Ben Woodruff
Ben Woodruff
  • 525
  • 19 073 177
Falconry: Searching for Coopers hawks
In this falconry video I go searching for coopers hawk nests, and find them This video shows coopers hawks mobbing ravens, turkey vultures, and other plants and animals I encounter while out looking for nests.
Coopers hawks are a medium sized hawk native to North America. They are incredible hunters and make fine falconry birds, but they are very intense and require a lot of time and patience to work with. I hope you enjoy this video. I am still recovering from my heart surgery and am having to take things very slow. Sometimes this comes across in the video as my speaking is sometimes slurred and I still have difficulty remembering things when I am presenting. Thank you for your support and your patience
zhlédnutí: 659

Video

Falconry: Looking for Goshawk nests #falconry
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 19 hodinami
In this falconry video I teach the basics about looking for goshawk nests. This format is a little different, as I actually take you along in the forest instead of just talking about it at home. I am still recovering from heart surgery and had help and people keeping an eye on the state of my health. It was good to get out and explore and see all of nature and how the eco systems are connected....
Falconry: Training Harris hawks #falconry
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 14 dny
This falconry video teaches principles and techniques used to train a harris hawk. Harris hawks are one of the newest species to be embraced in falconry. Falconers all over the world fly and hunt with harris hawks, when their history in the sport is less than 100 years. This falconry video discuses specific training and handling considerations when working with harris hawks. #kestrel #kestrels ...
Falconry: Kestrels vs Red tailed hawk
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 21 dnem
In this falconry video I compare kestrels to red tailed hawks. Red tailed hawks are large powerful soaring hawks, and American kestrels are tiny falcons. This video compares the two species and their use in modern falconry. In the early days of American falconry laws, apprentice falconers were only allowed to fly kestrels or red tails. Now most states allow for more choices for a first bird. Th...
Falconry: Different ways to keep birds of prey
zhlédnutí 4,1KPřed 28 dny
#falconry In this falconry video, I discuss the many different ways that people can work with and interact with birds of prey. From falconry and wildlife education, to bird banding and rehab, there are many ways people can work with raptors. Finding the right fit is the key to having a positive experience when working with birds of prey in any way. This video discusses this principle and will h...
#shorts Philippine Eagle
zhlédnutí 693Před měsícem
Philippine eagles are among the largest and rarest eagles on the planet. With fewer than 500 individuals currently on the planet. #shorts #shortsfacts #shortsfeed #filipineeagle #harpyeagle #eagle #hawk #falconry #falcon #benwoodruff #benwoodrufffalconry #kestrel #owl #owls Music provided by: Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): uppbeat.io/t/vens-adams/adven... License code: HIDBW3EYTLEPCJ9I
Updates and new videos info
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed měsícem
This falconry vides updates on the channel, my health, and new videos moving forward. #Benwoodruff #falconry #goshawk
Ben Woodruff falconry updates
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed měsícem
Ben Woodruff falconry updates
The Curious Case of the Absentee Falconer
zhlédnutí 3KPřed měsícem
The Curious Case of the Absentee Falconer
Why is the Government killing 500,000 owls?
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 2 měsíci
Why is the Government killing 500,000 owls?
Falconry: Saker falcon vs Peregrine falcon
zhlédnutí 2,5KPřed 2 měsíci
Falconry: Saker falcon vs Peregrine falcon
Falconry: New perspective on socializing raptors
zhlédnutí 13KPřed 2 měsíci
Falconry: New perspective on socializing raptors
Falconry: Goshawk vs Peregrine falcon
zhlédnutí 24KPřed 2 měsíci
Falconry: Goshawk vs Peregrine falcon
Falconry: Molting your bird
zhlédnutí 10KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: Molting your bird
Camel cannon bones
zhlédnutí 557Před 3 měsíci
Camel cannon bones
Falconry: Coopers Hawk introduction
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: Coopers Hawk introduction
50,000 subscribers! Thank you Everyone!!!
zhlédnutí 586Před 3 měsíci
50,000 subscribers! Thank you Everyone!!!
Falconry: Introduction to Goshawks
zhlédnutí 11KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: Introduction to Goshawks
Falconry: Training stubborn birds
zhlédnutí 4,3KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: Training stubborn birds
Camelids: Introducing the Paleollama
zhlédnutí 536Před 3 měsíci
Camelids: Introducing the Paleollama
Falconry: The new American Falconry Channel
zhlédnutí 2,6KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: The new American Falconry Channel
Falconry: Rule breaking buteos
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 3 měsíci
Falconry: Rule breaking buteos
Falconry: Illegal quarry?
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry: Illegal quarry?
Falconry: How raptors were viewed in the 1920's
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry: How raptors were viewed in the 1920's
Falconry: The new names? #wildlife #falconry
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry: The new names? #wildlife #falconry
The Black Backed Jackal #wildlife
zhlédnutí 778Před 4 měsíci
The Black Backed Jackal #wildlife
Falconry: Coping a Peregrine falcon #falconry #wildlife
zhlédnutí 3,2KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry: Coping a Peregrine falcon #falconry #wildlife
Falconry Fundamentals: Slip Management Concept Card
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry Fundamentals: Slip Management Concept Card
Falconry: Trapping a kestrel with a bal-chatri trap #falconry #wildlife
zhlédnutí 4,5KPřed 4 měsíci
Falconry: Trapping a kestrel with a bal-chatri trap #falconry #wildlife
Jellyfish Alien: The true story
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 4 měsíci
Jellyfish Alien: The true story

