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Sharp-tailed Grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus) - 5 February 2011 - Nicolet Road, Sault Ste. Marie, Chippewa County, Michigan
One of 6357 at Whitefish Point on May 1st...... it was an epic day that will be remembered for a long time!
Sharp Shinned Hawks and Coopers Hawks are very similar, but for some simple reasons I think this is a Sharp Shinned Hawk. Head is less squared off, the tail is squared off and the legs are thinner than a coopers hawk.
Sharp Azteca (Freud) and jockey Paco Lopez win the Monmouth Cup (Gr III) at Monmouth Park 7/30/17. Trainer: Jorge Navarro. Owner: Gelfenstein Farm
Say sharp-shinned hawk 3 times fast....
Favorite food...small birds found at back yard feeders....
I've seen him nail some red polls at the feeder but he got nothing but his picture taken this day!
Here's a picture of what great horned owl talons look like. This is a different owl, but I think it gives the main idea. Sharp and pointy!
Sharp shinned hawk.
*Disclaimer: since people will likely wonder how I obtained this hawk, it died by hitting a window on my aunt's house. It was chasing a robin at the time and both birds hit and died. Fish & Game instructed us to bury the animal, as it is illegal to possess all manner of deceased birds in Alaska. Before I buried the hawk, though, I took these scans of it - I didn't want its beauty to go to waste.
While not a high quality video, this does capture a sharp shinned hawk not long after a kill, feeding. This was taken in February, 2008 at Peace Valley Park in Bucks County, PA; near the nature center where, naturally, the bird feeders (seeds) are located.
Sharpes of Nottingham Volvo B12B, Van Hool Alizée VJI 625 in Nottingham City centre. Tue 10.04.2016.
Staff Sgt. Jake Sharp, a equipment operator with 3120th Engineers, 120th Engineer Battalion, Oklahoma Army National Guard and native of Quapaw, Okla., clears a soldier’s rife during weapons qualification ranges at Camp Gruber, Okla., June 9.
Rifle qualification is an important part of a Soldier’s individual training, ensuring they are proficient and prepared to deploy to a combat theater when called. To qualify with their weapons Soldiers must score a hit on 23 of 40 targets from three different firing positions: prone supported with a sandbag, prone unsupported and kneeling.
The 120th is undergoing premobilization training at Camp Gruber, near Muskogee, Okla., preparing for a deployment to Afghanistan later this year. The 120th Engineer Battalion is deploying to Afghanistan as a headquarters element for National Guard units from multiple states as well as active duty Army units and the Afghan National Army.
(US Army photo by Spc. Brent Oakes, 145th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)