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Western Bluebird, Rocky Outcrop Park |
Murphy's Law of Photography strikes again. When my wife and I took a walk around the neighborhood Sunday afternoon I decided to leave my camera at home. Naturally, we got a great view of a red-tailed hawk taking apart its prey on a picturesque tree stump at Grandview Park. It would have made a great urban wildlife shot, with the park and stump in the foreground and the Outer Sunset in the background.
As I was grieving over having missed this photo opportunity, the hawk took off with the prey animal and a foot-long tuft of grass dangling from its talons. As it rose in the sky it called out "Keeeeeer!" and soared over a nearby grove of eucalyptus trees, a row of houses, and the Rocky Outcrop Park, then suddenly tucked into a dive and made a beeline back to the stump.
That's when another hawk began to call out in response. The new red-tail soared into view and then it, too, tucked into a dive, then flared out its feathers to land on the stump right next to the first hawk, where it took possession of the prey and flew away with it, the extra tuft of grass still dangling like a kite-tail.
Thankfully, the rest of the walk was uneventful....
Later in the day I tried to get redemption by going back out to look for the hawks with my camera. I figured it was an incalculable longshot, but I took heart when I saw both of the hawks soaring above the houses at the top of the Rocky Outcrop. They circled a little bit, but soon glided out of sight to the south, taking my hopes with them.
While watching the hawks I'd also heard the light whistles of a Western bluebird nearby, and I soon found a male and female hunting for insects on the ground from their perches high on a light post with a No Parking sign attached to it. Sometimes they'd both post up on top of the light pole with nothing but an overcast sky in the background, but more often one of them would post up on the sign. They made numerous forays from the pole, but I only witnessed one catch: the female caught a Jerusalem cricket which, after some difficulty, it finally managed to swallow whole.
I spent a fair amount of time with the bluebirds in the breezy and chilly chute between the Rocky Outcrop and the row of houses along 14th Avenue, while a very light fog-like spray also carried in the wind. Eventually I felt like it was time to leave the bluebirds alone, and accept that the hawks were not coming back anytime soon.
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At first, only the less flashy female bluebird was in camera range, but then this male swooped right past my head to land next to a car in a driveway behind me. Whatever insect presumably drew it down must have escaped, and the bird quickly returned to the pole where it traded places with the female on top of the No Parking sign. |
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The female, meanwhile, had scored a juicy Jerusalem cricket. |
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From then on, the female pretty much stayed beyond camera range. |
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The male continued to hunt close to the road. |
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The Blue Hunter |
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Here the bluebird is just landing back on a metal stake that it also used as a hunting perch. |
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Feather Spread |
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The bluebirds made me happy. |
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