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Attack birds seen tossing baby goats off cliff

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This entry was posted on May 26, 2008 and is filed under Website Links.


The world today can produce some pretty scary things and what might be scary to one person might not have the same type of influence on someone else. This post is about that contrast.


Did you know that there is what I call an "attack bird' out there that grabs small goats and tosses them off steep cliffs to kill and eat them? As you'll see in the video, no one is more scared than the parents as they watch there offspring get muscled off the side of a cliff. Keep in mind that these birds that are known as the Golden Eagle live all around the globe and while it's not very likely, a small toddler weighs about the same as a young goat...and in this world, eventually everything becomes possible.


Picture I created in Photoshop Element showing a helpless goat before his life ends 10 quick seconds later


The Golden Eagle is known as a bird of prey and can grow quite large especially the females as they are always bigger than the males. The average wingspan is about 7 feet and the bird standing up averages about 3 feet, and that's just the average specs, not the biggest.

The Golden Eagle caught my attention because of it's diet. Many small animals fall victim when this attack bird is hungry.

A hungry Golden Eagle will eat...

  • mice
  • rats
  • birds
  • hawks
  • owls

But when they're really hungry they'll eat...
  • foxes
  • wolverines
  • young deer
  • lambs
  • goats
The way these attack birds hunt is interesting.  They have very powerful eyes which allow them to see prey from very far away.  Their weapon of choice is usually their long sharp talons that have no problem cutting and tearing their prey apart.  There are times when the Golden Eagle will use some type of tactics to hunt down their prey. 

The male and female have even been known to work as a team by the male bird driving or luring their prey into the direction of the awaiting female, or as you'll see in the video below, tossing them off cliffs.



Check out the video below that shows these birds dragging goats off the side of a cliff. The video is 7 minutes long but if you don't feel like watching the whole thing the action starts at 0:31 and then again at 4:53. Although the clips look similar, they are two different clips because in the second one the Golden Eagle grabs the goat by the head back to the nest.





After watching the video you might see why I like to call the Golden Eagle an attack bird. That scene in the video that shows the goat being dragged by the head and through a canyon is spooky. When was the last time you saw a bird fly past you holding a goat by the head?

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