Where Eagles Dare - This Time With Images Attached

One more attempt after learning something new on the internet.  Thanks to EveningStarNM for the head's up on reading the fine print when it comes to Google protocall and transferring images.  I did proofread the original posting, but apparently the images were available only to me, so let's see if Flickr can handle the load.

 Anyway, the original blog post was merely a copy of an email from my sister in VA who sent me the story below of an aerial eagle battle that took place on Lake Tapps, WA, less than twenty miles from where I live.  Ironically, it took meassage from my sister 2,500 miles away to alert me to what had happened in my own backyard.  Just more proof of the ever shrinking world due to the world wide web.

 

Here's a once-in-a-lifetime event captured on film...

The fellow sitting on the tailgate of his pickup truck never realized the show he was missing.
(620 mm effective Focal Length)

 

 The little duck watches as the Eagle speeds straight at him at about 40 mph.
(760 mm effective Focal Length)

 With perfect timing, the duck always dove and escaped with a mighty splash!   Then he'd pop to the surface as soon as the Eagle flew past.  This was repeated over and over for several minutes.   I worried the poor duck would tire and that would be the end of him.
(1,040 mm effective Focal Length)

 A second Eagle joins the attack!   The duck kept diving "just in time", so the Eagles began to dive into the water after him!
(1,150 mm effective Focal Length)

 After several minutes the Eagles got frustrated and began to attack each other.   They soon began to dive vertically, level out, and attack head-on in a good old-fashioned game of high-speed "Chicken".  Sometimes they banked away from each other at the last possible second.  Other times they'd climb vertically and tear into each other while falling back toward the water.  (The duck catches his breath at the right side of this picture.)
(900 mm effective Focal Length)

A terrible miscalculation!     The luckiest shot of my life catches this 100 mph head-on collision between two Bald Eagles.
(1,320 mm effective Focal Length)

 One Eagle stayed aloft and flew away, but the other lies motionless in a crumpled heap.  The lucky duck survived to live another day.
(486 mm effective Focal Length)

 It's sad to watch an Eagle drown.  He wiggled, flapped and struggled mostly underwater.  He finally got his head
above water and with great difficulty managed to get airborne.   To my astonishment, he flew straight toward me, and it was the most wretched and unstable bird flight I've ever seen!
(620 mm effective Focal Length)

 The bedraggled Eagle circled me once - then lit atop a nearby fir tree.  He had a six-foot wingspread and looked mighty angry.  I was concerned that I might be his next target, but he was so exhausted he just stared at me.  Then I wondered if he would topple to the ground.  As he tried to dry his feathers, it seemed to me that this beleaguered Eagle symbolized America in its current trials.
(1,200 mm effective Focal Length)

 My half-hour wait was rewarded with this marvelous sight.   He flew away, almost good as new.   May America  recover as well.
(1,400 mm effective Focal Length)

 

 

 

 

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Cool Story Bro!

We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.

by aidbo on 06/17/2009 07:17:40 PM EST

I just learned a new acronym, so thanks for that.

by Spencer on 06/17/2009 07:27:36 PM EST

[ Parent ]
TANSTAAFL
Bonus points if you can tell me what it means and where it's from.

We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.

by aidbo on 06/17/2009 08:02:25 PM EST

[ Parent ]
There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch
From The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein

by birdboy1 on 06/17/2009 08:05:55 PM EST

[ Parent ]
is over 9000 internets.  Especially for picking the meaning that I was thinking of.  I looked it up on Wikipedia just now and found out it's been being used for many different concepts, interesting how things are connected.

We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.

by aidbo on 06/17/2009 08:13:29 PM EST

[ Parent ]
Props to everyone involved.  LOL WTF LSMFT

by Spencer on 06/17/2009 08:16:27 PM EST

[ Parent ]
what's that mean, Lets Screw my finger's tired?

by birdboy1 on 06/17/2009 08:23:19 PM EST

[ Parent ]
But it's "Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco".

by Spencer on 06/17/2009 08:28:13 PM EST

[ Parent ]
I used to smoke Luckies (Luckys?).  They're better than Newports, but not as good as American Spirits IMHO.  It's been about 3 weeks since I had a cigarette though, so they all sound good to me right now.

We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.

by aidbo on 06/17/2009 08:54:27 PM EST

[ Parent ]
Great photography

I have never seen anything like that  Im glad I got to see it in pictures

thanks for posting this

seeing it is like a re charge of my batteries.


by Chinese Democracy on 06/17/2009 09:31:35 PM EST

Those are fantastic. Super props to you!

I don't believe in prophesies, but this left me wondering...

2 eagles collide in full flight while chasing a duck... it could have been more obvious, if a donkey and and an elephant with giant ticks riding horseback chasing some sheep had collided. But that would be very odd ;).

by eborujion on 06/18/2009 05:42:48 AM EST

the elephant had screwed the donkey, after sending the troops out to war to make money for his pig friends.

by birdboy1 on 06/18/2009 07:31:49 AM EST

[ Parent ]
That reminds me: a viable third party would just need a real cool animal to attract many followers. Any propositions? a 20-inch-dick-duck?
I never got donkey and elephant. Dumb and stubborn vs. aggressive and unforgiving both sound like duds to me, but then I don't give a shit about political traditions. But donkey must have been obviously flawed even back in the days, right?!?

by eborujion on 06/18/2009 09:00:55 AM EST

[ Parent ]

Ass wearing a Hat.

 

by gatekeeper50 on 06/18/2009 02:52:48 PM EST

[ Parent ]
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