Komentáře

  • @shae899
    @shae899 Před 8 hodinami

    Everyone saying "theyre agressive when they're on eggs" and "no its once they hatch!" It's all whether they're comfortable or not. Our resident female knows all the neighbors and you can get up right underneath her nest anytime of the year and she is fine with it. (Her fledglings even get left in our garden with us while we're working. We're apparently her babysitters.) However, a road crew last year caught ALL her fury and had to retreat to their vehicles and go down the road. They dont like strangers. Poor Ben! (This pair probably also dont like that their kiddos get recommended for snatching lol) Our resident pair was disrupted by first a red tail and then horrible weather and are courting a 3rd time. I really worry now that they don't have time to raise their clutch successfully before the small birds migrate. They usually fledge in early July, have fledged as early as early June and as late as mid-august. I worry this batch would not fledge till late September.

  • @user-lu1cr8ty6o
    @user-lu1cr8ty6o Před 8 hodinami

    I am currently observing a nest that was coopers hawk last year but never saw activity in it. The female was injured last June, and I didn't see her again. This year, I noticed that in mid to late March, new twigs started being added to the old nest. For two months, I have been watching, documenting everything I see and notice. I took some poor photos. I became so confused with the details of the ID. Cooper's hawk, Falcon and Kestrel. A process of elimination is needed. I am continuing to document everything. So, in the end, maybe I can know my Arizona raptors behavior is unique to itself. I had a professional wildlife photographer come to photograph the nesting family for proper I D photos. The results I'm told are Cooper's Hawks. I trust that. Then there is this behavior I'm seeing, as the weeks progress, there are changes to behaviors. Your subscribers' comments stating the female stay on the eggs are relatable as that too is what I saw, tail feathers. I have been run off by the male the week the eggs may have started hatching. The female stayed motionless while on the nest. The male herded me with his wings until he made me turn back on the trail the way I came from before I got any closer to the nest. In the last three weeks, I noticed different calls the raptors make. For two months, I heard their call and feel I learned it. I recorded it and ran it through an ID App, the results were Merlin! Now, what I'm documenting is mimicking sounds of their prey. I will hear a Dove call. It's the raptor on its perch, dives into the Palo Verde tree, and as the doves see it coming, they take flight, and one is quickly captured. Last week, mid-morning, raptor parent "A" makes a dove call and flys toward the Palo Verde tree, flushes doves, Raptor Parent "B" captures a dove! Well, that was enlightening! I know Hawks team hunt, I have seen it before. I have never heard them mimick other birds. As the temperature is over 100° in the past week, the babies are now visible on the edges of the nest. On my walk, I heard the sound of chirping, I knew it was the baby raptors. As I approached the disruption bandaries, I heard a western Cardinal and found a female in the Palo Verde tree near the raptor nest. Then next thing was such a surprise, as I heard another cardinal call, then another, the third with just a little different pitch. As I got there I could see the raptor parents were not in the nest and there were two babies chirping, one was sounding like the Cardinal in the nearby tree!! Whatever is going on has me intrigued so much I've subscribed to your channel and watch everything that could possibly help me learn. Thank you Ben Woodruff, hope things are progressing with you. M.E. in A.Z.

  • @lisaanderson124
    @lisaanderson124 Před 8 hodinami

    I love how they answer when you call, that's awesome! Definitely something I'd love to learn!

    • @shae899
      @shae899 Před 8 hodinami

      Just don't tell the birdwatchers. They disapprove very much. That said, if you just talk or sing at your resident local corvids and raptors, they'll learn that you are attempting to communicate, and can come to understand some concise words and sounds meaning certain things. (I have a whistle song for "I'm filling the birdbath, now!")

  • @oldschoolhawking8191
    @oldschoolhawking8191 Před 10 hodinami

    What I found when a Cooper's has eggs, she lays perfectly still, even when you're under the nest. You wouldn't even know the nest was active, but usually her tail will be visible, sticking over the top of the nest.

  • @phillipwasson2980
    @phillipwasson2980 Před 17 hodinami

    ❤👌

  • @antoniaalvino2586
    @antoniaalvino2586 Před 17 hodinami

    Togli quei lacci😮

  • @happybee7725
    @happybee7725 Před dnem

    That was cool. I enjoyed that. That raven call you make is absolutely bang on!

  • @fiercetoaster270
    @fiercetoaster270 Před dnem

    I'm really good at finding coops nests where I live! They're my favorite species to fly! I only looked for two of my 5 nests this year because I'm flying a Finnish gos this year. Unfortunately, the numbers are really low compared to last year. Last year, both nests produced 5, with 9 being fledged in total. This year, they were at 2 each, but one has already lost one.

  • @kristensorensen2219

    Hearing the Coopers Hawk tells me who my favorite Stellars Jay is immitating. One also mimicks the Redtail call. So fun to immitate their calls!!❤

  • @gerbilgeneproject
    @gerbilgeneproject Před dnem

    Looking healthy Ben. That's so good to see.

  • @danparadis01
    @danparadis01 Před dnem

    Always more aggressive when on eggs. Less when hatched out.

  • @karsantos-wd7yy
    @karsantos-wd7yy Před dnem

    🥰 que bonito

  • @Mikheno
    @Mikheno Před dnem

    From my experience Ben females won't dive bomb you if they're on eggs. They only defend young, not the stand, the nest or eggs. I'll bet you have young chicks in that nest. As for the one diving on the raven that should be the adult male. Juveniles don't defend territories and unless the raven was super close to the nest the male does most of the territorial defense. Nice find.

    • @shae899
      @shae899 Před 8 hodinami

      Tell that to my resident female's juveniles! Very aggressive to other species some years (but not at all others). I find the young females are much more aggressively territorial than juvenile males. Never seen a juvenile male get territorial unless following their sister.

