irish magpies, but are Cascades magpies a different one again? |
Originally Posted by bmcer
(Post 21556377)
Years ago while I was living in Chico, CA, I got a demonstration of just how aggressive red shoulder black birds can be...
My favorite are sand pipers, who will fly just infront of you as they try and "lure" you from their nest. |
Originally Posted by GrainBrain
(Post 21556908)
My favorite are sand pipers, who will fly just infront of you as they try and "lure" you from their nest. |
Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 21556925)
Crossing the country we encountered a species of bird that would fly along with us, land by the side of the road and act like it had a broken wing. We assumed it was trying to distract us from a nest.
Oh another cool one this morning, a flock of birds was on the rail trail around 5:30am as the sun was just up, as I came upon them they kind of flew up and then back down as a group just ahead of me. They kept doing this, kind of swirling motion for a mile until they pulled off into a field. |
Originally Posted by one4smoke
(Post 21556835)
You know why the right line of the formation is longer than the left??
Kildeer in Arizona do the same injured-wing bit |
Originally Posted by Oakman
(Post 21554774)
On this morning's ride, over my left shoulder swoops a red-tailed hawk. He dropped down and leveled off directly in front of me, staying about 10 feet ahead for maybe 30 seconds. Then he quickly accelerates to a low hanging branch to perch and watch me pass below. I gave him a salute and I swear he expressed a kinda smile. Beautiful animal.
Got any bike/bird stories? Red tail hawks are beautiful creatures! not bicycle, but have a falconer friend. One day on a hunt, the Bird latched eyes on a 3-4 year old child with a hood up. I raised my hand/arm to have the kid stop, the bird (Sally) was too low so she decided to just perch on me. 1. wow heavier than they look! 2. Super gentle with talons. 3. Talons are super sharp, I would not want to be on the receiving end of a bird using talons! only real bird interaction I have ever had on bicycle was a Pileated Woodpecker dropping out onto the MTB trail ahead of me and then flying down the trail in front of me. They kind of fly like a duck. I never realized that. On the road I occasionally see a red tailed hawk or a coopers hawk sitting on electric poles. Usually I run into packs of Turkey buzzards camping road kill. Those birds like to take off and circle back quickly, and they will drop a LOAD, huge load to gain altitude quickly if you are too close. Give em space! |
Originally Posted by SalsaShark
(Post 21555387)
I once had a bald eagle encounter very similar to the OP's story. It was super cool, and i wanted to look up continuously, but had to split time between watching the giant bird, and watching the road. It's funny how something like following a bird in flight can, for a few moments, suddenly become the only thing in the world that occupies one's thoughts.
Edit: I got ot be introduced to a peregrine falcon at the local Audubon Society. On his trainer's arm, 2 feet in front of me. What a beautiful and noble bird! Now I know why they appear in so many old shields and coats of arms. |
Originally Posted by DropBarFan
(Post 21555752)
I was chased by an Alpha Goose when I stopped on the MUP to watch the flock so I rode away. At a Skyline Drive parking lot there were a bunch of turkey vultures hanging around waiting for food scraps. Driving near my house I saw a bald eagle flying over the road & being harried by crows & sparrows, I'm surprised to read that's quite common. On local MUP a bat bumped into my shoulder, I had thought their nifty sonar prevented that.
Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 21555991)
It’s not fool proof. Went to pack up my bike for a trip out west and found a bat impaled on the small chainring. I must have hit it while I was driving home from an all-day event ride to Brooklyn. The bike was on the roof.
I don't think the poor creature survived. :( |
Originally Posted by Litespud
(Post 21554966)
Plenty of vultures here - occasionally I'll turn a blind corner and surprise a flock (?) head down in some roadkill. They all lumber into the air, sometimes coming within a few feet as they try to gain altitude. Probably no surprise, but vultures are pretty fragrant creatures, and not in a good way :(
|
I've has orioles fly alongside me a few times. It might have been the bright orange gloves I was wearing.
Sometimes I can see owls hovering over the rail trail. From a distance, the owls can look like people walking. |
Speaking of Aussies, worked for a couple of weeks in Canberra Australia. Noticed all the bicyclists had zip ties in their helmets, sort of a porcupine look. When I asked one of them why they said there was some bird in the area that was extremely territorial and would dive bomb bikers. Said the zip ties kept them from hitting the helmets. I don't remember the type of bird but maybe a magpie?
Beautiful birds in Australia. A bike tour in that country is on my bucket list. |
On the bike I've been attacked by Canada geese from the ground. (Big mouth and teeth like "Jaws ") Also by a wild turkey. One day I was paced by a big egret around 25 yards off my right. He stopped in a field, and when I took out my phone for a picture, he took off. Couple of nights ago, there was a big commotion in a pine tree near us. A big red tail was being harrassed by a little, but very loud, Cooper's hawk, then later by a silly mocking bird, after the small hawk gave up. Heres a few pictures.
https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...be809d2348.jpg https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...4b678447b2.jpg Cooper's hawk attacking red tail, top of tree. https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...c61ac7a9da.jpg Loud Cooper's hawk https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...8d948c6a05.jpg https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...3660613188.jpg Even the mocking bird got into it. https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...9f1756165f.jpg Angry mocking bird. |
Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 21556187)
Let's talk turkey. Climbing Dobson Pass from Wallace, ID.
https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...727202fe7.jpeg This one late evening I was on a quiet gravel trail and one of them on the side got spooked and started running away, in front of me. It was kind of fun, I picked up the pace, but then I learned that these things not only can run super fast, they are also decent flyers! |
After a ride, slowed to a stop, unclipped. While still straddling the top tube (clicking through cycle computer screens), a catbird alit (alighted? hmmm) upon my handlebars. Gave me the eye, flew away after a few seconds. No idea what he wanted.
Passing by a large pine tree in someone's yard on a ride, saw a red tailed hawk chase a squirrel around the trunk a couple of times before he gave up. I've seen kingfishers a couple of times, ditto Baltimore Orioles. Bald eagles, a few times. One was pretty big and close, perching in a tree, others were over the river. Too many turkey encounters to enumerate, including pairs of Toms having display contests (most springs). I generally give them a "gobble gobble", on consecutive rides near the same place/at same time of day (prob. same flock), the Tom gobbled back at me, prob. thought I was after his hens. Midtown Manhattan is less than 45 min. away by car (no traffic). |
The beginning of my commute is through the Arcata Marsh, and in the winter it's very dark. Too dark to see which birds I was surprising; every morning that one pond exploded in cheeping and the sound of birds paddle-flapping away.
Lots of non-migrating Canada geese (from a distance); once during hunting season I was riding along and a shot rang out, and hundreds of geese flew up and over my head. It was amazing. As much as I wanted to see them pass, I followed my own saying; 'Wise is (s)he who looks not at birds overhead.' So many egrets, some herons, every type of waterfowl you can imagine, and a variety of raptors, including kites, hawks, and barn owls. Crossing the last bridge into Eureka I sometimes see a kingfisher perched on the phone wire 10 feet away and about level with my head; it's pretty cool. |
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