Feet and Le^s 375 



-to' 



once clasped an object, never let go. It required two 

 men and two pairs of the thickest buckskin gloves to 

 obtain Fig. 295, and even then the foot could !)(' held 

 still for only a moment. As the photograph shows, the 



Fig. 294.— Foot of Snowy Owl. 



leg is feathered all the way down to the toes in this eagle, 

 for some unexplained reason, while in almost all its rela- 

 tives, as in the Bald Eagle, the legs are covered with 

 scales. The feet and toes of the Harpy Eagle, Fig. 204, 

 are probably the most terrible of their kind in the world: 



