<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136"></SPAN>[136]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ich11" style="max-width: 46.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_ch11.jpg" alt="The High Hills" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI">XI<br/> THE METHOD BY WHICH EAGLES AND<br/> HAWKS SECURE THEIR PREY</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">As</span> is well known, the eagle lives largely on
carrion such as dead deer and carcases of sheep,
differing in this respect from the peregrine
falcon, which lives exclusively on what it kills.
Generally speaking, the eagle secures its prey by
pouncing on it on the ground and carrying it
away in its talons. He swoops down at a great
pace in a slanting direction, and in this way not
only captures hares and rabbits, but also grouse
and ptarmigan on the ground and young ducks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137"></SPAN>[137]</span>
on the loch. It is very interesting to watch the
great bird searching slowly along the side of a hill,
about 50, 100, or 150 yards above the ground;
then he suddenly pounces, and in a moment is
up again and away with his prey in his talons.
So regularly does the eagle adopt this method of
capturing his prey on the ground, that I have
met stalkers who have told me that they do not
believe that an eagle can overtake any swift-winged
bird such as grouse or black game. This
is certainly wrong, for the eagle does sometimes,
though comparatively rarely, adopt the other
method of securing his prey—the method which
I have already described (see p. 64, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">supra</i>)—that
of pursuing and catching his prey in the air, and
in this way without doubt captures blackcock,
grouse, and ptarmigan. I have already stated
(see pp. 57-70, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">supra</i>) that in my opinion the
eagle in his downward flight is faster than the
peregrine. Even in his horizontal flight, once he
gets going he can fly very fast if he chooses, but
of course is not nearly so agile and cannot turn
and twist with the rapidity of the peregrine, and
the result is that when he overtakes his quarry he
frequently misses him.</p>
<p>Nearly a hundred years ago one of the most<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138"></SPAN>[138]</span>
acute observers amongst ornithologists wrote as
follows: “In another part of the Western
Highlands of Scotland we had an opportunity
of witnessing the powers of flight of this bird
in pursuit of its quarry. An old blackcock was
sprung and was instantly pursued by the eagle
(who must have been on a neighbouring rock
unperceived) across the glen, the breadth of
which was at least 2 miles.</p>
<p>“The eagle made several unsuccessful pounces,
but as there was no cover and the bird large, it
probably fell a victim in the end.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</SPAN></p>
<p>Lastly, as I have already said in the pages
just mentioned where I have fully discussed the
matter, the eagle on rare occasions swoops down
at a terrific pace on his prey in the air, striking
it to the ground but not clutching it or, to use
the falconer’s phrase, binding on it.</p>
<p>The eagle has a great partiality for hares, cats,
young fox cubs, and young lambs. I remember
James Macintosh, head stalker at Loch Rosque,
telling me that on two occasions whilst waiting at
a fox den he had shot an eagle. He added that,
whilst the old foxes are away, the cubs, when they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139"></SPAN>[139]</span>
get hungry, sometimes make such a noise that they
can be heard at a considerable distance, and that
he believed this attracts the eagles, particularly
if their eyrie in which they are rearing their young
happens to be in the vicinity. He went on to
say that he thought this accounted for his sometimes
finding fox dens containing only one or
two cubs instead of the usual number of three to
seven. There is no doubt that eagles sometimes
attack deer calves, fixing their talons in their
victim’s neck or back and striking the calf with
their wings. They frequently hunt in pairs, and
have been seen to drive the calf over a precipice.</p>
<p>On rare occasions eagles have been known to
attack a full-grown stag. In certain parts of the
Highlands they have lately increased in numbers,
and perhaps as a consequence, their ordinary food
not being so plentiful, have become bolder.</p>
<p>Only last year I was stalking in a forest where
a few days earlier a stalker had witnessed a most
unusual incident. The following is his account
of what he saw:</p>
<p>“A gentleman and I were out stalking on the
25th of September, and while the gentleman was
having lunch, I went off about 200 yards to have
a spy. I got a stag lying at the foot of a rock.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140"></SPAN>[140]</span>
While I had the glass on him, an eagle suddenly
swooped down and attacked him. The stag went
headlong into a bog, but managed to get up. I
then ran back for the gentleman thinking we
would have a shot, but by the time we got back
the stag and eagle were over the sky-line and the
eagle still following while going over the sky-line,
but after that we don’t know what happened, as
both eagle and stag went out of sight.”</p>
<p>Donald Matheson, who has had a lifelong
experience in the forest and has only recently
retired after having been for many years stalker
at Glen Shieldaig to Mr. C. J. Murray of Loch
Carron, told me that on one occasion, but on one
occasion only, he saw an eagle attack an adult
stag.</p>
<p>“It would be, as far as I remember,” he said,
“between the 6th and 10th of October in the
year 1888 when I was spying one morning at the
forest stables. I picked up a stag on the top of
Glen Shieldaig, quietly feeding on the Glaschnoc
side, and while having my glass still on the stag
an eagle swooped down on his head. The stag
fell on his hind-quarters, but was soon on his
feet again and ran for his life while the eagle was
fixed on him. The stag made for a thick clump<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141"></SPAN>[141]</span>
of birch-trees, and immediately the stag got under
cover the eagle could not keep its hold, owing to
the thick branches of the trees, and left the stag.
