In all cases, the bird's diet is carefully measured to control its weight. Weight determines how hungry and lazy birds are. It is a "greasy bird", or it is very heavy, and it may fly or not look for it. Aggressively, some underweight birds have the will to act, and some seriously underweight birds have the will to have health problems.
Training eagle
This extremely detailed paper "Eagle Training" is a legally operated eagle hunter's plan to buy their first new eagle. Please observe all applicable rules and regulations when raptors are involved. Although this is intended to help a novice falconer from leading to flying freely to suggesting every step through legal operation, for all special birds, please consult an experienced falconer for assistance and make a judgment, because each one is an individual with his own rule group.
Staging training, captive breeding teenagers and withered birds are the same; Eyass needs a different approach, mainly adapting to the image of food providers, from there to eagle hunters and appropriate victim projects and bait. Moreover, falcon training is different from short-winged and wide-winged eagle training (red-tailed fish Harris eagle, goshawk and so on). ) Because of its importance.
Eagle training is not as difficult or mysterious as some books think. It's based on mutual respect, and it's forged by food, patience and trust. You don't have to bump into or starve to death their eagle when they try to reach this delicate bond. Doing so means that you don't get the respect your bird demands. Eagles can't be controlled by hunger and obey: this method is simply authoritarian and cruel.
Paragraphs or dead birds can be terrible; This fear must be overcome to gain trust. Once the new eagle is put on gloves, it should be provided with small pieces of food. It is likely that her hunger was not enough to overcome her fear of people at first. In this case, she should wear a headscarf or put a meow in the dark to bind her bird habitat for one night. An eagle wearing a headscarf or an eagle in the dark can provide water by spraying or atomizing bottles at this time. When the liquid collects on her forehead and mouth, she will drink it. The next day, hold her in your fist and gently give her a sip of bright red food with your fingertips. If she bites your finger, put the meat in her face with blunt pliers. If she still doesn't eat, repeat the process the next day. Maybe she will come in a day or three-don't worry, unless she doesn't eat a big eagle (700g+) for five days. Smaller eagles and falcons need to eat and catch in a day or two. Consult a doctor at this time. This bird may be Illinois.
It is a good job to wait for the last disobedient eagle to open its mouth (the trick is that most terrible eagles are "tongue-tied", that is, open their mouths to threaten), and then put small pieces of meat into her mouth with fingers or pliers. Fog, beautiful fog, her forehead, she will swallow it. The smell of meat will trigger a feeding reaction in her body.
Once the eagle catches the meat and swallows it, she can eat finger-sized meat. Give her another video to see if she will turn her eyes from your face to your muscles. At this time, you will see her hunger for food and begin to ignore her fear of people. If she becomes full or refuses food, join her and start later. If she is hungry and eager to participate, allow her to eat a few more pieces and pay attention to her head to start reaching the expected food in the future. Now you can start taking a bite under her body to get closer to your gloves. Repeat the process of serving food. When she eats your food, lower the height of the food until she eagerly grabs it from her gloved feet.
Start biting gloves and stop feeding with fingers or pliers. The eagle should now (please make sure she is still tied to gloves or her bird habitat! ) allows you to' wipe' her chair back, her bird habitat, or other similar fixed objects. To do this, put the meat slices in your gloves. Give her this at the height of her forehead and mouth. If you get used to her, she will probably hesitate to stay and eat meat later. Repeat this process, let her take a bite and put down her gloves until she stands in the bird habitat and feeds her feet with gloves.
Now, once she can't wait to eat from the gloves and take a bite at the height of her feet, she will hold the meat or throw it out of the gloves for a short distance. She will get the food. Repeat this process, and then move after she finishes eating. She will twist herself into a strange posture. She tries not to jump or fly to get enough food, but eventually she will give herself a greedy nature and treat hops gloves as meat. Repeat the same action this time, moving backwards after each successful feeding.
At this time, you have to do two things-you start to get used to your new eagle world and its strangeness; Roaring dogs, cars, housewives, take her outside. Besides, she shouldn't park outside until she starts flying to you. If so, she may confront creance many times and hurt herself, because she doesn't fully understand the life of a captive eagle.
