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A short clip from a couple days ago to illustrate a typical low odds set up compared to a high odds set up in partridge hawking in my area. We all want our birds to be successful and the type of set ups we provide can help or hinder this. Sometimes we don't have much to choose from and seem to "settle" in the hope that it works out. That's OK providing you're not putting your bird in a hazardous situation just for the sake of a flight, I strive to first and foremost, to find safe set ups far from fences and wires but even when you do, things can go wrong as I was reminded several weeks ago with Smith my other hybrid. Even when you find those "safe" set ups, there are high and low success percentage opportunities. It's important to understand why and use them to benefit. It starts by understanding your prey, its behaviours and patterns. I can usually predict where a flight will go but nothing is 100% guaranteed. Sometimes I like to challenge my falcons and if you have an experienced game hawk they can sometimes benefit from being challenged and typically the odd "miss" isn't going to unsettle their confidence, unlike a new young and inexperienced falcon. The same with duck hawking in that you can pick easy dug outs for predictable high success rate or flying 5 acre sloughs that require tactical approaches, patience and strategic attacks from the falcon. This particular day I was multi tasking and had planned to go flying first thing and then onto the rifle range which is 90km from home, and try get back for an afternoon deer hunt. The mornings flight was a low odd set up and I anticipated it ending as it did. I have caught partridge in this location before but only when snow is on the ground and the cover isn't so tall. Of course if the falcon had bound to the partridge then this wouldn't be an issue but huns are smart and that isn't always possible. In contrast, the afternoons flight was high percentage success rate set up and the partridge had far to go to reach cover and therefore gave the falcon a clean shot. The rest is up to the falcon and a seasoned bird will rarely fail. I hope you enjoy the video !.