He was giving me the stink eye as if to say "don't even think about messing with me ".Thats an awesome photo!
To get close enough to get it is even cooler. You can see him staring you down as well.
They’re protected under US law - you can’t even have a feather unless you’re a Native American.Can you shoot them? he asked innocently.
Yep. The friggin' thing looks like it lifts weights between meals.‘MURICA!
But seriously, that is both beautiful and terrifying.
Lady friend in Alaska had her cat traumatized by being grabbed by an eagle, then dropped about thirty feet when the weight proved too much. The cat, not the lady. Cat won't go outside now. The bird seems like an aggressive buzzard to me. Can you shoot them? he asked innocently.
Al, there used to be one that I'd see off of a roundabout in Smithsburg on a weekly basis. He'd sit in a field with cows and just kept watch. People would pull over and take pics. He eventually stopped appearing. Perhaps he was tired of the paparazzi.They are jaw dropping up close. Last March, in a small Louisiana town, we drove past this one. I had to do a double-take and tell my wife "that's an Eagle, right?". This is on a city road. He was undeterred as we pulled along side. Previous, I had only seen them from afar along the Potomac River up in Maryland.
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And the ever-docile MCraney never EVER thought of messing with him!!He was giving me the stink eye as if to say "don't even think about messing with me ".
near Beaver Creek I assume (on 66)? My old stomping grounds as a kid, but I never saw a Bald Eagle.Al, there used to be one that I'd see off of a roundabout in Smithsburg on a weekly basis. He'd sit in a field with cows and just kept watch. People would pull over and take pics. He eventually stopped appearing. Perhaps he was tired of the paparazzi.