Canon EOS 5D
ƒ/6.3
400 mm
1/400
640

The verge of consumption… nestled in the seaside bluffs of Half Moon Bay, CA. 

I almost fell off my chair when I saw the simultaneous expression of predator and prey….(best viewed large)

The FlickrBlog wrote, with a bit of alarmism:

“Flickr user jurvetson has captured an amazing fraction of a second in the interaction between prey and bird of prey. Warning: this photo is NOT for viewers who would be disturbed by images of small cute things meeting their end – it is really quite gruesome. If that sounds like you, don’t click.” 

(repost after accidental deletion… 148 wonderful comments and 308 faves are lost… sorry)

83 responses to “Last Thoughts”

  1. There is a partial cache on the Goog… if you haven’t grabbed it already…
    209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:0DLxrGiI_SkJ:www.flickr.com…

  2. It’s just as amazing the second time around.

  3. Todd – awesome. I had forgotten about that. Thanks. It’s great to have the old comments. I was able to grab some of the replies I wrote to earlier questions:

    The hawk took two swoops down before making the catch. This Morning's Hunt
    After the first miss, I discovered an entire family of quail that were remaining totally silent (to me at least) right next to me. After the catch, the hawk landed on a precipice along the jagged bluffs. I was able to watch the whole meal from the other side of a steep gully. So I was close, but safely separated by a chasm. Amazingly, after the meal, the hawk flew over the chasm and landed just a few feet away. She stared at her observer for a while before flying off. It was a magic moment.

    No Photoshop or image processing of any kind. Just a crop from the original. Except for HDR merges, I don’t use Photoshop with any of my photos.

    I got an email from a field biologist… It’s a juvenile red-tailed hawk dining on a California meadow vole (Microtis californicus).

    Voles sure are interesting… Prairie voles are rare among mice for their "faithful marriages" (pair bonding, mongamy, and joint rasing of the young). Other voles and mice exhibit none of those traits. Tom Insel has done some fascinating experiments to genetically regulate the number of oxytocin and vasopressin receptors (which link to the D2 dopamine receptors associated with drug addiction) in the vole brain. Mating causes a release of both hormones, but the right receptors have to be in the brain for the pair-bonding to follow.

    In short, Tom was able to switch monogamy on and off. Monogamy may boil down to the length of a DNA sequence in a promoter switch at the front of a particular receptor gene.

    After much discussion, wikipedia made it a "featured picture", which means that members of the community have identified it as one of the finest images on the English Wikipedia." =)

  4. Oh no! I had written a long text about how this is not more gruesome than anyone eating at the table! Too bad for you and all of us Steve.

    Still a great photo!!!!

    How did this happen and are other photos lost?

  5. No just this photo. It was a freak occurrence. I was removing the photo from some Groups (as an old photo, it was in more than the current maximum)… and then poof… it was gone. Flickr folks were very helpful in preserving the URL though, so all of the outside links (from Wikipedia, etc.) should still work.

  6. I bet the whole think is somewhere and could be retrieved if you asked. It is an important photo with interesting comments and it would be worth it.

  7. Yeah…. in the Google archive (for now) and in the backup tapes at flickr. But they would have to take the site down to roll that back. Bottom line: Deleting is very permanent here.

  8. I am planning since over a year to copy all my important comments in a document. I have some since over 22 months. I should have done that with what I wrote here.

  9. My original comment (you cannot get the second page in Google but I at least found my first one, the one I care about that I find important here.) Thanks Steve for reminding me.

    10 months ago

    Fantastic capture!!!

    Disturbing. One can imagine being that prey!

    Yet, consider this:

    If the hawk were at home or in a restaurant, sitting at a beautifully set dining table, fork and knife in hand and had a perfectly cooked vole covered with a red wine sauce on a plate with a piece of the meat in his mouth, would we react the same way?

    To be truly disturbed, I must first evaluate the eating habits of all of earth’s living creatures, including human beings. In the end, I see little basic difference. We all eat to survive. Some are carnivores, some are vegetarians, some can be both. Intelligent human beings have this choice. Even if people cook meats, they still eat most of the parts of another creature on the food chain. Does cooking, flavouring, seasoning and combining various ingredients make the consumption of an animal less gross? We eat guilt-free because no one else can judge us. If more evolved beings from another world were to see how we feed ourselves, they might find our eating habits extremely disgusting and disturbing. It is all a matter of perspective and intelligence.

  10. that’s a major bummer steve:(

    i think my comment just re-iterated what an amazing shot this was. and just for hyperlinking goodness, here’s the link to also show that you won the theme photo of the week for "The Detail" in the Scientist Photographers’ group:)

  11. wow… very sorry to know about this. On a funny note: you are getting closer to the Flickr man himself (however, I do hope you never reach his score)

    Remember when Stewart deleted his entire album? Talk about permanent deletion…!!! HE himself couldn´t undo it.

  12. Steve…. I’ll re-fave it to help you get it back into the Explore pages….

  13. I wasn’t one of your original faves, but it deserves a fresh new one! Congrats for the very well taken photo.

  14. Thanks y’all. You rock.

  15. When you posted this yesterday, I was wondering how you got the O(200 x10^6) URL. You got Flickr to intervene…nice of them. Did they really say that they had the old comments on tape somewhere? You would think that for such a "notable" Flickerite they could at least copy them all into an email for you.

