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Published: 2006-07-09 16:22:44 +0000 UTC; Views: 767; Favourites: 21; Downloads: 27
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Description
Afterwork: Bordered, resized, sharpened.This hawk is 20-23 inches long and on average weighs from 735 to 1047 grams. The Harris Hawk or Bay-Winged Hawk was discovered by the great American naturalist Audubon, and is said to have been named after his friend Colonel Harris who was with him when he first saw it. In America it is referred to almost always as the Bay-Winged Hawk.
Harris' Hawk is almost uniform black, varying in shades. Generally darker on the wings and tail; shoulders are dark brown. The base and tip of the tail are white. The sides of the head may be streaked with white and the beak is yellow. Immatures are more of a uniform brown. The shoulders are chestnut; the back is rusty-brown. Undersides are off-white streaked brown.
Nests are built in trees, cacti or bushes. The nests are built by the female and constructed out of sticks, twigs and dried weeds; they are lined with grass and roots. Breeding season is year round, and while no eggs are usually laid between October and December, many times there are young being tended during this time. 2-4 eggs are laid and are incubated for 33-36 days, by all mates but most incubation is by the female. The nestlings leave the nest and surrounding areas in 43-49 days. As with some raptors, Harris' Hawks may have more than one mate at one time. Notes- Breeding Groups
The Harris' Hawk is also an oddity in hunting habits; when not pursuing prey, it does not fly very fast at all, and is very unsuspicious of visitors. However, when prey is spotted it is very swift and agile. It has never been recorded to perch-hunt or to dive, but prefers chasing the prey close to the ground. Harris' Hawk also hunts cooperatively often. It is not very selective; it will eat small mammals up to the size of jackrabbits, birds, reptiles, insects and amphibians.
Harris' Hawk prefers dry scrubland and deserts. Found in Southeastern California east to Texas; they are rarely found in Louisiana or near the Mississippi River. Found throughout Mexico and Central America to Panama. The voice of the mature Harris Hawk is typical of the buzzard family - long, harsh screams when disturbed at the nest or otherwise surprised, or when calling for food. Mild disturbance brings on an unimpressive "eee eee eee eee". Captive bred Harris Hawks, with a history of human contact and accustomed to receiving food from their keepers frequently call with no apparent cause, although this is probably derived from calling for food when young.
`lns
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Comments: 20
Guard-of-the-Citadel [2010-07-02 01:38:16 +0000 UTC]
So this was from the Zoo? Wow! He also had the Harris Hawk with him at the State Fair!
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ladynightseduction In reply to Guard-of-the-Citadel [2010-07-02 15:58:11 +0000 UTC]
I'm angry at myself not factoring in the sun that day. I look at some of these old shots and wish I had days and days with them for practice you know? And yep, we were at the Zoo that day. He had the Harris come out of the little barn and swoop over the crowd.
`lns
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Guard-of-the-Citadel In reply to ladynightseduction [2010-07-03 03:47:02 +0000 UTC]
I love the Harris Hawk! Come to think of it...I think it was this guy who was having the "separation anxiety" at the Fair last year...they get very vocal...I'll have to look back through my gallery and see...
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Monsoni [2007-02-11 00:04:20 +0000 UTC]
Is the hawk holding the mouse under its foot, or had it already gulped the mouse down?
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ladynightseduction In reply to Monsoni [2007-06-06 16:16:30 +0000 UTC]
He'd gulped it down. You can see the bit of it's tail still in his mouth. I've got a peregrine falcon going up today actually, with his beak still bloody.
`lns
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ladynightseduction In reply to tynana [2006-09-07 13:57:34 +0000 UTC]
He is awesome. I need to go back and visit before the weather gets to cold for them to be shown.
`lns
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BrickBradford [2006-07-13 02:12:41 +0000 UTC]
lol I woulda called it Hudson Hawk but meh, nice photo I love birds of prey.
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ladynightseduction In reply to BrickBradford [2006-07-15 20:29:08 +0000 UTC]
LOL. That's a great movie.
`lns
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BrickBradford In reply to ladynightseduction [2006-07-16 04:42:50 +0000 UTC]
I love it, it's classic.
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nowherekid85 [2006-07-11 12:07:28 +0000 UTC]
last time i went to the zoo here i got to see the bird of prey show. i wasn't able to get any pics but next time i know where to sit!
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ladynightseduction In reply to nowherekid85 [2006-07-11 15:12:18 +0000 UTC]
I love the bird of prey shows. I would watch them all the time if I could.
`lns
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ladynightseduction In reply to vaoni-adolpha [2006-07-11 22:52:20 +0000 UTC]
Why thank you. I hope to be back at that show later this summer.
`lns
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Sun-Seeker [2006-07-10 05:39:54 +0000 UTC]
Travelling through the outback you would have fun with all the Eagles feasting on roadkill. Many times I would come apon a mated pair eating roo and they would not take to the wing until you were nearly on them. I nearly clipped one who took off too late and flew the wrong way. At least here the big ones seem not to be endangwered.BTW.. the outback crows we have over here would be the size of this Harris Hawk. Talk about over fed.
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ladynightseduction In reply to Sun-Seeker [2006-07-11 22:53:29 +0000 UTC]
I'm going to walk your land one day. Just you wait.
`lns
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Sun-Seeker In reply to ladynightseduction [2006-07-12 03:14:48 +0000 UTC]
Take me all day to drive it at 100 MPH and you want to walk it...? We'll have to mack you an honouary aboriginal! We have a saying.... "going walkabout" about them. I didn't realise it was a white invention till I looked it up! Good old Google.A new Aussie film is titled "Walkabout" This from a review........
The hero of the piece, a young Aboriginal who rescues two white urban children lost in the desert and commits suicide after his ceremonial bid for marriage is rejected, has been dismissed by many indigenous artists as exemplifying a Eurocentric Rousseauic vision of the 'noble savage', while the very notion of 'going walkabout' is, according to Murri writer/director Wesley Enoch, nothing but a white invention.
It meant disappearing for months at a time without notice. Sounds like fun No?
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ladynightseduction In reply to Sun-Seeker [2006-07-12 14:53:00 +0000 UTC]
I've read about your aborigines. I even know the walkabout term. It sounds like a peaceful if somewhat meager existance. I'm not sure I could be without my electronics for the time it would take to make it across. Still I would love to see the culture, view it with my own eyes. I watched a movie once, set in Australia. I want to say Meryl Streep is the star, but I could be remembering it wrong. About a young girl that gets dragged off into the outback, raped, abused and it's blamed on natives. Streep's the lawyer or something. It turns out to be all about racial hatred and the line between each culture. Tell me if you know the movie, 'cause I might be forgetting details.
`lns
`lns
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Sun-Seeker In reply to ladynightseduction [2006-07-12 23:34:15 +0000 UTC]
The true story of a woman put on trial for the murder of her baby who maintains that the child was in fact taken by a wild dingo.
Not this Streep Movie? I don't know the one with your desciption!
Try and find Japanese Story ( 2 yrs old) or Priscilla Queen of the Desert for outback movies that don't have Paul hogan in them!
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ladynightseduction In reply to Sun-Seeker [2006-07-15 14:48:40 +0000 UTC]
Hm. You know that baby/dingo thing sounds familiar. You might have that right and I could have forgotten the correct actress. Thank you for the other stories mentioned though, I'll see if I can hunt those down too.
`lns
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