Late Afternoon in Point Reyes by Kitundu

No better way to spend an afternoon than meandering through Point Reyes National Seashore. I felt a sense of urgency on this day as the light was already golden when I left the house. This Red-shouldered Hawk still managed to stop me in my tracks well before I'd even arrived at Point Reyes.

A female American Kestrel hover hunting the hillside looking for small rodents and insects.

Got one! She caught at least 5 insects in the 5 minutes I spent watching her.

I walked into this barn to photograph the view of the ocean framed in the window and two Northern Flickers flitted around in the rafters, eventually heading out through these very windows.

I found one of them waiting in the sunlight on the ridge of the roof.

In the distance, a Red-tailed Hawk hunts above the rolling hills. The raking light making any movement below highly visible. Even small gophers cast long shadows in conditions like this.

Aspirational grass. It has a great view from its island.

A stooping male Kestrel sent these Starlings skyward before it settled onto that pole on the right. They swirled around him a few times before returning to their comunal roost. A nice way to start the evening.

Bolinas Bald Eagle by Kitundu

I was driving to work through the fog when I saw a dark shape float low over my car and drift toward Bolinas Lagoon. My first reaction was "Turkey Vulture" followed by a glimpse of a white-ish tail... "Osprey perhaps?" They were both usual suspects but when it banked I knew it was the first Bald Eagle I'd ever seen in Bolinas (granted I've only lived here for four months). It felt like a 3rd year bird, my hunch based on the amount of white in the tail and the scatterings in the body and remiges. I'd heard they can winter here and was so excited to see it scaring up Northern Pintails as it flew off into the fog. With no place to park and a meeting to get to, I kept on going and hoped that when I got home it might still be around.

When I got back to the lagoon there was a dark shape in the top of a snag, where I thought the eagle might be, but it turned its red featherless head and began to preen. While watching that Turkey Vulture another lump in the next snag turned its head and I immediately stopped at the next pullout.

The Bald Eagle was still around! Now of course I'm hoping it winters here. I think it really is a third year bird, although it's getting late in that third year.

The head is a getting nice and light but is still dirty and transitional. I love these intermediate birds.

There is a lot of white in that tail but it is such a cool tattered mix of black and white.

It came to rest in the Eucalyptus trees and preened and watched the grebes foraging in the waters below. Then the Ravens which drove it out of the original tree returned to cautiously mob the newcomer.

Here's a better look at that fantastic tail.

It finally settled in one of the larger trees and sat and preened and surveyed the lagoon for the next hour... so I moved on, hoping that the next few weeks will bring more eagle encounters.