The eagle kept hovering for some time above the
wood where the stag was concealed, but at last
flew away.”</p>
<p>Whilst stalking in the neighbouring forest of
Applecross two years ago, Colonel the Hon.
Claude Willoughby had a most interesting experience,
a description of which he has kindly given
me permission to reproduce here:</p>
<p>“On 30th September, 1921,” he writes, “I
was stalking with Alick Mackenzie on Applecross.
We had come through Corrie Chaorachan into
Corrie Na Na and spied a stag with hinds on
the west face above the loch. The wind was
west, and after a difficult and exceedingly good
stalk across the Corrie and above these deer,
avoiding hinds, also another stag with hinds,
we arrived at a point within 150 yards of the
stag we were after and found him lying down.
Owing to the light and the distance, I determined
to wait for him to rise before shooting.
After waiting half an hour, hinds which we
had seen beyond the place where he was lying
came galloping past him. He rose and I shot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142"></SPAN>[142]</span>
him; he fell dead. We at once saw that the
reason of these hinds galloping was that an eagle
was after a calf which had separated from the herd.
We saw the eagle land on the calf’s back twice,
but the calf escaped.</p>
<p>“The eagle then attacked a hind in the herd.
A kestrel hawk now joined in, and mobbed
the eagle. This attack lasted only a short time.
The eagle then circled round my dead stag,
the kestrel soon after disappearing. The eagle
settled on a rock about five yards from the dead
stag, and remained there until we showed ourselves.
All this took place within 200 yards
of us.</p>
<p>“On the Tuesday following Lord Derwent was
also stalking on Applecross, near Corrie Attadale.
He and the head stalker Finlayson saw an eagle
attack a calf, which it knocked down twice, but
the calf escaped.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="APPLECROSS" id="APPLECROSS"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i142fp" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_142_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">THE APPLECROSS HILLS, AND A HIGHLAND FISHING VILLAGE.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>There has been much difference of opinion,
and from time to time considerable controversy
as to how the peregrine kills its prey. Some
stalkers and ornithologists believe that it is done
with the edge of the wing, a smaller number with
the beak, whilst others think it is done with the
talons. The last-mentioned view is that which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143"></SPAN>[143]</span>
is, I believe, universally held by falconers, who
after all have many more opportunities of seeing
how it is done than any other class of men. I
have frequently discussed this question with
naturalists and stalkers, keepers and others
interested in this subject, and have listened to
all they could tell me. I have also had the great
advantage of hearing at first hand from falconers
of experience their views and their reasons for
them. Further, I have myself been so fortunate
as to see the wild peregrine pursue and stoop at
its quarry. I have seen it strike and kill it and
on occasion miss it. In addition to this, I have
read everything I could find on this subject, both
in the older and more modern books of authority.
I am satisfied myself that the view held by the
falconers is the true one, and I cannot state their
conclusions better than, or indeed so well as,
by quoting from three letters that I have received.
