Just checked my bird book. It is a Northern Harrier!
Just checked my bird book. It is a Northern Harrier!
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It's possible it's a Cooper's hawk. Juveniles are marked very similarly to Northern Harriers. They are also notorious for staking out bird feeders. But either species will sometimes take smaller birds as prey, though more common for a Cooper's hawk to do so.
Here is a page with some photos of mature and juveniles.
http://www.geocities.com/tgrey41/Pag...persHawkp.html
The Cooper's tend to have a smaller thinner head, and the Northern Harrier a more owlish head. I honestly have trouble telling them apart from a distance.
ETA: This page talks about how they can take up residence at places that feed song birds: http://www.illinoisraptorcenter.org/...de/cooper.html
Mom to Raven and Rudy the greyhound
Missing always: Tasha & Tommy, at the Rainbow Bridge
Thanks for the info, Columbine and K9 Soul. Now I don't know what it is for sure; but it is marvelous to see, soaring over the open field behind our house.
Cooper's Hawk is not in my bird guide. the one I have is the Audubon Society Posket Series, Birds of North America, Eastern Region. I did check and Cooper's Hawks do come in this area. K9Soul, The photos on the link are so good!
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That's a young female coopers hawk indeed!![]()
They have very good hearing and that's how they catch their prey most of the time, they'll be on a tree then on the other side of a wall could be a bird... instead of having to fly over looking for prey it can hear it very well so they do a surprise attack. I had a coopers hawk take one of my pigeons. Very beautiful and smart birds. I'd suggest moving that bird feeder closer to a bush or somthing this way the song birds will have a place to escape when that bird attacks, they will have a less chance of getting killed if the bird feeder is not out in the open! I attached a photo of a coopers hawk, you can see the detail very well.
Birds of prey are beautiful creatures! My parents got Red Tailed hawks in thier yard all the time going after mice and squrells. I haven't seen any hawks or the like here yet but Im sure its only a matter of time.
Thanks for sharing!
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