Saturday, June 1, 2013

TURKEY VULTURES

There is a deer carcass on the other side of the far buck & pole fence.  I'm not sure what happened to it - the highway is just up the hill and it may have been hit and made it that far before succumbing to injuries.  Mother Nature is working hard to take care of it.  We counted 27 turkey vultures having a feast.  I found out some interesting facts that I didn't know before thanks to the internet:

The turkey vulture is a gentle and non aggressive bird.  Like storks, the turkey vulture defecates on its own legs using evaporation of the water in the feces and urine to cool itself down.  They excrete a high concentration of uric acid that acts as a sanitizer that kills any bacterial it picks up while getting its food. It gets its name because of its red bald head that resembles the male wild turkey.    Its head is small in proportion to its body.  This vulture's head is bald because it often sticks its head into a carcass to reach its meat.  If it had a feathery head, it would capture unwanted pieces of the meal as well as bacteria.   Adults are about 30 inches long, weigh around two pounds and has a wing span of six feet.

6 comments:

  1. I love that fence! Turkey vultures have Americas dirtiest job.

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    1. We find that fencing works well with the cows and horses - not so well with the sheep - at least the lambs - they crawl right through the bottom.

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    1. Ramos the llama DOES not like those big birds close to his sheep - he has been making his chittering warning sound all morning...they, however aren't paying any attention to him.

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  3. At our old ranch in the California Mtns I used to watch them migrate for days...it was cool how they would just lazily circle, around and around, all following the same pattern. Don't see so many here, which is odd, cuz we are in an avian 'flyway'

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    1. Hi Petey! They seem to stay here most of the time - maybe we have more dead stuff?

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