07-JUN-2010
Tree moving 1 Day 43
She tightly grasped a limb and then did about 20 of the most powerful wing strokes she could. It's as if she wanted to move the tree!
07-JUN-2010
Tree moving 2
Now her left wing shows up as well. The tree branch actually lifted a little.
07-JUN-2010
tree moving 3
It's as though she's on a tread mill doing a super work out.
07-JUN-2010
tree moving 4
You know, the tree might be moving a little!
07-JUN-2010
tree moving 7 (Day 43)
Well, that's enough.
That was much better than a treadmill!
07-JUN-2010
After the tree moving excercise session, she's contemplating what to do next. Day 43
She's trying to decide whether to take her first flight down Glen Rd, or to the neighbor's lawn across Route 3. Glen Rd may give her more options for getting back to the nest safely.
02-JUN-2010
Hopping from one branch . . . (Day 38)
02-JUN-2010
. . . to another. Day 38.
As days progress, the chick takes longer and more frequent helicopter-hops between branches.
05-JUN-2010
Out on a limb, studying Glen Road. Day 41.
The 'chick' spends more time each day on this and a couple of other limbs each day, occasionally hopping from one limb to another, and then to the nest. She's a little puffed up here. I don't think she was angry at the moment.
17-MAY-2010
Mom watching, over Glen Rd and our driveway. Day 22
After about Day 20, Mom would position herself here for increasingly long portions of the day, while leaving the chick unattended. She's about 70 feet away, in direct view of the nest. Occasionally, blue jays would dive bomb her here, but they would eventually tire of that.
17-MAY-2010
Mom brooding, on cool morning. Age: 22 days
28-MAY-2010
Dad helping Henry dispatch a squirrel. Day 33
The squirrel was brought to the nest, and the Dad stepped back allowing the not-so-little one to do his work. The squirrel squealed for about thirty seconds, at which time Dad stepped in to help.
02-JUN-2010
Tail feathers getting larger. Day 38
12-MAY-2010
Jay attack (Day 17)
The male hawk was directly over our driveway, watching over the nest containing the baby red tail. Two blue jays were harassing the red tail, diving at it and striking at its back or wings. The hawk would simply stand still. One of the jays hit the hawk's back at least a half dozen times in the period of a two minutes.
I took this picture from the driveway, about 40 feet directly below the action.
10-MAY-2010
Mom and chick (Day 15)
A little more than two weeks have passed since the hatching. The chick is not showing herself that often, but here I caught a glimpse of her. Hunting is now very constant and goes on all day. This morning the temperature was closes to freezing, and at 7 am, mom was deep in the nest, brooding the little one.
04-MAY-2010
First view of the baby red-tailed hawk (Day 9)
Click on the image to enlarge it. Amazingly, she's holding a twig in her beak! And that's her eye twinkling through the gap in the twigs.
Earlier in the day I saw a pine sprig waving above the nest when there really wasn't any wind. Now I understand that she was trying out her beak even though I couldn't see her.
Why am I calling her "she"?
Because she looks like a "she". We'll see how that goes as time passes.
05-MAY-2010
mom leaves the nest with squirrel entrails (Day 10)
This is the first bird shot I took with my new camera body, a Canon 50D. A very lucky shot because when the mom took off from the nest, I slewed the camera and shot, without even turning off the IS.
05-MAY-2010
hmm . . . looks like mom's away (Day 10)
The next several images have very little contrast range because the chick is deep shadow with strong backlight from the low sun.
05-MAY-2010
I think I'll try my wing things
05-MAY-2010
let's see, how does this work?
05-MAY-2010
uhhh-oh . . . wow !
she actually stumbled. Good thing she's still so small and inside the nest.
05-MAY-2010
I'll just have to watch you more closely!
Mom returned a little later.
21-MAR-2010
The mother red-tailed hawk and her nest (Day -35)
She's quite proud of her nest.
My belief that she has one or more eggs is purely circumstantial, in that she becomes glued to the nest when it is wet or cold. As it warms up, she'll take longer excursions away, but rarely for longer than 15 minutes or so.
I don't know if I've seen the male partner in the nest. I've seen them taking fun trips way up 1/4 mile or so, then come rapidly down with one coming back to the nest. This happens about every other day.
