I LOVE owls - in case you didn't know : )
How dare you take a photo of me looking like this?
Sleepy Barn Owl
Swainson's Hawk / Buteo swainsoni
Swainson's Hawk watching for its next snack
Two-month-old American Kestrel
Great Horned Owl
Great Horned Owl
Licorice Allsorts (candy) eyes
Male Snowy Owl
Male Snowy Owl
Short-eared Owl
Short-eared Owl
Short-eared Owl
Prairie Falcon - Status: SENSITIVE, Species of Spe…
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Short-eared Owl
Snowy Owl 1st year male, Snowy Owl Prowl 2019
Snowy Owl male, Snowy Owl Prowl 2019
Snowy Owl 1st year male, Snowy Owl Prowl 2019
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Long-eared Owl / Asio otus
Long-eared Owl / Asio otus
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Long-eared Owl / Asio otus
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Long-eared Owl
Short-eared Owl - from January
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Barred Owl in FCPP - from the archives
Northern Hawk Owl juevnile - from the archives
Great Horned Owl / Bubo virginianus
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk / Buteo swainsoni
Northern Pygmy-owl - from the archives
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Northern Pygmy-owl - from the archives
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Burrowing Owl, ENDANGERED - from the archives
Burrowing Owl, ENDANGERED - from the archives
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Short-eared Owl out on a tree limb
Great Gray Owl - from my archives
Day 2, Turkey Vulture / Cathartes aura
Day 2, Crested Caracara immature / Caracara cheriw…
Day 5, Harris's Hawk, King Ranch, Norias Division
Day 8, Harris's Hawk, Santa Ana NWR
Day 8, tiny Elf Owl / Micrathene whitneyi - smalle…
Osprey pair harassed by Red-winged Blackbird
Osprey
Osprey
Osprey / Pandion haliaetus
Osprey with fish
Osprey with fish
Osprey with fish
Osprey with fish
Golden Eagle!
Swainson's Hawk, immature
Great Horned Owl - rehab
Osprey with a fish
Osprey with a fish
Red-tailed Hawk, watching for its next meal
Osprey number 2 / Pandion haliaetus
A classic light/intermediate-morph adult Swainson'…
Ferruginous Hawks - now safely grown and gone
Ferruginous Hawk
Enjoying a good meal
Swainson's Hawk take-off
Great Horned Owlet
Great Horned Owlet
Ferruginous Hawk / Buteo regalis
Almost missed, but gratefully seen
One of yesterday's Great Horned Owls
Sleepy Great Horned Owl
Great Gray Owl
Burrowing owl in the wild
Great Gray Owl
Far, far away
Great Gray Owl on the hunt
Great Gray Owl, highly zoomed
Bald Eagle getting a hosepipe shower
Great Gray Owl hunting
Great Gray Owl, watching and listening
Great Gray Owl #2
Great Gray Owl #1
Burrowing Owl in the wild
Bald Eagle after a cooling hosepipe shower
A cute, young face
Two Tropical Screech Owls, Caroni Swamp, Trinidad
Curious glance from a Great Horned Owl
Juvenile Northern Goshawk, feeding
You never know where you'll see a Snowy Owl
Two male Snowy Owls in the same field
Snowy Owl number 5
A most welcome find
Northern Pygmy-owl
Always a treat
A welcome addition to our Christmas Bird Count
I spy with my little eye
Licorice Allsorts eyes
Once was wild
Where countryside and civilization meet
It's the little guy/gal again
Another surprise on another gloomy day
Popcan-sized Northern Pygmy-owl, from January 2015
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Barn Owl
One of a pair
Shadows
Yesterday's absolute treat - the size of your fist…
After a busy night of hunting
A favourite subject with photographers
Swainson's Hawk
Yesterday's Bald Eagle
Bald Eagle / Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Merlin
Great Horned Owl juvenile
Yesterday's Great Horned Owl
Great Horned Owl on a fence post
Red-tailed Hawk?
Three years later ....
Sweet young owl
Swainson's Hawk
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk
See also...