  16. Wonderful capture! I saw this the first time around and it’s still astounding!

    NaturesFinestNaturesFinest
    Please add this great photo to Natures Finest
    Tag your photo with "NaturesFinest"

    >>>seen on
    1-2-3 group

  17. Please do not post a photo to Spectacular Animals until it is invited. Each photo must be individually invited to the group. Photos without the invitation will be deleted from the Group.
    In the Discussions on the Group’s Main Page , there is a possibility where you can post a photo that you think deserves to be included in the group and members can invite them.
    ———
    However, in this exceptional case, I think that this image would be a wonderful addition, so I have inserted the proper invitation.

    I really like your animal photo!
    You are invited to post this photo to Spectacular Animals, invite only
    http://www.flickr.com/groups/spectacular_animals/
    Please add the tag SpecAnimal to your photo

    I am assuming the original invite was lost in the deletion.

  18. Yes, it was invited. It is weird in the case of a reposting like this.

  19. (ACTION NOW) Great shot. 400mm must be nice. Crazy timing on your pic.

  20. Amazing shot, much admired by Melcir.meri, "FIRST – THE EARTH!" Group Admin [Haggis’s "Merlin with Woodpecker" reminded me of this pic – in our 2007 Photo Competition!!! — http://www.flickr.com/photos/haggis/928033673/in/photostream/ !!]

    A1-App-FTE-455531011_7dfad6f375_m

    — Since TIME’S RUSHING ON, let’s stop just paying LIP-SERVICE to LIFE! ~ Volunteer!!! Make a strong personal commitment to our planet and the future!!! ** Here’s our 2007-8 life-changing challenge! — Become an active realtime or online VOLUNTEER, for – "FIRST – THE EARTH!" Photo-ART EXHIBITION & Optional Competition group. ** First, join us. Then add comments/ +give our AWARDS to other images, plus find and AWARD great shots with invites — to help raise awareness of The State of the Planet, and of Preserving our Heritage & our Future! Choose a Volunteer tasks to suit your time and needs.
    ** MEMBERS ~ IMPORTANT! [JOIN, TO READ+REPLY] – See: http://www.flickr.com/groups/first-the-earth/discuss/72157600556... ESSENTIAL note !!! ** – Mel [Group Admin – "FIRST – THE EARTH!"]

  21. A1-App-FTE-455531011_7dfad6f375_m

    A great image, much admired by
    — enter your own name here –,
    a "FIRST – THE EARTH!" member
    You are invited to add it to our group pool!
    http://www.flickr.com/groups/first-the-earth/

  22. This was originally nominated for the Scientist Photographers Group Competition months ago – before it was deleted. So it deserves to remain in the group

  23. BTW – loved it back then and I STILL think that it is an AMAZING photo!

  24. It is obviously an amazing image. Incredible timing and shot so well. But an interesting thing to me is the high number of views compared to the relatively low number of faves. (Yes, I realize this is a re-post.) That said, I find myself reluctant to fave this! Interesting indeed. And, in the final action, faved after all.

    Congratulations on your excellent work and the well deserved recognition.

  25. How gruesome. I love it. =)

  26. A1-App-FTE-455531011_7dfad6f375_m

    A great image, much admired by Donna62 –,
    a "FIRST – THE EARTH!" moderator – http://www.flickr.com/groups/first-the-earth/

  27. Heads up! Amazing shot, congrats on the magazine – I hope you were paid well 😉

  28. I have seen this shot in wikipedia… cool

  29. wow, I thought my photo was vicious… but I think you’ve trumped me!

  30. (shivers)……. really an amazing photo.
    In my hikes I have watched dozens of raptors tear the sinews of prey, but never have I seen such an iconic image.

  31. truly fantastic shot. Did the little vole scream?
    (found it by clicking on the hawk that’s in a thread in TWTME)

  32. An absolutely stunning shot, love it.

  33. Thanks for licensing this image as CC "by" !
    Your photo is uploaded here :
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Hawk_eating_prey.jpg
    under the terms of the Creative Commons "by" license.

  34. i finally got around to putting up my scientist photographers flickr group calendar on my wall yesterday and this photo is featured for the month of Feb, so i’m sure i’ll be getting a lot of comments from friends!

    for anyone that’s interested in supporting our calendar (all profits are donated to Medecins Sans Frontieres / Doctors without Borders), you can purchase one here 🙂

  35. Awesome…. I had forgotten about that. Just ordered one now. Thanks.

  36. Wow…This is a truly phenomenal capture!

  37. Saw this on the "favourite animal shots" stream and had to stop by to say what a stunning capture.

  38. I think the rat is still looking at me, excellent capture. 🙂

  39. wow… great photo if a bit gruesome!

  40. This could be a new olympic sport, synchronized prey eating.,. notice this contestant has the toes pointed as well. Leading our judge panel to aware it a 9.3, 9.1, a 9.3, and a 6…from the judge who thought this was a PETA sponsored event.

  41. Excellent moment. Live and dead.

  42. Momento cumbre … la alimentación !!! Preciosa foto que vi en el grupo. Flickr Faves.

    La bajo a mis favoritas y te señalo como contacto amigo.

    Saludos cordiales

  43. truly a once in a lifetime catch!

  44. wow – this belongs on national geographic!

  45. Excellent capture……viewed large it is quite unique

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