Golden Eagle swoops on child.

Corso312

Well-Known Member
I did not watch the video but not surprised it is fake...golden eagles can probably. Carry 65 plus lbs...no baby is that big...
 

Total Head

Well-Known Member
i'd be lying if i said i wasn't a little disappointed that the vid is fake, but it did serve a very useful purpose beyond entertainment. it sparked all sorts of discussion and there are thousands of people who now know that eagles can be very dangerous. the video may have been staged, but it could actually happen, and there are probably a few less people who would push their luck trying to be cutesy with big scary birds of prey. no one loses.
 

Corso312

Well-Known Member
My buddy n his brother were fishing on Minnesota ..one was reeling in a nice northern when a bald eagle wentfor it....crashed into boat n knocked himself out....they landed fish n put knockout. Eagle on land...he came to in a couple minutes n flew away...but they say he was fuckn. Huge ....4 ft off ground...wish I was. There..huger fan of birds. Of prey.
 

loquacious

Well-Known Member
i'd be lying if i said i wasn't a little disappointed that the vid is fake, but it did serve a very useful purpose beyond entertainment. it sparked all sorts of discussion and there are thousands of people who now know that eagles can be very dangerous. the video may have been staged, but it could actually happen, and there are probably a few less people who would push their luck trying to be cutesy with big scary birds of prey. no one loses.
No, it is not possible and to an earlier post, there is not a single bird of flight who can carry 65lbs. Just as in the video of the eagle trying to take the baby goat, as soon as it tried to fly the weight of the baby goat dragged it straight to the ground. It truly is scary how gullible a lot of people are.
 

Total Head

Well-Known Member
No, it is not possible and to an earlier post, there is not a single bird of flight who can carry 65lbs. Just as in the video of the eagle trying to take the baby goat, as soon as it tried to fly the weight of the baby goat dragged it straight to the ground. It truly is scary how gullible a lot of people are.

i didn't know the kid was 65 pounds. i thought it was way smaller than that. it looked like a baby.

edit: i reread your post and the 65 pound thing was something else. still, in general those things are scary. i see no reason why a giant bird wouldn't mistake a baby for something it could carry, even if it didn't get the kid off the ground. it's not like they tried to make it look like the bird carried the kid away. if that was a real video the kid could have ended up with shred injuries from talons. they are scary as fuck when they're aggressive and they try to grab small things all the time.
 

PeyoteReligion

Well-Known Member
I thought I was fake because it looked just like the guy that made the video of him flying a homemade flying contraption that he just flapped his arms and the thing started flying.
 

Trolling

New Member
Yeah just now saw this on the news, surprised it wasn't mentioned before, the people who made it said they came out and said it was fake on the same day it was released.
 

Dr. Greenhorn

Well-Known Member
I thought it was real till I started reading all the links. it was college students, if I remember correctly, who made the video


from the link cheechako posted


It seems that the public and the media are wildly grasping for crazy stories to focus attention on this holiday season, but one particular "story" is a video "gone viral". This amateur video claims to show a golden eagle snatching a toddler in a Montreal park. It is really scary and spectacular – until your morning coffee kicks in and awakens the thinking part of your brain.
The fact is this video is a fraud. A clever fraud, yes, but it's still a fraud. In fact, I am sure the video's creators are having a Santa-sized belly laugh over it right now.
I admit, the first time I saw it, I was initially fooled too. But even during my first viewing, I could plainly see that this bird's wings are all wrong for a golden eagle. Since I enjoy trying to correctly identify birds, I watched this video again. And again. And again.
Sometime during my third replay, which was a frame-by-frame examination, I became convinced that this video is an elaborate fraud.
First, I'll talk about the most obvious error: this is NOT a golden eagle,Aquila chrysaetos. To start with, the wings of the raptor in the video are absolutely the wrong shape – being too narrow and with a sharp "wrist" – neither of which you will see in a golden eagle.
The video raptor's colouring is wrong – being a steely grey instead of a warm brown colouring. But more convincing are the white markings: the video raptor has many white markings that absolutely are inconsistent with a golden eagle – most notably, golden eagles do not have a white patch across the upper surface of the wings, nor do they have a white trailing edge on their wings, nor do they have a white band at the end of their tail feathers.
No, no, no, this is NOT a golden eagle!
For reference, compare the colouring and especially the patterning in my video "grab" of the video raptor (above) with this photograph of an adult golden eagle:
Golden Eagle, Aquila chrysaetos, La Cañada, Ávila, Spain.
Image: Juan lacruz/Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

