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Native Californian, biologist, wildlife conservation consultant, retired Smithsonian scientist, father of two daughters, grandfather of four. INTJ. Believes nature is infinitely more interesting than shopping malls. Born 100 years too late.

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Carcass visitors -- day 10



A raptor came the day after Christmas, day 10, at 10:55AM. The wary yellow-eyed bird stayed for a minute and a half, and I got four photos. If it fed, it kept its beak clean.



I thought it was a Cooper's Hawk, but on looking at my Sibley Guide, it seems to be a first-year Northern Goshawk.



The tail bands are not exactly even, as they should be in a Cooper's hawk. The shoulder is spotted, and there's a white brow. All are features of a subadult Northern Goshawk. Plus it seems to be a little large for a Cooper's hawk.

If anyone out there disagrees, or can confirm, let me hear from you. I never argue with birders. (You may need them in the future.)

7 comments:

brdpics said...

Yeah, man- looks like a Gos to me!!

Now why can't I find one to pose??

Camera Trap Codger said...

Thanks, Bill.

Keep an eye peeled for road kill. Maybe that's the secret.

Steve Bodio said...

Definitely A Gos. I have one in the kitchen!

Steve Bodio said...

Definitely A Gos. I have one in the kitchen!

Steve Bodio said...

Don't know why that went twice. I wanted to add that it is generally considered unusual for Accips to feed on carrion. Maybe juveniles get hungry, even big females-- which is what that one looks like.

Email me at ebodio -at- gilanet- dot- com and I'll send pix of mine.

And a belated thanks for putting us on the blogroll.

Owlman said...

Great shot of immature Goshawk Chris. You really got lucky or maybe it's just good karma. I'll be taking a large plastic bag in my truck while looking for roadkill.

Anonymous said...

I agree with you that it is an immature goshawk. Two keys are the greenish-blue sere at the base of the beak (it is yellow in adults), and the light eyes (eyes become bright orange in adults).