![]() ![]() ![]() Marl bed flats exposure great blue heron lake apopka reddish egret landscapes osprey snowy egret butterfly northern parula econ river wa grassy lake and live oaks blvd red-shouldered hawk trees tricolored heron equipment limpkin bachman's sparrow bald eagle black-necked stilt eastern phoebe Great Egret blue-gray gnatcatcher fort de soto how to eastern towhee grasshopper sparrow little blue heron brown-headed nuthatch green heron canal st. You have to appreciate a bird that knows what she wants. I saw this kestrel (I think it's the same one) do the exact same thing to an Osprey about a week ago. She swooped the hawk several times until she finally succeeded in making it fly away. What to do? The hawk is much bigger than the kestrel, but that doesn't stop the kestrel from making a royal pest of herself. The other side of this post just won't do. It had to be the side on which the hawk was perched, though. ![]() On the other end of the field was another goal post, and a Red-shouldered Hawk was occupying one side of the goal post.Īs you can clearly see, this goal post is vastly superior to the one occupied by the Kestrel, so the Kestrel was obligated to take it for herself. ![]() This morning I returned to Central Winds and found an American Kestrel at the top of a goal post in the football field. ![]()
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