OK, I have to share my favorite Shrike story as well. I was cross-country skiing and following the tracks of a mouse in the snow. Suddenly the tracks ended with wing-prints over where they disappeared. About 15' further on there was a barbed wire fence with a mouse skin impaled. The body was gone, and it had also been de-gutted, since that part was on the ground. This Shrike evidently only wanted the meat, scorning guts and skin.
Mary Kay Waddington
Yes others noted the stashing of the prey. This bird could not lift the house sparrow. But it tugged like crazy against a chicken wire fence protecting a shrub. Finally, it went around it and hid the prey in a greasewood shrub. Nice to know others have witnessed this phenomenon.John RawinskiMonte Vista, CO--On Monday, May 6, 2024 at 11:35:37 AM UTC-6 mvjo...@gmail.com wrote:This morning as my daughter and I were watching birds at our feeder, I saw a Loggerhead Shrike crouched on the bird bath (likely ducking the gale force winds). In a moment it flew 5 feet and struck a House Sparrow. As it dispatched its prey, daughter grabbed her camera and got a few quick shots. Predator prey in action. Sometimes hard to watch but essential part of a system. Something we had never seen before!John RawinskiMonte Vista, CO
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