I arrive as usual on Saturday around 4pm. There isn't any activity among the hawks that would mark it as anything other than a normal late-afternoon. Two of the hawklets (the oldest and the youngest) are on a ledge of the main hospital building looking inside the windows; I don't see Jen but she seems to prefer being by herself. Could her week-long stay with the Wildlife Rehab folks after crashing into the window have somehow changed the dynamics among the siblings? For whatever reason, I rarely if ever see all 3 hawklets together anymore. While looking at the 2 on the ledge, I notice one has what appears from a distance to be...a snake...
(A brief pause in the action for a quick reminder. The South Bay Wildlife Rehab has been following the Kaiser Red-tails from the beginning and has been indispensable in helping them whenever they seem to need human assistance. They are all volunteers and most of the funding comes from their own pockets, so please help with a contribution. Their website is at
http://www.sbwr.org and their phone # is (310) 378-9921. Thanks Ann, Jen and all the other wildlife rehabilitators!)
I look through my FZ20 viewfinder (my camera now doubling as binoculars) but from this angle I can't quite make out what it is the hawklet has...
I look through my FZ20 viewfinder (my camera now doubling as binoculars) but from this angle I can't quite make out what it is the hawklet has...
Camera: Panasonic (Dmc-fz20) |
Original size: 994px x 657px |
Current: 400px x 265px |
Other sizes:
Small
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L |