If you read yesterday's post you know Hubby and I had been out for a Sunday drive when we saw the barn in my post. After I had taken those photos I got back in the Jeep and as hubby began to pull forward I noticed this hawk in the field beside of me. Hubby stopped and I got a couple of shots. Of course the hawk was way farther away than the capability of my lens and I was shooting into the noonday sun but he posed and I clicked.
By then he knew I was there and off he flew. National Geographic won't come calling asking for permission to publish my photos; but, sometimes it's experiencing the moment that counts and I'm grateful to have the opportunity to live in the country and enjoy nature's little surprises on a sunny Sunday afternoon.
(Clicking to enlarge the photo should help in seeing him a little better.)
Linking to
Wild Bird Wednesday.
a very nicely colored-out red-shoulder! beautiful!
ReplyDeleteCongrats! I've found hawks rather difficult to photograph around here. The opportunities are rare. Nice job!
ReplyDeleteA lovely bird to see... and more than a record shot for you..
ReplyDeleteYour comment about appreciating the moment in the countryside is a valid one Carletta. I wish everyone was the same . Even here from the UK I can see it's Red-shouldered Hawk.
ReplyDeleteI just love watching the wildlife, sometimes I forget to take a picture and sometimes I go mad and waste all the batteries. From Findlay
ReplyDeletePerfect attitude...I think I will borrow it rather than complaining about not having the right lens with me! Nice capture!
ReplyDeleteHe's a beauty! (Or she!) I like it's barred feathers. They are so hard to photograph. Lucky shot! xx
ReplyDeleteGreat that you stopped and made an attempt at a photo. You never know what might happen. Maybe with some luck and then National Geographic may come calling.
ReplyDeleteNice Shots. Not easy to get close ups of hawks. Definitely more than a record shot.
ReplyDeleteNo matter what the photos are like it is still great to capture a moment like that.
ReplyDeleteHi Carletta, How are you? We had a wonderful vacation --but it's nice to be home.
ReplyDeleteGreat hawk sighting... We don't see them very often around here --but I'm glad about that since they enjoy 'eating' my backyard birds!!!! Yipes.
Hugs,
Betsy
Wow....lucky you!!! And here Bud and I drive to the thermal migrating highway and seen none. I'm jealous.
ReplyDeleteGreat sighting, Carletta. I usually see the hawks along the road when we are out driving. Great shots!
ReplyDeleteoh i agree completely!!
ReplyDeletealthough i have been known to complain about my pictures (oh no, not you) i about wet my pants when i see something exciting to photograph!!
i'm sure it was an exciting moment!!
Yeah - Hawks are very wary of humans being too close up. I think they have an inbuilt memory box, that says "that camera just may be a gun". Don't see too many in suburbia, but I sure will see plenty in the next few weeks when out in the country. Heaps of them around Young, NSW and another thing, have you ever seen two of them together in the wild? I never have and I have seen plenty of them over the years. Maybe in a tree where they have a nest, but never two when they are hunting.
ReplyDeleteSo photograph a pair out hunting and you will have the National Geographic knocking on your door.
Now back to furious preparations for my departure down south. I am ticking off from my list what I have to do beforehand - ha ha!
Next contact will come from south of "The Tweed".
Cheers
Colin (Brisbane.Australia)
He's a beauty!! Boom & Gary of the Vermilon River, Canada.
ReplyDeleteGood job. These are not easy shots to get.
ReplyDeleteNature shots are difficult but hey you captured it anyway.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful picture you took of hawk ..... not always easy to prey on the lens :)
ReplyDeleteHi there - hawks can be really hard to photograph and identify!
ReplyDeleteI have been struggling with light at the other extreme of light - very bright and flat, with not a cloud in the sky. I'll take the grey skies for interest, but the blue ones for pleasure!
Thanks for linking to WBW.
Stewart M - Australia
The thrill is in seeing the hawk, the photo is proof that you did. :))
ReplyDeleteI'm certainly not going to complain about these photos. The thrill of such a moment makes it difficult for me to think about camera and lens details.
ReplyDeleteGreat photos, don't sell yourself short!
ReplyDeleteGreat hawk sighting! I had one casually fly over my head when I was in the back yard watering, he looped around and went back the other way, looking for a kill. But, I didn't have my camera! I try to remember to always have it when I'm outside.
ReplyDeleteSo great you got a memento of your experience - and National Geographic is overrated anyway!!
ReplyDeleteI know exactly how you felt! And I think the photos are good enough!
ReplyDeleteGreetings Pia