Frazz by Jef Mallett for November 13, 2023

  1. Screenshot 20231107 125131
    terrapin6000 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Absolutely love how Jef drew the chewing in the final panel and the sandwich .

     •  Reply
  2. Brain guy dancing hg clr
    Concretionist  about 1 year ago

    Yeah. I wouldn’t want that amount of brain power either.

     •  Reply
  3. Pexels pixabay 278823
    Doug K  about 1 year ago

    Let us prey … Thank you Lord, that we don’t prey on rodents.

     •  Reply
  4. Picture 001
    rshive  about 1 year ago

    At least we hope it’s not rodent. When we lived further out in the country, we constantly had hawks circling over our field. Looking for rabbits, I think.

     •  Reply
  5. Profile pic
    The Orange Mailman  about 1 year ago

    I can pray from 10,000 feet.

     •  Reply
  6. Graceeyepatch large
    Teresa Burritt (Frog Applause) creator about 1 year ago

    Interesting fact.

     •  Reply
  7. Stick figure
    Ichabod Ferguson  about 1 year ago

    10,000 feet? If we switch to metric, they’ll starve to death.

     •  Reply
  8. 041ce150 741f 443a aa6a 84618520b989 1 201 a
    jessegooddoggy  about 1 year ago

    Ravens can spot another raven a mile away and know if it’s one of their friends.

     •  Reply
  9. Download
    cervelo  about 1 year ago

    Don’t think that one out too long Frazz… Take Caulfield’s sandwich for instance. Peanut butter, jam and bread may contain (according to the FDA) several mg of unavoidable insect parts, poop and rodent hair, charmingly referred to as “food defects”.

     •  Reply
  10. Img 20230511 134023590 portrait 5
    markkahler52  about 1 year ago

    O, Cursed, to be a near-sighted hawk!

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    trainnut1956  about 1 year ago

    Hate to break it to you but the FDA allows a certain small percentage of insect and rodent parts in food…

     •  Reply
  12. Sevasleeping
    Serial Pedant  about 1 year ago

    Feathered rabbits…

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    cissycox  about 1 year ago

    There’s a Perigrine that lives in the building across from mine. Whenever she’s in town the pigeon population goes down. Can’t say I complain.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    royq27  about 1 year ago

    I can usually see a Dairy Queen sign from 10,000 feet…

     •  Reply
  15. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  about 1 year ago

    2 hawk types use our 6 feeder posts as perches for several minutes some days. They are beautiful and fierce looking. Their gaze covers the area. But, apparently just for the fun of it, birds come to the feeders anyway. There are thick shrubs within a 20 ft of the deck and, if the hawk even clears its throat or ruffles its feathers, the birds are >>>>gone. Just colorful streaks in the open space.

    For me, one curious activity occurs when hawks land in the grass and feed on something there. Usually too far away for me to see the ‘food’ even with field glasses. Assume a slug or some other tasty morsel.

    We live in a heavily wooded suburb in central VA and they are a good mix in the very limited animal population. We enjoy seeing them.

     •  Reply
  16. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  about 1 year ago

    Caulfield has a selective set of priorities. He’ll take the sight and the height but will pass on the menu. He hasn’t so far seemed to glom the fact that there are consequences to every decision and that, sometimes, a leap before a look can put one in a bind.

     •  Reply
  17. Rwljlogo2
    The Wolf In Your Midst  about 1 year ago

    Ever wonder why so many animals are so easily domesticated? Because the promise of food and shelter is amazing to them. The “wild and free life” sucks when you’re starving.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    prrdh  about 1 year ago

    Although I wouldn’t mind a mouthful of hasenpfeffer.

     •  Reply
  19. Plsa button
    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Hmmm, this strip is set in Michigan, but that’s an Atlanta Falcons logo on Frazz’s T-shirt. I wonder if there’s some subtle point being made here. It couldn’t possibly be that Jef Mallett’s developing a soft spot for football, could it?

     •  Reply
  20. 136061 pic
    Mike Baldwin creator about 1 year ago

    Very Funny! Peanut butter and jelly has fewer bones.

     •  Reply
  21. Avatareddie05
    gregcartoon Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I can spot fast food from 10,000 feet away. Farther, on the interstate.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    a swino  about 1 year ago

    Earlier this year I watch a hawk catch an updraft and almost effortlessly rise at least a couple of hundred feet nearly straight up in about 12 seconds.

    I’d eat at least three filthy raw pigeons to feel that sensation.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    amaryllis2 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I was describing my resident Cooper’s hawk to someone once and how doves, which have nest after nest after nest all year as long as the food and weather are good, laying eggs right in there with babies about to fledge, are meat factories for the hawks. Her reaction was, Wait. You’re saying—Birds? Eat birds? Well, yeah, who else in nature is equipped to do it?

     •  Reply
  24. Missing large
    Stephen Gilberg  about 1 year ago

    For Caulfield, this is unusually basic and low on arrogance.

     •  Reply
  25. Ti
    Rhetorical_Question   about 1 year ago

    Healthy Eating by Frazz?

     •  Reply
  26. Fdr avatar 6d9910b68a3c 128
    Teto85 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    To quote the Great Gary Larson, “Birds of prey know they are cool.”

     •  Reply
  27. Whatever
    unfair.de  about 1 year ago

    Eating bird would be a common ground with a hawk. And rabbit, too. But I’d miss salad, fruits and vegetable – and all things baked.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frazz