Really crappy pictures of a really cool thing

I stopped at Subway (heh) for lunch on my way in to OtherJob.  The particular Subway I stopped at has two blind turns as you circle the restaurant from the drive-thru microphone to the actual window where you pay and get your food.

I made the first turn and had to slam on my brakes, because there was an honest-to-God red-tailed hawk just chilling in the parking lot two feet in front of my car.  I almost hit him.  That close.  Scrabbling for my phone ensued, but the beautiful bastard flew away just as I was pulling up the camera app…

…to join his mate on the roof of another nearby fast-food installation.  Two of them.

I spent a good ten minutes chasing them around the parking lot trying to get either a) a crappy picture of both of them together or b) a good picture of one of them and failed.  Nonetheless, enjoy crappy long-distance taken-from-inside-the-car-through-the-windshield iPhone pictures of two really cool birds:

2014-02-08 10.45.24

2014-02-08 10.45.182014-02-08 10.51.29


Discover more from Welcome to infinitefreetime dot com

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

11 thoughts on “Really crappy pictures of a really cool thing

  1. winterbayne's avatar winterbayne

    Got them here. A nest is in the woods outside my house. When I go walking, they get upset with me. Happens every spring. They are always beautiful and hold a little spot in my heart though.

    Like

  2. It’s funny that you just liked my post about the vision quest. I clicked on your name to find out more about you, and seen this post about a red-tailed hawk. I literally just came back from trying to get a photo of one!
    I’ve started to call it the ‘Ghost Hawk’, because I’ve passed it twice now on my way home. Each time I have run in the house to grab my camera, drive back to where I seen it and it was gone. And, now I’ve just clicked on your blog and it’s about getting a photo of a red-tailed hawk.
    Crazy…

    Like

  3. Pingback: Nabakov, the hunter, and Nabakov, the farmer | The Feth Element

  4. Pingback: The Vision | Thoughts from the Hollar

  5. Those plus the peregrine falcons (and sad little kestrels) all fly around my very cement-covered city outside of Dallas. When I had a bird feeder in the back hard, they’d show up on the fence to hunt the sparrows. Always shocks me to see them just chilling near the humans, though.

    Like

Leave a reply to surprisebjg Cancel reply