Kitten
New Member
Wuss, puss.
Guilty as charged
Wuss, puss.
How does a cat catch a bat???
Strange how people don't like rats but aren't so bothered by the larger rat with a bushy tail - a (grey) squirrel.Funny the phobias/fears we have. .... A bat is just a winged mouse really, but then some people are terrified of them.
Well, the latter tastes much nicer, just ask the local scouts!Strange how people don't like rats but aren't so bothered by the larger rat with a bushy tail - a (grey) squirrel.
Years ago I saw a fish eating duck snatch a passing bird out of the air and eat it.Our cat waited until the bats flew low under the bottom tree branches then leapt up and swatted them tennis serve style ( with his paw). Success about one every two nights.
I'm confused. A fish was eating a duck (with orange sauce?), then presumably jumped into mid-air and caught a bird? Or are we talking cannibalism? The duck was eating fish (with chips?) , then decided to pluck another bird out of the air.Years ago I saw a fish eating duck snatch a passing bird out of the air and eat it.
Depends how hungry it is. I once saw a squirrel consume the contents of a bird-feeding doo-dah in one sitting (should be one stretch as it was upside down at full stretch). Whilst visiting hospital a few months ago a collection of squirrels turned up in a nearby tree at 16:15 each day to gorge themselves on the buds.I don't think a squirrel is likely to gnaw your foot off.
This thread reminds me of The Big Bang Theory when Penny moved in next door, you can make your own minds up as to which of you lot is Shelden.
Pretty close, but they would have been very soggy chips.The duck was eating fish (with chips?) , then decided to pluck another bird out of the air.
I doubt it, it wasn't black IIRC, probably grey. Also Cormorants are pretty big, and I think even the smaller Shag is larger than most ducks. I'll have to do a better trawl of the online bird identification pictures (I used to have a book of ducks but I think it got sold off in our big move).Cormorant?
As far as I can see, those pictures show juvenile mallard - so I question the idea that it is anything to do with egg laying.One theory the researchers have is that the Mallards were struggling with a lack of animal proteins, perhaps due to intense competition for insect larvae by fish introduced for angling. In a desperate bid for high-protein food during egg-laying season, the ducks turned to eating other birds.