26-APR-2010
First day of feeding (Day 1)
28-APR-2010
2nd observed feeding 2 days later (Day 3)
23-APR-2010
She leaves the nest to find her partner. (Day -2)
She had been calling for him, and he has just flown by about 200 feet overhead, answering her call.
23-APR-2010
Her wingspan is about four feet ! Awesome. (Day -2)
Aren't those long finger-nail feathers beautiful?
23-APR-2010
She accelerates with big strokes . . .
23-APR-2010
. . . and follows through.
12-APR-2010
In another flight, she's accelerating with powerful strokes, just having left the nest. (Day -13)
12-APR-2010
A tighter zoom . Note the spiraling shape of her right wing.
My sailing friends will appreciate this air-foil shape.
22-APR-2010
Reverse Thrust!! (Day -3)
The mom's returning to her nest.
20-APR-2010
She's about 15 feet away, and appears to be getting to be quite accustomed to me. (Day -5)
The day before, I obliviously drove into my driveway, stopped, and was about to get out of the car, when I saw her eating a squirrel on the lawn about 12 feet away! I froze, then slumped down and hid my eyes behind the side rear-view mirror. She continued for 15 minutes, nervously looking around and then at me every 15 seconds or so. She appears to have been trying to analyze what this white car thing is that appears to have a human in it.
She then picked up the squirrel and hopped over til she was adjacent to the driver's door, about 8 feet away, where I could no longer hide my eyes. She re-arranged the squirrel several times, while studying me, and then decided she should return to the nest, leaving the squirrel behind.
A friend suggested that she was offering it to me. You never know! After dark, I disposed of the squirrel. This squirrel was part of mating couple of squirrels, and the mate came by a couple of times to look at her partner.
20-APR-2010
She's saying: "if you don't stop this mowing-the-lawn jazz, I'm not going to be your friend"
The day after the squirrel incident, I decided I had to cut the grass. In the middle of cutting an area adjacent to the tree, she flew over me (quite high up), around the house, and landed in the yard where she had eaten the squirrel.
I stopped mowing, and went to my car to fetch my camera. At that point, the hawk, not finding any remnants of the squirrel, flew up to this low gable above our porch, and proceeded to have a conversation with me using body language! It was amazing.
Only about 15 feet away, she didn't seem at all skittish about my photographing her.
20-APR-2010
She then flew to a nearby branch, where she was harrassed by a bluejay . . .
After she was done lecturing me, she flew to a nearby tree, where she was scolded by a bluejay.
20-APR-2010
. . . and then left the scene in a flurry.
The mom decided it was time to return to her nest, before the jay got any ideas of attacking the nest again.
A week ago I found a hawk-egg shell at the bottom of the tree. It was odor-free, so it probably came down early in the incubation period.
Around that time I had seen a blue jay flitting around the nest, with mama not in sight, for a few minutes. I don't know if she got any eggs then. But that might be connected with the shell that showed up.
Or mama may have broken it by accident.
26-MAR-2010
Lunch break..... (Day -30)
I couple of weeks ago, I came across her eating a squirrel in the crotch of a tree a block away. During her meal she moved to different parts of the tree a couple of times.
26-MAR-2010
Lunch break -- shifted to a different branch.
She eats her squirrel, with her hackles raised, she's warning me not to steal it -- or else! A couple weeks later she became much more comfortable with my presence.
25-MAR-2010
She's peering over the edge of the nest -- a common sight.
I'm about 100 feet away, and she seems to always know what I'm up to.
24-MAR-2010
Her tail overhangs the nest's edge.
A typical view. She occasionally shifts position in this way. A couple of times I saw tail feathers that were much redder. Perhaps that was the male?
I haven't seen both at the same time near the nest. When they're together, they're on their way to circling flight hundreds of feet up.
19-MAR-2010
Here's the nest in blue spruce tree
Most non-birders can't see it until I carefully point it out.
26-APR-2010
a serious conversation between dad (?) and the blue jay
Note that his hackles are raised. This standoff lasted a minute or so, and then the jay began flitting around the hawk, too quickly for the hawk to respond.
26-APR-2010
bluejay starts a buzz dive
An amazingly high speed dive.
26-APR-2010
blue jay doing serious acrobatics
The jay fires the afterburner here!