This past week I had to spend some time in Florida for a work conference so I wasn't able to fly Hayduke but I needed to get my falconry fix some how so I got in touch with some local falconers. These folks went out of their way to show me some truely awesome falconry. The only downside was that my digital camera crapped out just before the trip! All I've got is some rather fuzzy cell phone pics but you'll get the idea.
On Thursday afternoon a second year apprentice named Matt made a 45 minute drive out to the resort I was staying at and picked me up only to drive another hour and a half (closer to two hours I think) to a field he'd gotten a good tip on. Matt is flying a fantastic red-tail in her 2nd year and we hooked up with a few other falconers, one flying an amazing finnish/german gos and another with a young Harris hawk that hadn't been entered yet. The field did not disappoint!
First up was the gos. The area was located in a large bowl and we were working along one of the edges with the gos on a T-perch when a bunny broke beneath us to the left. The gos shot of the T-perch before any of us even knew the rabbit had appeared and made the 30 yards up in the blink of an eye crashing down just behind the bunny. In true gos fashion the gos picked herself up and latched onto the bunny a scant 5 yards later and bunny #1 was in the bag. A great start!
The falconer traded her off and we set off in search of bunny #2 when one of the other falconers noticed a good sized rattlesnake tucked under a bush he was about to walk through! It was a pretty menacing sight and I really wish I had my better camera for the picture but this is all I got (Look closely!):
With the gos back up on the T-perch her falconer climbed a brush covered dirt mound and two rabbits bolted, going opposite ways. It was almost too easy for the gos who wrapped up #2 in 15 yards:
The gos got to feed up on this one but were kicking ourselves later on when we found out just how good this field really was! Not only did we kick up dozens more bunnies but we bumped at least two covies of quail! I would've loved to see the gos kick on the afterburners and fly one of those down!
Anyway, we trudged back to the car to pull out the Harris hawk. Despite having never caught a rabbit before he chased numerous bunnies and small birds with gusto. We ended his session by letting him feed up on a bunny the gos had caught to reinforce that those things taste good. I'm sure he'll end up being a great bird.
Then we pulled out Matt's bruiser. A 1300 gram red-tail that is quite ill intentioned toward rabbits. We wanted to work our way down toward the middle of the bowl where there was a tall telephone tower from which we were sure we'd get some good flights. I don't know how many bunnies we flushed on the way down there but we saw some great flights with the brush crashing that red-tails are known for but nothing more than fur to show for it. The red-tail was actually on the wing when we bumped one of the covies of quail and she actually dipped a wing at them! Quite the gamey bird!
It took a little coaxing but we finally got his bird up on the telephone tower in the center of the bowl and started beating the brush. We'd actually gone quite a ways and the cover was getting to be pretty tall when his bird launched into flight. She came barrelling over our heads about 50 feet up and crashed into the bushes about 50 yards from us snagging her first bunny of the day. From the tower to the bunny must've been at least 300 yards and the cover at that point was about head high. How on earth his bird spotted that rabbit from that distance in that cover I'll never know. I know they have good eye sight but this was just plain ridiculous!
Now usually Matt is satisfied with his one rabbit but there were so many bunnies in this field and the tower was such a good spot that he decided to try for his first ever double. His bird was a little flustered at not being able to take her fill of the first rabbit but eventually made her way back to the tower. It wasn't long before our crew flushed another unlucky bunny and the Red absolutely crushed it into the ground in a fantastic flight right in front of me. Congrats to Matt on his first ever double!!
I have to thank Matt again for going so far out of his way to pick me up, drop me off, and show me some great Florida falconry. That was truely a day to remember!
Saturday was my next chance to sneak some hawking in. For those of you who don't know, peregrine falcons had been on the endangered list for many years and while their numbers have fully recovered due to the efforts of many groups, not least of which were falconers, 2009 was the first year in about 40 that a limited number of States allowed take of wild peregrines. A Florida falconer by the name of Eric was lucky enough to draw a permit for one of these birds in Maryland and has been flying his beautiful Tundra peregrine, Doc, on snipe in his home state of Florida this season. Watching this bird fly was an opportunity I couldn't pass up.
I've seen many, many high flying falcons but most of my experience has been in Skytrial settings with the falcons being served racing homing pigeons in pretty controlled situations (as controlled as falconry gets anyway). Up to this point I'd only seen falcons kill wild game twice before in my entire falconry career.
It was an hour and a half drive to where I was supposed to meet Eric at 7:30 in the morning but the falconry I was shown was well worth getting up early for. We drove to the ranch where Eric usually flies and fairly quickly flushed a snipe. Snipe are Eric's favorite quarry, they are fast and maneuverable and he's had many falcons be unable to catch them. He remarked that one of his friends told him that he's convinced that snipe are un-catchable! Apparently Doc didn't get the memo!
We very loosely marked the snipe we had flushed while driving by, Eric parked perhaps 50 yards further away and got Doc ready to go. The hood came off and Doc took in his surroundings before launching off the fist into the sky. Before long he was up at least 500 feet straight above us! We overshot the snipe by a good ways in our attempts to flush and I'm sure Doc had gone up at least another hundred feet by the time it finally flushed. He came sizzling down in a beautiful stoop that caused the snipe to crash into cover for safety. Doc went in right after him and the snipe took to the air again with Doc hot on his tail. The two twisted and turned for another 50 yards before the snipe bailed into the cover again and this time Doc must've lost sight since he started to ring up above us again. Eric and I rushed over to the area where the snipe had put in as Doc gained altitude above us. The snipe flushed again when Doc was about 200 feet overhead and again Doc came screaming out of the sky. The snipe tried to bail but Doc was too close and there was an audible thunk as the two collided on the ground. What a fantastic flight!
That makes 21 snipe for Doc this season! An absolutely incredible feat! It was a special honor to watch what amounts to the Holy Grail of falconry (a wild caught peregrine) fly at such an exceptional level. There wasn't much left of the snipe when Eric picked the birds up but here's a shot I got with my cell and one Eric took with his much nicer camera:
If that wasn't good enough, Eric then pulled out a beautiful little red-necked falcon native to Northern Africa.
What a beautiful bird! It flew at about 150 grams and was one of most maneuverable little birds I've ever seen. Scarred the bejeebers out of numerous sparrows! Unfortunately the little guy has a thing about going into cover after them. The sparrows would bail into cover when the bird was inches from closing the deal and rather than go in after them he'd hover over the spot for a couple seconds and then move on. We didn't catch anything with him but it made me rather excited to fly a merlin this fall.
So ended the morning and my falconry experience in Florida. All in all some absolutely fantastic flying from all the birds I saw and I can't thank all those Florida falconers enough for allowing me to tag along. All the hawking made the hours and hours of work conference just a bit more bearable and the memories will last a lifetime. Falconry rocks.
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6 comments:
Wow - that sounds like a great time! Whenever I travel. I tell myself I'm gonna hook up with other falconers, and I never do.
Good stories
Doug
It was a great time! Sooooo glad I contacted some local falconers!
Great write up Isaac, glad you enjoyed the trip and come on back any time.
Almost as much fun to read as it must have been to live through it. Thanks for sharing! great tales. Hurrah for falconing!
I'd like to see a wild-caught Pgreen fly... We had a captive bred once. Beautiful birds! The Gyr was my personal fav though
excuse me.. let me ask. where i can get the red headed falcon?? thanks for the answer
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