Once she starts jumping the length of the belt, it's time to use creance-a long and thin line (the recommended Crence is a knotted nylon line 30 to 100 feet long or a very thin parachute rope of similar length-no twined line or fishing line monofilament is used for this purpose). Take her to a short lawn (football field, big backyard, pasture and short grass) and a bird habitat. Put her in a bird's habitat, and give her cookies in one hand and food in the other. She should jump on it as eagerly as she does indoors. Repeat this process and support a few feet. She should fly to you at once, without delay. If she turns in another direction in the bird habitat, flies away from you or rolls up one foot, she is not hungry or has not enough hands to start this stage. If she does, offer to staff her, or let her go to work at night and start working the next day.
If she flies to you with longing, take her with her, as long as God allows. A length of 50- 100 feet is acceptable. She should be eager to fly for food. She should come to you before you ask her. Chances are, she won't even be 75 feet behind you. If you have to wait more than a minute, flap your arms, make a hullabaloo about or put up with other such nonsense, then she is not ready for the final stage of training-flying freely.
Before flying freely from the starting point, there are many things to talk about; Eagle hunter's insurance policy. Even if you stop using bait, train her now. The fat eagle has no intention of returning to the gloves, and will happily nail the bait out of greed. After telling her the value of tying a whole crop, the meat attractant paired gloves several times in her creation. You should do this once or twice to consolidate the concept of' seduction = full belly' to the eagle. Once she cooks food in the bait, provide decorative gloves and take a hard bite to prevent her from swallowing or taking the food to the ground. She will eventually be dragged and forced to eat with gloves on. Hide the bait, she. Out of sight, out of mind, with no property left, is an eagle.
If she is a falcon, the importance of bait will increase. The next major step is to train falcons to accept bait. It will put its feet on it, make the bird's wheels turn and then attack the bait. Once this is done, the eagle hunter will subtly swing the bait in a big circle, encouraging birds to "pass" the bait more and try to catch it. This has become a "reservation game" between birds and eagle hunters, questioning the skills and dexterity of the two races. The job of the eagle hunter is to continue the bait and pull the bait at the last minute, while the bird tries to come in quickly and make a sharp turn to balance the eagle hunter's movements. Birds may fly 40 times before a suitable bait. If the bird should catch the bait, the falcon reward and small pieces of meat are safely tied to the bait. At the end of the game, birds usually feed a large portion of food as a reward for the whole exercise.
Another useful thing in free flight is still to call the eagle down from a height before flying. For various reasons, a new eagle found himself floating in a tree and developed the habit of being blind to eagle hunters. This may mean that she is too fat and not good enough for people (to adapt to the world of people and people), or it may mean that people in the upper class are simply happy to get off at near ground. In any case, she can be trained to avoid the hawkish tendency of the upper class and cannot come down. Throw her on the roof or other similar object that rises at least 12 to 30 feet. Don't choose trees, trees are easily entangled in branches. Allowing your eagle to be hung by creance is an insult to her … and it will affect her training, so avoid it anyway.
After receiving bait training, she will be ready to fly freely. The experienced eagle hunter saw the highly focused eagle "ready to fly freely …". When she got to the food bag, she concentrated on raising gloves, whistling, and even blowing air, and regarded the eagle hunter as food. These are all actions that novices should look for. Once she is in this situation, remove creance at the private airport and tell her. It is quite possible that she is already on her way. If she swings into a tree, try to make her more aware of gloves-and then provide bait to fully quantify the food attached to gloves. She should fall straight from the tree and put on gloves or bait.
From this point of view, what must be done is to interrupt your eagle, make sure that she is in the wind, because she is not too great (paragraphs or new chicks can be particularly tempted by the prospect of rising warm currents), and bring appropriate weight to the areas where her victims know, as well.
Once a reliable relationship is established, go to the field for investigation. In the falcon's case, the bird was not blocked and quickly flew into the air. Eagles prey from the air, from takeoff, from nearby bird habitats, or from gloves. Once the bird is untied from the rope, the eagle hunter becomes the servant of the bird, diligently searching for its prey and washing it like a raptor. Raptors play the role of pursuers, providing amazing air maneuvers. The eagle seems to ignore physics, and the falcon's bend (dive) is recorded as accelerating to 240 mph, and her wheels are over 29 Gs! For many eagle hunters, this aerial display is the biggest reward, and this natural closing witness left the deepest impression on him, which made him get an undisputed front seat at the biggest air show on earth.
Instead of chasing bait, the eagle encourages flying from tree to tree, and occasionally provides a decorative glove when the eagle hunter walks. Some methods used by eagle hunters called "jump training" require the eagle to fly almost directly to the height of 10- 12 feet to bite. This can be done many times, and rewards are given intermittently (because psychological principles teach that intermittent rewards are stronger enhancements) to gain strength and endurance.