Monday, December 5, 2011
2:51 PM
By Daily Mail Reporter
Freeze-framed: The snowy owl is inches away from the unsuspecting mouse
Freeze-framing nature at its cruellest, these stunning photographs show a tiny field mouse - seconds before it is swooped on by a hunting snowy owl.
The jaw-dropping images were captured by photographer Hal Trachtenberg - who braved bone-chilling sub-zero temperatures from dawn until dusk to frame his favourite wild bird at its fiercest.
In his series of pictures hotel-worker Hal, 49, from Montreal, Canada, snapped several owls patrolling snow-covered fields near Saint Barthelemy, Quebec.
Closer and closer: The owl focuses in on its prey
Within touching distance: The mouse is unaware of the fate that is about to befall him
His patience finally paid off when one young adolescent male - less than a year old - pounced on the unlucky rodent in front of Hal.
He said: 'The little mouse didn't stand a chance. The owls are silent when they fly so it didn't know what hit it.'
The bird's feathers are frayed and break up the air as they fly - meaning they make barely make a sound when travelling.
The snowy owls seen in Hal's pictures usually live high on the Arctic Tundra - on Canada's north coast - where they feed mainly on lemmings.
Gotcha: The mouse feels the force of the owl as it makes contact
Up and away: The mouse's tail can be seen dangling from the owl's claws as the predator makes its escape
In flight: The snowy owls seen in Hal's pictures usually live high on the Arctic Tundra - on Canada's north coast - where they feed mainly on lemmings
source:dailymail
Freeze-framed: The snowy owl is inches away from the unsuspecting mouse
Freeze-framing nature at its cruellest, these stunning photographs show a tiny field mouse - seconds before it is swooped on by a hunting snowy owl.
The jaw-dropping images were captured by photographer Hal Trachtenberg - who braved bone-chilling sub-zero temperatures from dawn until dusk to frame his favourite wild bird at its fiercest.
In his series of pictures hotel-worker Hal, 49, from Montreal, Canada, snapped several owls patrolling snow-covered fields near Saint Barthelemy, Quebec.
Closer and closer: The owl focuses in on its prey
Within touching distance: The mouse is unaware of the fate that is about to befall him
His patience finally paid off when one young adolescent male - less than a year old - pounced on the unlucky rodent in front of Hal.
He said: 'The little mouse didn't stand a chance. The owls are silent when they fly so it didn't know what hit it.'
The bird's feathers are frayed and break up the air as they fly - meaning they make barely make a sound when travelling.
The snowy owls seen in Hal's pictures usually live high on the Arctic Tundra - on Canada's north coast - where they feed mainly on lemmings.
Gotcha: The mouse feels the force of the owl as it makes contact
Up and away: The mouse's tail can be seen dangling from the owl's claws as the predator makes its escape
In flight: The snowy owls seen in Hal's pictures usually live high on the Arctic Tundra - on Canada's north coast - where they feed mainly on lemmings
source:dailymail
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