See more...Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
90 visits
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
On 21 August 2018, it turned out to be such a great day, with some much-appreciated sightings. I must have spent about 8 or 9 hours driving and almost every inch of my body ached like crazy at the end of it. Now, each summer, I try and do two or three longer (for me) drives, making sure I don't lose confidence to get there.
Weather-wise, it was around 24C, so not too hot. Yes, it was still smokey from the British Columbia wildfires, making distant hills barely visible and deleting mountains from view, but it didn't have too much effect on closer photography.
It was a good day for Hawks, seeing three on the way south and a few on the way home. I almost missed two Swainson's Hawks, as the hay bale they were standing on was way out in a large field. At first, I thought there were three hawks together, but when I stopped to take a few photos, I realized that there were only two - one looked almost like two hawks close together, but then I saw that it had its wings mantled. I guess it wanted to make sure that the second hawk behind it couldn't steal any of the food from it.
A lone Common Nighthawk also helped make my day. For several years, I had longed to see one of these unusual birds and, finally last year (2017), I managed to find four of them. That time was almost two months earlier in the year than my recent find, so I wasn't expecting to see any in late August. I would still love to find one lying on a wooden railing rather than a metal railing. Last year, I did get a photo of one on a fence post, but the angle was not the greatest. These birds are 9½ inches from the tip of bill to the tip of tail.
"On warm summer evenings, Common Nighthawks roam the skies over treetops, grasslands, and cities. Their sharp, electric peent call is often the first clue they’re overhead. In the dim half-light, these long-winged birds fly in graceful loops, flashing white patches out past the bend of each wing as they chase insects. These fairly common but declining birds make no nest. Their young are so well camouflaged that they’re hard to find, and even the adults seem to vanish as soon as they land." From AllABoutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Nighthawk/id
"North America has 13 nighthawk populations. All but one are in decline and the species is considered threatened in Canada and several U.S. states."
www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/little-backpacks-gps-used-to-trac...
A Horned Lark, a Western Meadowlark juvenile, and a Vesper Sparrow gave me the chance for a photo or two, and a lone hawk I spotted way in the distance was a Ferruginous Hawk. A happy sighting, as these hawks are so few and far between.
Weather-wise, it was around 24C, so not too hot. Yes, it was still smokey from the British Columbia wildfires, making distant hills barely visible and deleting mountains from view, but it didn't have too much effect on closer photography.
It was a good day for Hawks, seeing three on the way south and a few on the way home. I almost missed two Swainson's Hawks, as the hay bale they were standing on was way out in a large field. At first, I thought there were three hawks together, but when I stopped to take a few photos, I realized that there were only two - one looked almost like two hawks close together, but then I saw that it had its wings mantled. I guess it wanted to make sure that the second hawk behind it couldn't steal any of the food from it.
A lone Common Nighthawk also helped make my day. For several years, I had longed to see one of these unusual birds and, finally last year (2017), I managed to find four of them. That time was almost two months earlier in the year than my recent find, so I wasn't expecting to see any in late August. I would still love to find one lying on a wooden railing rather than a metal railing. Last year, I did get a photo of one on a fence post, but the angle was not the greatest. These birds are 9½ inches from the tip of bill to the tip of tail.
"On warm summer evenings, Common Nighthawks roam the skies over treetops, grasslands, and cities. Their sharp, electric peent call is often the first clue they’re overhead. In the dim half-light, these long-winged birds fly in graceful loops, flashing white patches out past the bend of each wing as they chase insects. These fairly common but declining birds make no nest. Their young are so well camouflaged that they’re hard to find, and even the adults seem to vanish as soon as they land." From AllABoutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Nighthawk/id
"North America has 13 nighthawk populations. All but one are in decline and the species is considered threatened in Canada and several U.S. states."
www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/little-backpacks-gps-used-to-trac...
A Horned Lark, a Western Meadowlark juvenile, and a Vesper Sparrow gave me the chance for a photo or two, and a lone hawk I spotted way in the distance was a Ferruginous Hawk. A happy sighting, as these hawks are so few and far between.
Malik Raoulda has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
www.ipernity.com/group/oiseaux_monde
Sign-in to write a comment.