Failed Flight Leads To New Life For Eagle
A few months ago, park visitors started noticing something strange near a quiet pond beside the woods. A young eagle was following a swan family across the grass, staying close behind the cygnets as if it belonged with them. At first, people feared the eagle might be hunting, but witnesses said it never lunged or acted aggressive. It simply followed. Researchers believe the juvenile may have failed an early flight attempt, drifted too far from its mother, and attached itself to the closest large white bird it could find. Since the pond sat near a wooded area, sightings were rare, and after a while, the strange little family seemed to disappear.
But recently, during a stretch of hot sunny weather, visitors spotted them again only this time, the eagle was nearly full grown and floating calmly beside the swan like it had learned a completely different way to live. Researchers say it’s unusual, but not impossible, for a young bird to pick up behaviors from the animals around it, especially after being separated early. They believe the eagle will likely return to normal eagle behavior over time, but for now, the sight has left people stunned: a predator raised in peace, following the one bird that never treated it like a threat.
@Liza137823 When I started reading I though it was a joke. But no. It is a real complain. Are you for real?! WTF. Then somebody agreed even saying they dont like kids. You really have a problem living in society. And being human. Go live somewhere in the woods. All by your glory self. WTF!!
They might look familiar but these characters only appeared in this one short, "Rabbit Stew and Rabbits, Too" (1969).
In a very strange moment from the final days of the Warner Bros. theatrical cartoons, director Robert McKimson created two new characters:
Rapid Rabbit and the Quick Brown Fox (who is clearly orange, but...okay.)
The rabbit runs around honking a horn, while the fox sets failed traps for him...a not-so-subtle Road Runner knockoff.