Sheer panic when this guy arrived.

No small birds like to see this guy around, as there will surely be some killing going on. We have seen one on the farm in the past, lifting a hadeda ibis baby out of a nest and it is not a good memory.
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A beautiful juvenile Harrier Hawk came in on the attack and it raided a nest in a tree across the road from our house. This is raw nature.

The Harrier Hawk, known previously as the Gymnogene (Polyboroides typus), is a known nest raider, and with its double-jointed knees it can even climb trees. A very clever and stealthy hunter this guy, as at times he flies low over trees and when the small birds mob him, he knows that there are nests in the trees. Then he goes away, and he bides his time to go and raid the nests when the parents are out searching for food to feed their babies.

We were watching two little Cape Sparrows building their nest in the tree, but someone else was watching as well.
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And here below the watcher appeared to raid the nest. He kept on watching until the parents started to hunt for food, as then he knew that the eggs had hatched and that there was a baby, or babies in the nest.
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He turned around at the top of the tree.
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And then he flipped down to the nest while the parents were screaming at him inside the tree.
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He dunked his head inside the nest, and I ran over the road to try and scare him away, but no such luck.
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You can see more of the Harrier Hawk at the source link below.

The African harrier-hawk, harrier hawk or gymnogene (Polyboroides typus) is a bird of prey. It is about 60–66 centimetres (24–26 in) in length. It breeds in most of Africa south of the Sahara. The only other member of the genus is the allopatric Madagascar harrier-hawk (Polyboroides radiatus).

Source

Now I will advise those with squirmy stomachs not to look at the rest of the pictures.

He landed on a wall of a house below the tree with his prey.
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And finally, he took off to go and scout for other nests.
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We are now in the Spring Season of the Southern Hemisphere and this took place in a rural town of the Western Cape Province in South Africa.
Babies are born all over the place and new life is in abundance in nature.
In fact I have now spent 3 weeks and 3 days filming the birth of a Malachite female baby and she is the cutest thing that you will ever see.
I have already posted the story about the nest and you are going to love what I have to show you in a series of 3 posts. The first post will be done tomorrow, so please keep an eye out for it.
Such is life in nature.

I hope that you have enjoyed the story and the pictures.

And That's All Friends.

Photos by Zac Smith-All Rights Reserved.

Camera: Canon Powershot SX70HS Bridge camera.

Thank you kindly for supporting this post.



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36 comments
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One of the most dramatic posts I've encountered my dear friend! I completely understand how this spectacular creature must eat, but I still feel so sad for the fragile prey. Though the pics do disturb me greatly, your photography and written content is incredible nonetheless. Thanks for sharing.

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I do apologize for the disturbances, and we were also shattered when we saw it for the first-time years ago. But after some research we started to understand why these things happen. Nature has its own population control, and we will be swamped with birds if this didn't happen. That's the one reason and the other is that everyone and anything that lives in nature gets fed.
The little parents are so used to it that they have already started to build a new nest. Guess where?
I will do a post to show that they are building their new nest right here in our fence, as they saw me trying to scare the big bird away.
Now they are close by and of course we will keep an eye on them.
!PIZZA

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Impressive captures going in, small birds perform loudly, alas it is a case of feeding most probably little mouths waiting back at home.

!LUV nature always interesting.
!LOLZ Happy Monday

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Thank you and yes, nature controls the populations and she feeds everyone.

Monday is now done and we hope that you will have a good Tuesday.

!LOLZ
!LUV

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With stage 6 load shedding not sure how much time online with three times per day we all know the agony.

!PIZZA
!WINEX

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(Edited)

Yep! A real nightmare methinks, and the new spindoctor has to retract all of his loadshedding promises. What a farce.

!WINEX
!PIZZA

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As you rightly mention Such is life in nature as harsh as it may seem.

I still keep in my mind the sad abduction of a baby bird that happened literally in front of my eyes, in my face. The hunter swiftly flew into my backyard and swiped at the small nest where an unprotected mother was feeding her baby chick. I was bewildered by how fast it all happened, I could not believe it. The abduction was executed by a species of eagle known in my country as Gavilan.

Dear @papilloncharity, I am so sorry that, despite your great effort, you were unable to prevent the abduction of the chicks. I can only imagine how frustrating it was for you and how bad you felt.

A strong but at the same time fascinating story. I will be watching to follow the story of the signing work you did.

Thank you again so much for continuing to share your great passion for nature. Greetings to the family and take care of yourself!


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Thank you and yes, nature is raw truth my friend.
One can never forget an episode like you had with that Eagle and it is always upsetting. I have seen many such instances now and the best one that I can remember is that I was watching a fight between a snake and a mongoose. Out of nowhere an eagle flew in, grabbed the snake and flew away with it.
So I can imagine how surprised you felt.

Thank you for the kind message and I have some good news for you. The little parents are already building a new nest and this time they are building the nest right here in a fence at our home. They saw me trying to scare the predator bird away. So no big bird will come here to our home to grab the babies.

You also take care and it's my pleasure to share my passions.
!PIZZA !LOL and !LUV

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Beautiful hawk you click some great photos of it, looks really wonderfull 😍😍

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Woah! Your photos are incredible! We saw it here, I think I told you. But I didn't have my camera with me. So amazing. The Harrier Hawk is such a beautiful raptor

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Thank you and I only try my best. Yes, I do remember your episode and now you are walking around with your camera strapped hippie style around your waist !LOL
Only teasing and to me the juvenile looks so much better than the adults.

Got an adult floating around in the sun this morning.

Blessings to you and the family.

!PIZZA and !LUV

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You could thrown a brick.., but he will just come back when you leave!

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Oh yes, you are right as no way to stop that guy.
Besides, with my luck I will land the brick through a neighbor's window and he will come after me with a shotgun !LOL

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(Edited)

PIZZA!

$PIZZA slices delivered:
papilloncharity tipped ma3str0
papilloncharity tipped buckaroobaby
papilloncharity tipped joanstewart
joanstewart tipped papilloncharity
papilloncharity tipped bravofenix (x2)
papilloncharity tipped sanach
@papilloncharity(2/15) tipped @litguru

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Holy Sh...! What amazing shots of this natural scenes. No wonder little birds appear to be born with an innate fear of raptors. I can't remember the specifics of the study, but researchers showed the cut out of a bird of pray to newborn chicks, and they completely freaked out when the shadow passed overhead, implying that they're innately born with this fear so they can protect themselves. Very nice photography!

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Thank you and that sounds like an amazing study. I think that humans are also born with many innate emotions. Depending on the DNA lines of the parents though !LOL
Glad that you liked the pics.
!PIZZA

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