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A Red-tailed Hawk kills a rabbit and comes back the next day to eat much of it, leaving the organs, bones, and fur.
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When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe - John Muir
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A Red-tailed Hawk kills a rabbit and comes back the next day to eat much of it, leaving the organs, bones, and fur.
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A few days ago I found a dead rabbit with a mangled head not far from the house. I thought maybe a bobcat had killed it and then was scared off by something. I moved it a few feet to a spot in front of my trail cam. When I checked the camera the next day, I saw that the predator came back the previous afternoon to eat away on it.
It seemed these turkey vultures spotted a raven digging around in our compost bin and came down to investigate. They ended up relaxing and basking in the yard.
This is the 4th year in a row that our Hooded Merganser "April" has had a successful fledging of ducklings. Our "river cam" caught her yesterday morning headed downstream with what appears to be nine ducklings. I will count the egg membranes left behind in the wood shavings in her nest box to verify.
About 2 weeks ago, 6 miles into the forest, we came upon mud with tracks of bear, bobcats, opossums, and other animals. We came back the next day and set up a trail cam on this remote ridge jeep trail. We left this camera for 10 days, as well as another one off another spur trail several miles away.
When we returned last Sunday to retrieve them our hearts sank as we could see the camera was aiming down at the ground. Something had knocked it hard. We didn't know when it had been knocked. The whole 10 days could have been a waste. When we downloaded the 64 videos from the camera back home, the answer was clear. It had been knocked down about one hour before our return. Below is the evidence of who the culprit was.
Four days earlier, another drama had unfolded.
The next morning, the big cat returned. Mountain Lions can and do kill and eat elk of all sizes. I watched a video of one locked onto a bull elk's throat and grappling its head. This apparently asphyxiated the elk enough to weaken it, allowing the lion to bring it down. We don't know if this was the case in this instance.
Of the 64 videos taken by the first camera (bears, Mountain Lion, deer, elk), 53 were of branches blowing in late afternoon breezes. Such is the life of a trail cam geek.