
Northern Harrier
They like open terrain where there is good ground cover.
They hunt by flying low over fields, scanning the ground.

Immature Red-tailed Hawk
Hunts by flying over fields, watching for prey below. Small prey is carried to a perch while large prey is often partly eaten on the ground.
We drove on to the Valley Nature Center to hear their Saturday morning talk.
Martin Hagne was presenting a program he called Badgering the Valley. It was about 16 species of animals in the Valley that are rarely seen. It included Badgers, Long Tailed Weasel, Pocket Gopher, Beaver, Ring-tailed Cat, Coati, Jagarundi, Hog-nosed Skunk, Rio Grande Lesser Siren, Mexican Burrowing Toad, Texas Blind Snake, etc. It was pretty good and lasted about 1 1/2 hours. After the talk we walked around the Center and found a bunch of Yellow-crowned Night-Herons in the trees. Some were on nests. We got great, up-close looks!

Badgering the Valley by Martin Hagne


Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
Mark was presenting his third in a four part series of nature talks this afternoon at 3:00 so we needed to get back to the RV after lunch. Todays program was entitled Butterflies as Botanists.
We had a large crowd and lots of people mentioned how much they enjoyed the talk.

Next Saturday is the last program and will be about our trip to Ecuador.
I saw a young hawk one time (I think it was a hawk) when I was sitting on the shore of a small lake in New Hampshire. He was at the top of a very tall pine tree, and then he'd take off and go out about, I don't know, 100 yards? Then plummet into the water. I thought he was trying to fish, but he never caught anything, which is why I thought he might be young.
ReplyDeleteIt was super interesting to watch. I'd love to have seen the Red Tailed Hawk chasing jackrabbits.