Oh she is truly lovelyIsabella says, "Happy Friday!"
View attachment 2960305

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Oh she is truly lovelyIsabella says, "Happy Friday!"
View attachment 2960305
I don't have a hope in hell of identifying them - but I thought maybe if I could learn dangerous vs. not it would help me be a better protector.You can't tell chicken breeds apart how are you going to do raptors?
Seriously though I just look for large birds with light colored bottoms and dark tops. Those are our raptors.
They are all the same hen, Sansa. Something was very wrong with Sansa and when she molted in September her feathers did not grow back properly. That first picture is Sansa after her molt.Wonderful pics! Who is that first pic?
Dark on top, light on bottom = dangerousI don't have a hope in hell of identifying them - but I thought maybe if I could learn dangerous vs. not it would help me be a better protector.
Very helpful and I now know more of what to look for."From a distance a soaring Turkey Vulture might look like a Red-tailed Hawk, but Turkey Vultures have longer, more rectangular wings, which the birds hold above horizontal, forming an easily visible V. Turkey Vultures are also much less steady when they soar."
Good comparison pictures & info of Red-Tail vs Turkey Vulture, both have visible separate feathers on the wing tips:
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Red-tailed_Hawk/species-compare/60317261
I got that - but how do I ever see the top?!Dark on top, light on bottom = dangerous
Get an view from above the birdI got that - but how do I ever see the top?!
So beautiful! Buff Brahma?Isabella says, "Happy Friday!"
View attachment 2960305
As they tilt while circling you can see the difference.I got that - but how do I ever see the top?!