A relaxing walk in the park can produce some nice surprises and excitement, especially when I have my camera and am looking for birds to photograph.
Such was the case last weekend during a stroll around the old Kings Grant Golf Course.
From a distance, I spotted a large bird perched on a Do Not Enter sign. I quickly surmised it to be a Hawk, a red-shouldered one.
I took some pictures from behind like the one above, then slowly moved in the shade of a tree to see the bird’s face. I’m sure it saw me. These raptors don’t miss much I am sure.
The Hawk proved a good model! It let me take all the photos I wanted and didn’t fly away until I walked away.
We saw a second Red-shouldered fly to a nearby tree. I wasn’t able to photograph that one but am very pleased with the ones I took of this beauty.
Turkey Vultures wouldn’t make many people’s beautiful bird list. Natures clean up crew I call them. The All About Birds site describes the Turkey Vulture: "These birds ride thermals in the sky and use their keen sense of smell to find fresh carcasses. They are a consummate scavenger, cleaning up the countryside one bite of their sharply hooked bill at a time, and never mussing a feather on their bald heads."
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What were they picking and pecking?
This is what was left of a snake. It was covered with bugs. Yuck!
I decided to bug the big birds to see if I could get a decent in-flight image.
I’m sure the Turkey Vultures were back to the snake carcass after we walked away.
The other good photo op this day was a majestic Monarch Butterfly.
It was so involved with these pretty flowers, Smooth Asters I believe, that I was able to observe and take photos from just a few feet away.
Smooth Aster flowers are described this way: "a hardy plant that defies frost and keeps on blooming, often into November, with a profusion of lavender-blue, star-like flowers."
It was a pretty day to visit this pretty nearby park.
The Hawks and Vultures encounters made the outing even better!
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