The writers of these three letters have kindly
given me permission to quote their Views.</p>
<p>Major C. E. Radclyffe, who has had almost
unrivalled experience as a falconer, writes as
follows:</p>
<p>“All forms of falcons and short-winged
hawks, such as sparrow-hawks and goshawks,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144"></SPAN>[144]</span>
always strike their quarry with <em>their feet</em>, and
never with anything else. The killers are those
which ‘bind to’ their quarry in the air, that is,
pick up a bird in their feet, and never let go
of it until they come to the ground. A really
experienced old trained falcon does this nine
times out of ten.</p>
<p>“Sometimes, however, when stooping from a
great height, the impetus of the falcon is so
terrific that she seems to know if she ‘binds to’
her quarry, the impact will be so great as nearly
to tear her legs from her body. Thus, when
stooping at a heavy bird like a grouse, or a pheasant,
at great speed, the falcon slightly throws upwards
on her impact with the quarry, and delivers a
raking blow with her single long back talon.
By this means (her back talon being sharp as a
razor) I have seen a grouse ripped open from its
tail to its neck. I have seen its wing broken and
I have seen its head cut off.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“All falcons are very careful not to risk
touching anything with their wings, hence a
falcon will never really stoop at a bird on the
ground with an idea of catching it, but they will
keep stooping just over a bird they can see on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145"></SPAN>[145]</span>
ground in the hope of flushing it, and then they
will catch it in a minute.</p>
<p>“I have seen falcons and hawks break their
wings by striking the smallest twig on the
branch of a tree when misjudging a stoop at a
bird.</p>
<p>“Therefore, you can imagine how easily a
hawk would smash its wing if it attempted this,
to hit a heavy bird like a grouse or pheasant
going at terrific speed.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“If you threw a lawn-tennis ball against a
falcon’s wing coming at you at the rate of over
a hundred miles per hour, and hit its wing-bone,
that hawk would never fly again.</p>
<p>“I have many times in my life, when casting
lightly with a very small trout rod, just touched
the wing of a swift or swallow with the tip of the
rod. I never broke a rod thus, but nearly always
broke the bird’s wing. I think, when you come
to consider these things, you will see that a hawk
dare not strike the smallest bird with its wing.</p>
<p>“It uses its beak only to finish off a bird on the
ground, and this she does by breaking the bird’s
neck with its beak.</p>
<p>“I have lived amongst wild and trained hawks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146"></SPAN>[146]</span>
all my life, and I can assure you the above facts
are true.”</p>
<p>The reference in the above letter to the
peregrine killing a grouse by striking it with its
talon reminds me of the following interesting
note in <cite>Birds of Great Britain</cite> (5 volumes),
published by the author, John Gould, F.R.S.,
in 1873.</p>
<p>“Evidence forwarded to Mr. James Burdett,
keeper to the Earl of Craven.... On dissecting
a coot I saw taken and dropped by a peregrine
falcon, I found the neck dislocated at the third
joint from the head and an appearance as if the
sharp point of the hind claw had penetrated the
brain at the occiput.”</p>
<p>Captain C. F. A. Portal, D.S.O., writes as
follows:</p>
<p>“I have seen many dozens of game-birds
struck down by trained peregrines within 50
yards of me, and I can definitely state that the
hawk <em>invariably</em> aims a blow <em>with the talons</em> at
his quarry....</p>
<p>“So true is a peregrine’s aim that he generally
gets home with both his <em>hind</em> talons somewhere
near the middle of the quarry’s back, but often
he hits a wing and breaks it, and occasionally he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147"></SPAN>[147]</span>
breaks the neck in the same way. I have examined
hundreds of birds (partridges) killed by hawks,
and I have always found the mark of two hind
talons or one of them. The decapitation is
generally performed within a few seconds of the
hawk’s alighting on the dazed or crippled victim.
It is performed by one powerful wrench of the
beak. No peregrine will eat or even pluck a
living bird.... In my experience it is a rare
thing for a peregrine to strike a bird dead in the
air. It does occasionally happen that the blow
falls on the head or neck, but what generally
happens is that the bird is thrown violently to the
ground with a wing broken or the back dislocated.
