[AT] From another list
David Rotigel
rotigel at me.com
Wed Sep 21 16:42:13 PDT 2016
Perhaps Charlie, but with the eagles you NEVER see or hear it coming (or going)!
Dave
> On Sep 21, 2016, at 6:08 PM, charlie hill <charliehill at embarqmail.com> wrote:
>
> I've seen the war bird show at Oshkosh. If it was better than that
> it had to be something. I've never seen a golden eagle in the wild.
> We have bald's here. One thing those war birds have over the golden
> eagle show is the sound of those powerful engines.
>
> Charlie
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mike M
> Sent: Wednesday, September 21, 2016 4:01 PM
> To: Antique tractor email discussion group
> Subject: Re: [AT] From another list
>
> Holy crap is that a cool story! What a once in a lifetime experience!
>
> Mike M
>
>
> On 9/21/2016 2:41 PM, tmehrkam at sbcglobal.net wrote:
>> Tractor related. I suspect non Antique.
>>
>> This came from a gentleman who runs a 2,000-acre corn farm up around
>> Barron, WI, not far from Oshkosh. He used to fly F-4Es and F-16s for the
>> Guard and participated in the first Gulf War.His story:I went out to plant
>> corn for a bit, to finish a field before tomorrow morning and witnessed
>> 'The Great Battle'. A golden eagle -- big, with about a six-foot
>> wingspan - flew right in front of the tractor. It was being chased by
>> three crows that were continually dive bombing it and pecking at it. The
>> crows do this because the eagles rob their nests when they find them.At
>> any rate, the eagle banked hard right in one evasive maneuver, then landed
>> in the field about 100 feet from the tractor. This eagle stood about 3
>> feet tall. The crows all landed too and took up positions around the
>> eagle at 120 degrees apart, but kept their distance at about 20 feet from
>> the big bird. The eagle would take a couple steps towards one of the
>> crows and they'd hop backwards and forward to keep!
> their distance. Then the reinforcement showed up. I happened to spot
> the eagle's mate hurtling down out of the sky at what appeared to be
> approximately Mach 1.5. Just before impact, the eagle on the ground took
> flight, (obviously a coordinated tactic; probably pre-briefed) and the three
> crows that were watching the grounded eagle also took flight -- thinking
> they were going to get in some more pecking on the big bird.The first crow
> being targeted by the diving eagle never stood a snowball's chance in hell.
> There was a mid-air explosion of black feathers, and that crow was done.The
> diving eagle then banked hard left in what had to be a 9G climbing turn,
> using the energy it had accumulated in the dive, and hit crow #2 less than
> two seconds later. Another crow dead.The grounded eagle, which was now
> airborne and had an altitude advantage on the remaining crow that was
> streaking eastward in full burner, made a short dive, then banked hard right
> when the escaping crow trie!
> d to evade the hit. It didn't work - crow #3 bit the dust at about 20 feet
> AGL. This aerial battle was better than any air show I've been to,
> including the War Birds show at Oshkosh. The two eagles ripped the crows
> apart, and ate them on the ground; and, as I got closer and closer working
> my way across the field, I passed within 20 feet of one of them as it ate
> its catch. It stopped and looked at me as I went by, and you could see in
> the look of that bird that it knew who's Boss of the Sky. What a beautiful
> bird!I loved it. Not only did they kill their enemy, they ate them. One of
> the best Fighter Pilot stories I've seen in a long time.
>>
>>
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