Friday, September 26, 2014

Hawk and Eagles at Occoquan Bay National Wildlife Refuge

I finished work early and noticed how nice the weather was this afternoon, so I headed to the refuge. I had the place to myself; no cars in the parking lot.

When I reached the road along the shore, I caught a glimpse of a large, dark bird. I kept flushing it because it flew away from me, along the shore, in the same direction I was walking. It was too small to be an eagle, too big for most anything else. I finally got a shot of it.
Elusive Bird
It flew away again and I thought I'd missed my chance to get a decent shot of it. I rounded a bend in the road and there it was.
Red-Shouldered Hawk
Just my luck, it's in front of an outhouse. It was finally still, with an unobstructed view, and my background is a toilet. It stood there for a while eating something and looking around occasionally. It never did see me while it was on the ground. Finally, it took off, and I was hoping for a shot with a better background. But it simply tried to land on the outhouse, and there was a loud scraping/scratching sound as its talons kept slipping on the plastic.
Hawk Tries to Grip the Outhouse
It circled the area a couple of times, sometimes too close to get the bird in the frame, so I have some unusable shots of part of the bird. But I did get this one.
Hawk in Flight
And one more...
Hawk in Flight
And then it flew into the woods. So I kept walking, and within a minute or so I flushed a juvenile bald eagle that I hadn't even seen in a tree next to the road. Like the hawk before it, the eagle flew along the shore in the same direction I was walking. I wasn't able to photograph it because the view was quickly obstructed by trees, but I was able to observe it fly to and land on a tree that contains a vacant osprey nest. Looking through the lens, here's what I saw.
Adult and Juvenile Bald Eagles
So now I had a chance at some eagles. I hustled along the road, which curves and is surrounded by trees and brush, so I knew I could approach without being seen. So I got into position, and the juvenile just wouldn't cooperate; he/she kept looking away.
Bald Eagles
Soon the adult flew away. The juvenile hung around a little longer.
Juvenile Bald Eagle
And then the juvenile flew away. Both eagles flew away from me so the in-flight shots were unusable.

So I started walking again, looking to see if maybe they had landed somewhere visible, when suddenly this adult flew right past me, approaching me from behind.
Bald Eagle
And that was the end of the bird show.

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