Monday, June 15, 2009

Hunting Kestrel


For me the American Kestrel has been an illusive bird. I frequently see Kestrels sitting on powerlines during my daily commutes. Since my primary goal is to capture wildlife in a natural setting until this encounter my files contained very few Kestrel images and none without the omnipresent wire.

While sitting on our deck last evening I noticed a Kestrel high in the sky hovering as it searched the ground for prey. With the sun at my back I grabbing the camera and began shooting each time the bird stopped in mid air. The Kestrel would hunt for 10-15 minutes hovering over different spots in the meadow behind my house and then fly to a distant cedar tree and rest in its top branches. After a short rest it would again resume hunting. This image was the best I obtained. The shot is heavily cropped as the distance was too far for the 400mm to do its best work.

This evening I again observed the Kestrel but with clouds covering the sun the bird was not lit well so I contented myself with watching. After hovering a few times the Kestrel stopped nearly directly high over my head. Hovering for a moment it then dropped down about half way, hovering again momentarily and then plunged into the high grass of the meadow some thirty yards from the deck. I watch intently and was rewarded a minute later when the Kestrel rose from the grass and flew to the tree line carrying prey in its talons. From the size and color of the prey I am pretty sure that it had caught a mole.

Maybe another evening with better light will give me the close-up image that presented itself tonight but for now I am content with the image posted here and the memories of the Kestrel’s successful hunt.

5 comments:

  1. Good Luck.These Kestrals are hard to capture.
    Blessings,Ruth

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  2. We often see kestrals when we're driving along the motorway. We saw a few at the weekend. They are usually hovering above the grass verges by the side of the road or over the fields we pass. Sometimes they are quite low!

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  3. Last year I had a Kestral that would fly above the landrover on a certain track I used.. I realised it was waiting for prey to be scared by the land rover... I took Jane with me and she captured a few good shots of it flying more or less at the eye level and only a few feet away. I used them on Sky Watch Friday
    This year I have not seen it at all. I hope it keeps coming back now and you get your shot.

    Tom
    My blogs show Last of the meadow views and Poem with Butterfly's

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  4. How wonderful to have so much wildlife close at hand. Its always a pleasure coming here and seeing life up close.

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  5. They are such a remarkably pretty bird, but very hard to get photos of. We see them all the time, but like you say, they're always perched on a highwire!

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Thanks again
Coy