Headless fish flying

 

Were the fish flying? Some might quibble that these fish weren’t flying; an Osprey was flying. Yet, if I were to say I flew to Vancouver, would people believe that I had flapped my arms, or would they understand that I had been carried by some flying device?

The sight of a headless fish flying across the sky is certainly one of the oddities of the local summer.

The question is why?

I became aware of the phenomenon of a headless flying fish nearly a decade ago when I was kayaking and an Osprey flew past with one. Since then, I have had many such views. (Sept. 14, 2007)

A web search for osprey carrying fish reveals many images similar to the next one: a complete fish. Only a handful of headless ones appear. Does this mean that what is common here is rare elsewhere? It is more likely that this is the result of a photographer’s bias for showing the complete fish. (Sept. 1, 2013)

In the above picture, the Osprey is carrying the fish with its head forward so as to minimize drag. When it lands, the head continues to face front ready to be eaten. (Aug. 17, 2010)

Many birds of prey eat the head first, presumably because brains are tasty and nutritious. However, an Osprey probably eats the head first, rather than the tail, because it merely has to lean down to feed. (Aug. 17, 2010)

What is striking about the previous two pictures, and the next one, is that the Osprey has not taken the fish to a nest. Rather, it has stopped to snack. When it flies off, it will be packing a headless fish. An Osprey pausing for a quick snack seems to be one of the reasons headless fish fly around the lake. (Sept. 13, 2014)

Another reason headless fish fly around our skies is an Osprey’s protectiveness. If an Osprey leaves any portion of a fish unattended, it will be stolen. The primary threat seems to come from a Bald Eagle. This Osprey packing a headless fish is being chased by a sub-adult Bald Eagle. Had the Osprey not taken the fish along, the eagle would have stolen it from the nest. As it was, the eagle failed and the Osprey kept its fish. (Jun. 5, 2010)

Indeed, any unattended fish will attract scavengers such as this gull hoping for scraps. (Sept. 7, 2013)

There is another curious wrinkle in the story of headless fish flying: humans. Ospreys are partial to making nests upon human structures, but the humans, themselves, make Ospreys nervous. The dock pilings and the dolphins (channel markers) that Ospreys favour are inherently places of considerable human traffic, so we may have to forgive them for their inconsistency of retreating when a human has the audacity to turn up. (Osprey family on dolphin, Sept. 2, 2013)

But, why would an Osprey take its fish with it just because a boater docks or obeys regulations and passes a dolphin on the proper side? The boater is not about to try to steal the fish from the nest. Alas, the Osprey does not know this. It only seems to know that when retreating, take along the fish. This instinct prompts an increase in the number of headless flying fish during boating season. (Aug. 13, 2015, FFG)

Not to mention, a smaller number of complete, but strangely hairy fish flying about the Lake. (Aug. 13, 2015)

Finn Fraser Grathwol’s picture of the Osprey packing a headless fish is used with permission.

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Young hawks

 

Over recent months, I have shown this year’s young of many species from Tree Swallows to White-tailed Deer. Here are the young of two hawks: Osprey and Red-tailed Hawk. 

A juvenile Osprey is still in the nest, but it is learning to fly by facing into the wind and flapping its wings.

This juvenile Red-tailed Hawk still seems to be trying to make sense of its new world.

It lifts off. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawks do not show a reddish tail for their first year.
 

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Bat hunting

 

For ingenuity and technical prowess, there are few exploratory projects around the Lake that can rival that of Derek Kite’s photography: He has set out to take pictures of bats. But, not just bats in a roost, but bats on the wing while hunting insects over the Lake at night.  

This is like the proverbial problem of finding a black cat in a coal cellar, but with the added difficulty that the cat (the bat in this case) is not only unseen in the darkness, but is passing through the cellar at a high speed. 

The bat banks as it swings around to capture an insect.

Derek Kite’s picture is used with permission.

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Fawns

 

At this time of the year, the delight is to see the newly born. Usually, the fawns are so well hidden as to be unobservable. Needless to say, seeing these two fawns of the White-tailed Deer in the tall grass was a treat.

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Turtle painted

 

Now, this is certainly one painted turtle. 

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Shadow Darner

 

When I was a child, I remember throwing handfuls of sand at these so as to down them.

I now consider the Shadow Darner (this is a male) to be one of the great delights of the late summer. They relentlessly patrol the shoreline for all manner of other flying insects and are voracious when encountering them.

How could anyone (other than a callow youth) not revel in the flight of a darner?

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Pacific Wren

 

When I last saw this wren, it was called a Winter Wren; now it is called a Pacific Wren. The first observation was made before 2010, which was the time at which the Winter Wren was divided into two species and our western species was renamed the Pacific Wren. I have only seen this bird in older forests some 500 to a 1,000 meters above the Lake. 

Seen flitting from one perch to another, a Pacific Wren divided its time between this rock face and a tree.

Here it is singing while perched on a tree. 

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Dawn otter

 

The River Otter treated my presence with surprising insouciance.  I wasn’t standing far away as it chewed on its fishy breakfast in the light of dawn. It would sometimes look my way, but more-or-less ignored me.

I am otter; hear me roar. Actually, while otters chirp, growl and grunt, they don’t roar. It is probably just swallowing.

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Two-deer day

 

Around the Lake, there are five species within the deer family (the cervids): moose, elk, caribou, mule deer, white-tailed deer, but only the latter two have the word, deer, attached to their names. It was nice to see both deer on one day. Certainly, the white-tailed deer is common in the valleys, but the mule deer is usually only seen higher on the mountain sides. 

The first deer spotted was a mule-deer buck. It is named for its large (mule-like) ears, but is perhaps more readily identified by its black-tipped rope-like tail. The antlers of this one are still in velvet. 

Then a white-tailed doe was spotted in my yard. After taking pictures and enjoying her company for a short time, we left her alone to browse.

When spotted again at twilight, it became clear that she was browsing for two.

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Eagle ablutions

 

This was the first time I had seen an eagle bathe and dry itself.

Last Friday, a number of eagles investigated a fish on the shore: an eagle infestation. Then, the fish was contested and eaten: eagle feast and fight. Finally, an eagle entered the water where it bathed and dried itself.

The eagle waded into the shallows and vigorously splashed water over itself.

It then twisted back and forth to shake off water as would an otter or a dog.

The drops flew as it continued twisting and shaking.

Next, the wings were flapped to evaporate water from the flight feathers.

With its flight feathers spread and waving, the wings are now nearly dry.

The time had come to dry the tail and leg feathers by jumping up and down.

Sated, clean and dry, the eagle flew off leaving only ephemeral marks on the water.

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