The tail situation is indiscernible. The feather lengths should be equal in
winter, as the molt and new feathers are not progressing.
Cold here again this week, in the mid-20s at day, mid teens at night. Not
seeing any winter immatures this year. Only a few experienced haggards who spent
the winter here will survive. Persistent snow makes hunting for voles
impossible.
RTs, like all the Bald Eagles, will be searching for and feeding on deer
roadkill, which is the primary food for winter BEs here on Lake Erie. The lake
is essentially frozen over, so no fish can be taken. BEs are surviving (nicely)
on roadkill deer.
BEs will from time to time expropriate an RT nest and make it bigger. But
the hawks will just go a moderate distance (usually less than half a mile), and
build and use a new nest, without any predation or conflict from the eagles.
Different matter in the West with Golden Eagles, who will kill RTs when on
prey --- as falconers out there know. Lots of falconry Red-tails killed by
Golden Eagles when the hawks are down on newly-caught prey. Bald Eagles pay no
attention,
But when I was hunting with my Red-tail, and she saw a Bald Eagle flying
along a half-mile away, she stopped hunting and just watched the eagle, until it
flew out of vision. Red-tails are always attentive to eagles in their field of
view, and they always want to be certain that the eagle expresses no untoward
intents; probably a behavior impressed genetically upon the hawks by Golden
Eagles.
But Bald Eagles have little interest in pursuing hawks.
--John Blakeman
Many thanks John for sharing your expertise and I'm glad to hear that Bald Eagles have no urges to do in their Red-tailed neighbors.
Speaking of Eagles enjoying the bounty of road killed deer, some of you will remember that on my previous trip when I first saw the band-less pair, on my way home I saw another Red-tailed Hawk fly up out of the area under a small bridge just outside of town. I went back to see just what she might have been doing down there and discovered a deer carcass.
One of the road killed deer we have just been talking about as a mainstay of Bald Eagles, also is feeding some of the Red-tailed Hawk population as well as numerous other species.
Not far from town I saw another Red-tailed Hawk in the sky heading back toward the country.
That Red-tail looked similar to the one that had been feeding on the carcass so I stopped again at the little bridge where I had seen the deer carcass previously to have another look.
Where I had seen a complete carcass two days previously, there was nothing but a stain on the snow with dozens of tracks leading to it.
That was fast!
When I went back up, I realized that there were two remnants of the carcass that had been abandoned on the verges of the road.
On the right, was an about 8 inch scrap of deer hide.
On the left side of the road lay a single deer hoof.
The rest of the deer had kept many a creature well fed and perhaps in some cases alive for the last 2 cruelly cold days and nights.
Now what was that in the topic line about a little walking bird?
Earlier in the day, while I'd been waiting for the Red-tailed pair to make themselves seen, I'd looked over into the field and seen a smallish brown bird walking amongst the old corn stalks.
I had no idea beyond an inkling that it was some kind of prairie bird. Nothing I'd seen in a very long time and I couldn't come up with it.
She reminded me of a Meadowlark, but she wasn't.
She'd been pecking around in that area and suddenly came up with a kernel of corn in her beak.
She turned to the side and ate it.
She then turned back to me with a look that said, "And what do you want?"
Looking down as she did, I too spied the piece of corn laying there.
Then she gave me another version of "What do you want?". I was bothering her. I turned away and started flicking through her photographs...what was she?
Then I found a photograph that jogged my memory because it was the only one with the detail I needed for the epiphany and though it was out of focus...
I could still see her horns.
She's a Horned Lark.
Happy Hawking!
Donegal Browne
P.S. Stay tuned, Quicksilver the African Grey Parrot has started guarding the white chest of drawers and flying at my head when I'm in the laundry room.