The concussion with the ground dazes it, and
the hawk quickly drops down upon it and kills
it with its beak.</p>
<p>“The merlin often kills comparatively large
birds (<em>e.g.</em> the thrush, fieldfare, golden plover,
etc.) by strangling them, as its beak is not strong
enough to break their necks. It kills larks, etc.,
in the same way as the peregrine kills his quarry,
that is, by sudden dislocation of the neck.</p>
<p>“The sparrow-hawk kills its prey by gripping
it with its feet and driving the claws into its
body; this is a slow death sometimes, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148"></SPAN>[148]</span>
sparrow-hawk has none of the true falcon’s scruples
about plucking (and even, I fear, beginning to
devour) a living bird.</p>
<p>“I do not like the sparrow-hawk for this
reason, though, of course, the falconer can generally
prevent cruelty by killing the quarry himself.”</p>
<p>Captain G. S. Blaine, another falconer of great
experience, also has no doubt on the matter. In
a letter to me on this question he writes:</p>
<p>“A peregrine strikes with its talons only. Of
this I am certain, having seen the blow given to
countless quarries at close quarters. How the
other idea (that of striking with the wing) could
possibly have originated I do not know. It is
quite obviously impracticable.... If a peregrine
administered the terrific blow which she
delivers when striking a quarry with her wing,
breast, or beak, she would be knocked out at
once, and permanently injured. A peregrine
can easily, after recovering from her stoop, turn
over again and catch the quarry in the air. I
have seen this often done, when the bird had been
struck high up in the air. If near the ground,
it would fall before the hawk could get hold of it.
Many also often catch and hold a quarry without
knocking it down. This is the way most successful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149"></SPAN>[149]</span>
game hawks catch grouse or partridges. When
struck, the blow is delivered on any part of the
body—it may be the head and it may be the back
or the wing which may be broken.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="MALLARD" id="MALLARD"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp48" id="i148fp" style="max-width: 40.5625em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_148_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">DEATH OF THE MALLARD.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">J. Wolf</span>.</p>
<p class="pfs80">Reproduced by kind permission of Messrs. Oliver & Boyd,
Edinburgh, from <cite>Game-Birds and Wild Fowl</cite>, by A. E. Knox.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>In <cite>Reminiscences of a Falconer</cite> (John Nimmo,
London, 1901) Major C. H. Fisher writes:</p>
<p>“The blow is given by the falcon’s strong and
sharp hind talon of each foot—usually sharp as a
needle and driven at great speed by a bird weighing
over 2 lb.”</p>
<p>As illustrating the falcon’s stoop Major Fisher
describes how he saw a wild falcon strike a greyhen
twice. He says (p. 97):</p>
<p>“As illustrating the force of a falcon’s stoop,
I may mention an incident which occurred to me
on the banks of the river Orrin when fishing.
From some bracken I put up three greyhens.
Down came a wild falcon from the sky at the
middle bird. I saw and heard the blow. The
greyhen staggered on, leaving the usual tribute of
feathers behind her. Up rose the falcon in the
grand and stately style so few trained hawks can
ever adopt or regain (so much do they lose by
captivity); over and down she came, and down
fell the quarry, as dead as though shot by a bullet....
Down too went my long rod and off went I.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150"></SPAN>[150]</span>...
On this occasion I took possession ... of
the wild hawk’s prey. On examining the effect
of her two blows, I found that three ribs on one
side were clean cut through and separated from
the backbone as by a chop with a heavy knife
and strong hand, and one talon had entered and
split the base of the skull, from which the brains
were protruding.”</p>
<p>One of the foremost advocates of the contention
that the fatal blow is inflicted by a stroke of the
wing is Mr. Tom Speedy, who deals with this
subject in his <cite>Natural History of Sport in Scotland
with Rod and Gun</cite> (pp. 102, 103). He
bases his argument first on the supposition that
when the fatal blow is struck on the back of the
quarry, the skin is only bruised and not torn. He
writes:</p>
<p>“A keeper friend of mine near Kingussie
witnessed a grouse struck down by a peregrine,
and as there was not a mark on it he sent it to me.
Carefully plucking it, I noted that with the
exception of a bruise along the spine there was
no other mark on it; yet the blow had been
sufficient to cause instant death. This comports
with my own observations, and it is difficult to
understand how this blow could be struck by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151"></SPAN>[151]</span>
these terrible talons without the skin being torn.
