These stunning photographs of the world’s last remaining Mongolian eagle keepers show the incredible bond between man and bird. (Photo: Daniel Kordan/Caters News) These stunning photographs of the ...
View post: What To Know About Banned ‘Forever Chemicals’ At the Olympics View post: Patagonia Fleece Is Up to $75 Off at REI Right Now—Shop These 4 Styles Before They're Gone Patagonia Fleece Is Up to ...
Chinese Kazakh eagle hunter releases his eagle during the competition in the mountains of Qinghe County, Xinjiang, northwestern China. Chinese Kazakh eagle hunter releases his eagle during the ...
Falconry - the art of hunting with birds of prey - was born in the forbidding Altai Mountains of Central Asia. As we first told you last year, hunters there still loft golden eagles into the sky in a ...
The golden eagles that live in the high Altai mountains, in far-western Mongolia, build their nests in the crags of the area’s rugged peaks—there aren’t many trees. Hunters belonging to traditional ...
Kazakhs have a long history of using birds of prey to hunt foxes, wolves, and other animals and that tradition continues to this day. A tournament of eagle hunters, known as "berkutchi," took place on ...
Officials who are monitoring incidents affecting the eagle population in the United States are revealing a lingering danger that could cause a decline in the birds' presence. Todd Katzner, a U.S.
3don MSN
Kewanee eagle rescue urges hunters to clean up after themselves following 2 cases of lead poisoning
When a hunter shoots an animal, fragments of the lead ammo spread throughout the body. Eagles scavenge the remains left behind and can ingest the lead by mistake.
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