I heard them about ten or fifteen
seconds before I saw them: They let out two or three mournful
shrieks, though at first they were concealed behind a local stand of
trees. Two red-tailed hawks, gliding maybe a hundred feet above me.
They were keeping roughly opposite one
another in the same lazy circle, about fifteen or twenty feet across, as it
slowly drifted east to west above me.
Five-fifteen pm – with last weekend's
time change, that puts it about two hours before sunset around here. So it's
really the same story everywhere, I suppose: they're wrapping up the
day, on the commute home (if it's the same pair that's been around
for several years, they nest near an overpass about half a mile from
here) and just looking for some take-out for dinner. Some evenings
you just don't feel like cooking, you know?
A running joke among my condo neighbors
is that when we feed the birds and squirrels we're just fattening
them up for the hawks. That may be why I've taken to feeding the
crows (who, from their point of view, have taken to training me to
feed them when they give the right mid-morning call): I'm sure a crow
would lose a street fight with a hawk, but they're too smart to get
caught, and anyway the hawks would probably prefer something a little
more epicurean than crow. Something tasty and delicate like a
mourning dove, many of which have moved back into the neighborhood in the last few
weeks and are – and I mean this in the nicest way – among the
dumbest and most target-worthy creatures in North America.
And I'd never have known the hawks were
there if I'd been in a car.
2 comments:
Hello from a fellow Oregon blogger. I'm in Corvallis -- got to your site from Yastreblansky's blogroll.
I really need to get my bike out and ready for spring now that DST is here and I won't have to commute home in the dark.
I've had a couple new birds in my yard this year and I don't recognize their calls. I need to see if I can get a picture of them so I can identify them.
Thanks for stopping by! [Yastreblyansky has sent me a fair amount of traffic, for which I'm grateful.]
Good luck with the spring-tune-up/commute. I just dodged a major bullet on mine a couple of weeks ago: a small bend on the aluminum frame. Maybe it would let itself be bent carefully back into alignment again, or maybe it would snap in the attempt, making the whole thing a very large paperweight. This time the stars were in my favor. Woo-hoo!
Don't be a stranger.
bn
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