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Red-tailed hawks mostly hunt mammals—such as mice, rabbits and squirrels. But they will also eat birds, carrion and snakes—even ones weighing more than five pounds.

Predator meeting prey is part of the circle of life in nature. All living organisms need nutrition to produce the energy required to run their systems. Sometimes that predator-prey relationship is extremely clear, such as when you travel to Africa and witness a lion taking down a wildebeest, or when you tour Yellowstone and catch sight of a wolf pack tracking and catching an elk.

At other times, however, the balance between predator and prey gets a bit jumbled. In the video below, a young red-tailed hawk and a four-foot bull snake seem to get themselves into a stalemate. That’s when two men happened upon the scene and subsequently tried to “untangle” the situation.

Bull snakes are nonvenomous constrictors that can be found in pine barrens and sandy, open country. While they mainly eat rodents, they also prey on birds and lizards. Red-tailed hawks mostly hunt mammals—such as voles, mice, wood rats, ground squirrels, rabbits, snowshoe hares and jackrabbits. But they will also eat birds, carrion and snakes—even ones weighing more than five pounds.

Named for its distinctive hiss—which sounds like a grunting bull—bull snakes are nonvenomous constrictors. They eat rodents, birds and lizards. ©Ed Ogle, flickr

A warning, though, is in order. After this video was posted on YouTube, one state-licensed falconer wrote in, “be careful when handling birds of prey in distress. Footing, when a bird grabs hold of your hands, can be a very painful injury. Place a towel over the bird’s head and then carefully hold both feet between one hand and unwrap the snake with the other; assuming, of course, that the snake is not poisonous. Thanks for taking the time to help this bird. The first-year average mortality rate for raptors is high—around 80 percent.”

No matter how you feel about humans interfering in predator-prey encounters, the video does demonstrate the dangers that both face every day in order to eat. At least for this one day, both snake and hawk lived to search for dinner elsewhere—and find easier fare, we hope, on many days yet to come.

Here’s to finding your true places and natural habitats,

Candy