Second, golden eagles typically prey on terrestrial mammals such as rabbits, marmots, ground squirrels, and they may even grab a fox, a house cat or (not often enough!) the neighbor's yappy chihuahua, but they do not prey on children. In fact, there is no way that bird could lift that kid – raptors cannot fly off with toddlers because toddlers are simply too heavy! The greatest mass that a golden eagle may possibly carry is 7kg (or 15 pounds). I am fairly certain that toddler weighs more than that, especially since the kid is thickly wrapped in what looks like 7 kilos of winter clothing.
Third, wild golden eagles don't live anywhere in the Montreal area in the dead of winter, and they're extremely uncommon there any time of year. Additionally, to the best of my knowledge, there aren't any resident golden eagles in Montreal. Clearly, the bird in the video is not a golden eagle.
What species of raptor is this? I think this is either an osprey, Pandion haliaetus -- the most monstrously huge one I've ever seen -- or it could be a steppe eagle, A. nipalensis, that second ID is a conclusion also reached independently by some of my bird pals. One of these birders, a bird artist, thinks this could be a juvenile steppe eagle.
Those of you with either a field guide to raptors or with Google access can easily confirm that osprey are specialists, living near water and feeding only on fish and spending their winters in South America, whereas steppe eagles are Old World raptors that are never, ever everfound anywhere in North America. So whatever it is, it must be a falconer's bird. Further, it is incredibly unlikely that any wild eagle would even attempt to grab such outsized prey as a toddler in a public area that it is unfamiliar with, unless … this entire event was staged.
Which brings me to my last point; let's talk about that toddler. To my eyes, this toddler looks like a doll. Notice how the toddler does not reactat all to suddenly being grabbed and then becoming airborne – neither kicking nor flailing nor moving its head nor otherwise moving naturally. Does your toddler just dangle like a blob when you pick him up suddenly from behind?
Ok, so I know more about birds than I know about toddlers, but that kid just looks fake to me.
All this evidence, taken together, means that this video is a golden teaching moment. It also means that the Guardian blew it by posting this video without including any analysis from a video expert as to whether it's real or ... artificially manufactured. Further, the Guardian blew it by not including comments from either an ornithologist or a birder as to whether this video portrayal is even plausible.
This is irresponsible journalism. By posting this video, the Guardian is actively promoting and reinforcing the public's misinformation and fear of birds of prey, and further alienating the public from nature. Publicly sharing this fraudulent video without any expert commentary serves to undermine the education and conservation efforts of many excellent organisations such as the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and the British Trust for Ornithology.
Shame on you, Guardian!
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NOTE: this piece was originally published without the video. The video was later embedded because my screen grab is fuzzy and my editor thought readers may not be able to see what I was writing about. I only mention this because people are "harshing" on my editor when in fact, I did give him permission to embed the video. So even though I don't like promoting this inaccurate video, I think it's important that readers can see what I am talking about here. So stop being mean to my editor or you'll find a lump of coal in your Christmas stocking!
NOTE: this is a hoax. It was a class project by Normand Archambault, Loïc Mireault and Félix Marquis-Poulin, students at Centre NAD, in the production simulation workshop class of the Bachelors degree in 3D Animation and Digital Design [read more, link kindly shared byRyanClarkPhotos].

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