As the heads of grouse are frequently cut off
when struck by a peregrine, it is the opinion of
foresters who have watched them with their
glasses that it is done by the wing. Falconers
deny this and maintain that it is done by the
hind talon. How, then, it may be asked, can this
be done when there is not a scratch on the victim,
but only a bruise indicating where the blow was
struck?”</p>
<p>The answer to this argument is that there is
absolutely reliable evidence to the contrary—in
other words, that sometimes the skin is torn.</p>
<p>Major Radclyffe in his letter referred to above
writes: “I have seen a grouse ripped open from
its tail to its neck.”</p>
<p>Captain Portal says: “I have examined hundreds
of game-birds killed by hawks, and have
always found the marks of the two hind talons
or one of them.”</p>
<p>Sometimes, no doubt, as in the instance referred
to by Mr. Speedy, there is a bruise along the
spine and the skin is not torn, but this is no doubt
to be explained, as is pointed out by a writer cited
below, by the way in which a falcon shuts its feet
when stooping, the hind talon on each foot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152"></SPAN>[152]</span>
closing over the fore talons, thus forming a kind
of keel—and the bone on the back of the grouse
is strong enough to prevent more than a severe
bruise.</p>
<p>Mr. Speedy continues:</p>
<p>“It is argued that it is impossible the bird
could be killed by a blow from a hawk’s wing, as
the wing would certainly be injured. I have seen
a retriever stunned by a blow from the wing of
a swan, and but for my being in close proximity
in a boat it would certainly have been drowned.
Those who have put their hand into the nest of
a wood-pigeon are familiar with the blow even a
half-fledged bird can give with its wing. I have
been struck with the fight a wounded wild goose
can put up, and the blows it can inflict on a
retriever with its powerful wings.”</p>
<p>But, with all respect, surely the blow of a
large powerful bird like a swan or a goose delivered
in this way is a very different thing to the blow
which is delivered by a peregrine when stooping
at its quarry at the terrific speed with which it
then flies, and, in my opinion, the view taken by
experienced falconers, such as those quoted above,
that the wing would most certainly be broken or
badly injured, is the correct one.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153"></SPAN>[153]</span></p>
<p>Finally, Mr. Speedy says:</p>
<p>“When a falcon strikes a bird in the air there
is a loud ‘clap’ which I have heard several
hundred yards away. This would not be the
case if struck by the talons.”</p>
<p>I venture to think, however, that the argument
based on the sound caused by the impact
carries Mr. Speedy’s contention no further.
Would not this loud “clap” naturally be expected
if the peregrine struck its quarry in the manner
described?</p>
<p>In conclusion, then, what is the correct view of
the matter? In the words of a recent writer:<SPAN name="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</SPAN>
“The truth ... seems to be that the falcon
shuts its feet when stooping, the hind talon on
each foot closing over the fore talons, thus
forming a kind of keel. When the falcon strikes
a grouse, the latter may be partially or wholly
decapitated, or it may be severely bruised on the
back. The neck of a grouse is soft, and the
‘keel’ of a peregrine’s hind talon is sufficiently
sharp to cut it, whereas on the back of a grouse
the bone is strong enough to prevent more than
a severe bruise. The shock of impact must,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154"></SPAN>[154]</span>
however, be tremendous, for a bird so struck
hurtles to the ground at once. When the peregrine
strikes, one hears a loud ‘clap’ audible at
a considerable distance, and it is this noise that
has given rise to the theory that the falcon strikes
with its wing. If the peregrine used the latter,
however, in all probability the wing would be
seriously damaged or broken, because the pace
at which a falcon stoops must be seen to be
believed.”</p>
<p>There is another interesting fact in regard to
this fine bird which is not generally known.
There seems little doubt that he deserves the
description which has more than once been
applied to him—that of a wanton murderer.
Thus Charles St. John in his classic work, <cite>Wild
Sports and Natural History of the Highlands</cite>,
says (chap. x.): “The peregrine seems often to
strike down birds for his amusement, and I have
seen one knock down and kill two rooks, who were
unlucky enough to cross his flight, without taking
the trouble to look at them after they fell.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />