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Raptor Wednesday
Sharp-shinned Hawk. Bald Eagle. Red-tailed Hawk. Coopers Hawk. Merlin. Amid the usual suspects, we’re missing only American Kestrels here. I’ll have more picture of them soon. I have’t seen a Red-shouldered Hawk this winter. The Swainson’s Hawk has returned to the recycling facility (our equivalent of a dump), but I haven’t personally seen it. The…
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Mammal Monday
Not Cruella de Ville or Susan Sontag.A Striped Skunk. Unfortunately not in good shape: canine distemper is riling the local population, just as they’re out and about mating. Bit a theme going here… this is a skull of a Common Raccoon. Rodent teeth in Great Horned Owl pellet.
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Kestrels on Sunday
She sees something down there. Something with a wing and bit of gristle: looks like some previous prey was cached and then retrieved. Not atypical behavior this time of year, when the female is eating like crazy to build up the energy to create eggs. Across the street was this male. Later both birds were…
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Waiting For The Dragonflies
Meanwhile, looking for them anywhere I can find them: in this case, in a couple of Samurai movies from the late 1960s. Above, the scale seems off, since the knife in the hand of the thrower looked to be about 8″. And here the kids seem to be using poles smeared with a birdlime-like substance…
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The Cranes Are Flying
Seven Sandhill Cranes, the first I’ve ever seen. In the wild, that is. The wilds, as it were, of Brooklyn! Overhead of me in Green-Wood on Tuesday. I was between two American Kestrels and a Merlin, so I rather perfunctorily took a few shots, thinking they were Great Blue Herons, and then wondered about the…
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Raptor Wednesday
Love in a Tuliptree: Red-tailed Hawk copulation. The male then brought a couple of fresh sticks to the nest. The thing is, though, this nest is not in a good place. Last time around, the young were killed off by very territorial Great Horned Owls. They say only the nestlings’ talons were found.
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Ravens
Common Raven in the foreground with Fish Crows in the background. The “Romane nose” of the Raven’s bill is visible even from a distance. These great wedged or diamond-shaped tails also distinguish these from our two crow species. Sure, Ravens are as large as Red-tailed Hawks, but size can be hard to judge. Pair is…