    • @Mikheno
      @Mikheno Před 7 hodinami

      @@shae899 Juveniles at the nest can be very aggressive and will occasionally kill one of the adults (particularly the smaller male) when fighting over food. As they become more aggressive and better at flying the adults will make no attempt at feeding them. The simply fly into the nest area, drop the prey (maybe still living) and get the hell out. What I was referring to with Bens observation is that it's the males that establish territory boundaries usually long before a female even arrives on scene. They also build several nests to entice her to hang around and mate. Last years juveniles, sometimes called floaters as they don't have a nest stand of their own, will rarely be seen and don't defend territories. i'm pretty sure the bird he saw chasing after the Raven was the adult male at that nest stand.

    • @shae899
      @shae899 Před 7 hodinami

      @@Mikheno this late in the year, ya, probably. The latest I've seen one of last year's juveniles driving out other birds was a February right before her mom turned around and kicked her out a few weeks later

    • @Mikheno
      @Mikheno Před 6 hodinami

      @@shae899 I'm not sure what you're referring to in February but family breakup usually occures by the end of August at the latest. Juveniles and adults will start migrating out of the area in another month after breakup. Full blown migration will kick in around October/November. When I worked for the Forest Service on the Goshawk Survey crew we usually gave up after August. Most birds, young and old, had disbursed the nest sites and were long gone. Not an absolute but that was generally how it worked out.

    • @shae899
      @shae899 Před 6 hodinami

      @@Mikheno so we have a resident pair of Cooper's Hawks (and have had pairs before them) for about 2 decades with pairs of this species now. Family break up has varied wildly. The earliest fledge I have observed was first week of June and the latest was mid August. The juveniles stay in the area about 6 weeks together, sometimes all cooperating to hunt and others completely avoiding one another and forcing the parents to choose who to feed- and every behavior combo in between. After the six weeks are up MOST years all but one of the chicks (usually the largest female or smallest male) leaves the area entirely. The large female tends to herself if she stays, and the small male usually latches onto dad to learn and sometimes get fed. This last winter in mid Michigan was warm, with almost no snow on the ground throughout the winter. We had our resident pair fending off two other pairs who were trying to move in on their territory. The resident pair had a small male, a small female, and a large female and one of the other pairs had a medium sized female with them. These two families stayed together all winter, and the resident pair with their clutch of three won the day. The two female juveniles tended to range around but the small male stayed right in the central nesting ground. I last saw them in late February before their mom kicked them out and a few weeks early courtship started. (They have lost their first two clutches this year, now, and he is courting her again. I'm not sure they have time to finish, now. Very strange last year's worth of observation with these hawks. Last year's clutch fledged less than 3 weeks from today.)

  • @ComicusFreemanius
    @ComicusFreemanius Před dnem

    dandelion is probably the healthiest plant on the planet, root tea isn't bad if it's done right.

  • @rossrossier935
    @rossrossier935 Před dnem

    Great find Ben!!!

  • @PaulVos-qw5kl
    @PaulVos-qw5kl Před dnem

    I love this channel it has inspired me for falconry and have went red tailed hawk spoting

  • @juliareal8187
    @juliareal8187 Před dnem

    Bella ❤

  • @marioviscosi4808
    @marioviscosi4808 Před dnem

    Che bello

  • @kenho-wr5ul2rh7m
    @kenho-wr5ul2rh7m Před 2 dny

    what i see the hawk starts to be narcissistic

  • @EdwardVGrimm
    @EdwardVGrimm Před 2 dny

    "Da f*ck ya looking at, bruh"

  • @user-xe3ou3lz5q
    @user-xe3ou3lz5q Před 2 dny

    덩어리

  • @bgtuc84
    @bgtuc84 Před 2 dny

    Would you recommend doing this in advance or after thawing a bird? The wife and I are raising our own flock and some are close to processing now.

  • @monicaabarzua5378
    @monicaabarzua5378 Před 2 dny

    Majestuoso!!!❤❤❤❤

  • @BrezkBone
    @BrezkBone Před 2 dny

    Fuck yea every harris that gets sold i get a hubdred dollors see ya around.

  • @RobinASmith138
    @RobinASmith138 Před 2 dny

    I was once a baby Robin with my mom too

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Před 2 dny

    why are there so many recently died trees in your woodland?

