Help me identify this bird?

hokankai

Songster
10 Years
May 18, 2010
2,735
98
246
SW WA
There's a bird I'm worried is stalking my flock, but I can't get a good look at it and it's REALLY fast. All I've been able to figure out is that it's super fast, and that it's brown/gray with white at the base of its tail on its back. It was fairly big, but not big enough for me to say it was a hawk.

The first time I saw it I had my chicks in a rat playpen, which was covered. One of the chicks jumped on top of a box I had in there and then all of a sudden WOOSH, the bird zoomed right over the playpen, looking like it was swooping to get that chick. It was there and gone past the house in an instant.

The second time I saw it fly off and it looked like it landed on a tree trunk like a woodpecker, but I could be wrong.

The last time I went out of the shop, which is near the chicken coop, and it flew away again. It had been sitting on a dead stump near the chicken coop and looked like it was watching them in the run.

Any ideas on what on earth it could be? I've kept the chickens locked up for the last two days because I don't know what it is
hmm.png
 
Woodpeckers aren't carnivores or predators of chickens so I would vote no on the woodpecker. There are many types of hawks, some that are quite small. Maybe google "sharp-shinned hawk" and notice his regular size, just as a reference. Also can google "hawk identification" and look for the varmit. Also mocking birds as well as others can be very territorial when nesting. Good luck with your ID.
 
brown/gray with white at the base of its tail

landed on a tree trunk like a woodpecker

It's probably a harmless Flicker


Woodpeckers aren't carnivores or predators of chickens so I would vote no on the woodpecker

It didn't attack the chickens.
That part is all speculation

A hawk wouldn't land on the side of a tree

yellow-shafted-flicker-12.jpg
 
Last edited:
Peregrine falcon are small and.lethal to chicks if.given the chance. Look them up see if it matches and they are very fast
 
Thanks you guys! I'm gonna try and get another glimpse of it tomorrow if it comes around. I wish it would make some vocalization or something, haha.
 
A peregrin really is not that small, a merlin or a kestrel is considerably smaller. Kestrels are very colourful, without much white. Merlins have a fair amount of white. whatbird.com is excellent in helping identify birds. About what size was the bird--if you can relate it to being similar in size to say a pigeon or mockingbird or whatever, we can maybe help you identify it better. While hawks and falcons are very ulikely to land on hte vertical side of a tree trunk, if there is enough of an angle to the trunk, they might.


I suggest getting tarp or shadecloth or even a sheet or shower curtain and covering the birds' pen so that they cannot be seen, especially from above.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom