Showing posts with label White Tailed KITE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White Tailed KITE. Show all posts



§ At the Ranch....




There were dozens of Crested Caracaras [and vultures] in a barrow ditch...cleaning up road kill.
CRESTED CARACARA
photos taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map: Caracara
length:  22-24 inches
wingspan:  50 inches


One lone Harrier landed and quickly flew off as I slowed down to get a photo
NORTHERN HARRIER
photo taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map: Harrier
length:  18-22 inches
wingspan: 40-48 inches


A Red Tailed Hawk perched in a cropping of trees, soon to take off and fly away...
...and a 2nd one was watching, nearby

RED TAILED HAWK
photos taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Hawk
length: 19-25 inches
wingspan: 46-58 inches


One plowed field was crawling with meadowlarks. I believe they are WESTERN meadowlarks being that the back feathers are such a lighter brown than Eastern.  Coloration is best ID because the two, Eastern and Western reside in the state.
MEADOWLARK
photos taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Meadowlark
length: 10 inches
wingspan: 14-16 inches



Whimbrels have a pale center stripe and brown stripes on each side of the center stripe on the head.  Most often this bird is seen along the coastline, but these cotton fields were flooded in areas from heavy rainfall, and one section of land, they were feasting as has been noted before in Texas [also noted in past years around this area were Hudsonian Godwits -with upcurved bills- in flooded fields]....
In comparing, the whimbrel is smaller than, and shorter beak than the curlew.  Lighter and more gray/white in plumage also.
WHIMBREL
photo taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Whimbrel
length:  18 inches
wingspan: 32 inches


LONG BILLED CURLEW
note the longer bill and the browner/rusty belly
photo taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Curlew
length:  22 inches
wingspan:  36 inches



EUROPEAN STARLING
photo taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Starling
length:  8.5 inches
wingspan: 15 inches

Recently, there were two 'rare' birds reported being sighted on Chapman's Ranch. Altho the reports do not have specific coordinates or accurate mapping, and the ranch is over 20,000 acres with many county roads intersecting [and some roads impassable], I took a chance once again to drive out and see if I could find the two birds. More than likely seen in daylight, the rare [slowly becoming more populated species after fear of near extinction in the 1930s]...the White Tailed Kite. As I saw and photographed all the others, above, I was heading out to the main highway to get back home, and off to my right, I saw this. Could it be?

YES!!! A new bird for me.



I zoomed in...

WHITE TAILED KITE
photos taken:  Chapman Ranch
habitat map:  Kite
length: 16 inches
wingspan: 40 inches

....The other reported bird was the short eared owl....I went at dusk on another day, and no luck.



This Week's Participants:

Travels With Birds
Linda, Virginia USA
Lavender Dreams
Eileen
Sallie [Full Time Life]
Phil UK
Rosyfinch Ramblings
Lea's Menagerie
Cranium Bolts
Birds Seen in Africa and Europe 


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