    • @benwoodrufffalconry
      @benwoodrufffalconry Před 2 dny

      Utah is very much a desert state. Anywhere we get water, woodlands will appear. But the past few years we have had intense droughts that have killed many of our trees. And the intense summer heat the past few years has also pushed many of our pine and fur trees being their limit.

  • @user-wu4tv7xc7v
    @user-wu4tv7xc7v Před 3 dny

    ALLAH CELLE CELALÜHÜ HERŞEYE KADİRDİR 🤲🤲🤲🤲

  • @user-wu4tv7xc7v
    @user-wu4tv7xc7v Před 3 dny

    SÜBHANALLAH 🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲

  • @signore-solomonare1818

    That’s what Ducati Multistrada v4 modeled from

  • @user-hp5mq4pf1z
    @user-hp5mq4pf1z Před 3 dny

    날개달린 고양이🦉🤎🤎

  • @raavyak1853
    @raavyak1853 Před 3 dny

    Jai mahalakshmi 🪷🙏

  • @chrisbaker3066
    @chrisbaker3066 Před 3 dny

    You must find it hard not to get TOO excited Ben!!? You may need to ease your heart back into full -on "over- the - moon-iness!"

  • @RobinASmith138
    @RobinASmith138 Před 3 dny

    That female is making a noise I don’t hear from the Cooper’s around my area (south-central Texas)

  • @user-ez2tq4vi8f
    @user-ez2tq4vi8f Před 3 dny

    Stay Gold, ponyboy. Stay gold.

  • @bertacampanelli2240

    Es hermoso😊

  • @markdanielczyk944
    @markdanielczyk944 Před 3 dny

    Been watching four families of Robins, three our done, last family should be out this week or so. The last family parents are so calm, just doing their job.

  • @ismewhat1234
    @ismewhat1234 Před 3 dny

    So cool ❤

  • @Crosswindsaviations

    Cute! I have a pair of chickadees nesting in my yard

  • @BrezkBone
    @BrezkBone Před 3 dny

    It's becuze kestrel beat pergrine and prarie loves kestrel for it american thank you your a connected person.

  • @BrezkBone
    @BrezkBone Před 3 dny

    Why is a peals pergrine able to artificial I ensemanate the only girl freind I've ever had why I have close in my back ok is it revenge for liking blue wings better she got blue wings I'm not that mad but is peals and kestrel conpadble in some wird way I like peals pegrines pepgrem

  • @Oh-Deer-God
    @Oh-Deer-God Před 3 dny

    Hey Ben, I've been looking for a hat like that, can you tell me which it is or where you got it?

  • @kinoeye8730
    @kinoeye8730 Před 3 dny

    I'm curious, do hybrids still fall under government regulations?

  • @michellegroncki9257

    So cute!

  • @wesadams5128
    @wesadams5128 Před 3 dny

    I always thought it was bullcrap when i see the videos 😂 like wtf? Bash your head in a wall?

  • @Bernandez4139
    @Bernandez4139 Před 3 dny

    Let Tobias go he's been though enough!

  • @sayasendirisaja674
    @sayasendirisaja674 Před 4 dny

    Cat eagle.

  • @StoneE4
    @StoneE4 Před 4 dny

    Excellent video! 👍👍 More of this, please. I like all your videos, but the ones where you're out in the field and/or showing practical applications of your techniques are alway my favorites. At first glance the shot of all the spent pine seeds on the ground looked like the base of all the trees, right now, where I'm from - Chicago. The 17 year cicadas are emerging and just about every tree has a mound of exoskeletons.

  • @bennyjames558
    @bennyjames558 Před 4 dny

    Hawk to reflection: id hit that

  • @tbrackett8389
    @tbrackett8389 Před 4 dny

    Calgon take me away

  • @theundefeatedavatar1738

    That bird is probably very confused aint they vision like zoomed in