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tblue37

(65,307 posts)
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 08:11 PM Jul 2015

FOUR young hawks were just standing around together in my backyard!!

Wow! I was just looking out the window while on the phone, when I spotted FOUR gorgeous young hawks, each about the size of a cat (though undoubtedly not as heavy!), standing in a fairly tight group in my back yard. They just stood there looking around, then looking at each other, then looking around some more, like a bunch of confused kids who were curious but not at all clear about what they were supposed to do or where they were supposed to o.

After several minutes, they all flew to sit in a row on my neighbor’s tall wooden fence (see picture, which shows 3 of them), with about a about the same amount of space between each two birds.

They sat that way for a while (and I took some useless, too far away pics and video while they did so, for fear of scaring them away if I tried to get closer), and then one flew to a tree nearby. Then another flew to the same tree, and then another, leaving just one on the fence.

I am thinking maybe they were fledglings that were hatched in the tree they all decamped to.

But how cool it was to see them standing there together for so long in my back yard, no more than 10 feet away from where I watched at my window.

You can barely see three of the hawks in this zoomed image:

<a href="http://www.freeimagehosting.net/commercial-photography/texas/houston/"><img src="" alt="Houston commercial photography"></a>

***The picture is pretty useless, but if anyone here is both a bird expert and sharp-eyed enough to make sense of this image, I’d love to know which type of hawk these guys are.***

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The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,669 posts)
3. If the birds were cat-sized I'm guessing they might be female red-tailed hawks.
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 08:52 PM
Jul 2015

Red-tails are pretty common and the females can be as much as 2' long. Can't tell from the photo, though.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,669 posts)
6. Then maybe they could be Cooper's hawks, which are smaller than red-tailed hawks.
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 08:59 PM
Jul 2015

A cat-sized hawk, as you first described, would be quite a large one, and red-tails are among the largest hawks except for northern goshawks, which you probably wouldn't see where you are.

tblue37

(65,307 posts)
9. I have three large cats, but my fourth, my daintiest girl kitty
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:07 PM
Jul 2015

was sitting in front of me as I tried to think of how best to describe the birds, so I wasn't thinking that large. ANd since she was sitting, her tail didn't figure into my sense of her size. In fact, I underestimated her size anyway, since she would be 8" from neck to foot if I measure her from the front s she sits facing me, so her head would make her too tall to be a good reference for the hawks' size.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,669 posts)
11. When I think of "cat-sized" I think of my cats,
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:09 PM
Jul 2015

two of whom weigh about 16 lbs. and are about the size of cocker spaniels. So maybe I was imagining a bird more the size of a condor.

tblue37

(65,307 posts)
14. I have a Maine Coon girl kitty who is 13.5 pounds, a
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:19 PM
Jul 2015

shorthaired black boy kitty (15 pounds), and a (Siamese-looking) half-Siamese girl kitty (12.2 pounds). But my fine-boned little dilute calico lady is under 8 pounds at her heaviest, and is often barely above 7 pounds. They are all not just heavy, but large--i.e., tall and long. But my littleat girl kitty is both lightweight and on the smaller side of medium in length and height.

Besides, since birds fly, they are much lighter than mammals whose bodies have the same dimensions.

tblue37

(65,307 posts)
10. Oh, dear. I just realized why the bunnies and squirrels
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:08 PM
Jul 2015

that my cats used to enjoy watching from my windows are no longer around to amuse them. I think the hawks have cleaned them all out!

There used to be a lot of rabbits and squirrels in my front and back yards all during the warm weather, but now I don’t see them at all. I kind of love that the family of young hawks have honored me with their presence, but now I am really sad about all the animals my cats and I don’t get to see any more. I also worry about the neighborhood cats—because of our gang of juvenile hawks (and, of course, their mama, who must be even better at hunting).

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,669 posts)
13. If the hawks have eaten everything they might move on.
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:11 PM
Jul 2015

I don't think a medium-sized hawk would even try to carry off a cat, but they might try, which would be at least a bit frightening.

tblue37

(65,307 posts)
15. If they try, their talons could easily kill the cat--or injure it severely--
Thu Jul 16, 2015, 09:21 PM
Jul 2015

even if they didn't manage to carry it off. And if the talons did pierce something vital, thus killing the cat, I bet the hawk would not waste the meat.

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