Sunday, August 1, 2010

The Day of the White-tailed Kite

I just circled today's date in the calendar and named it The Day of the White-tailed Kite. This truly amazing bird was spotted at least a thousand miles from home, in Stratford Point -- the first documented sighting in Connecticut, and one of the only times it's been seen in all of New England. Who knows how or why this bird arrived, or how long it will stay -- it's normally found in Florida and the Gulf states, or on the West Coast and in some Southwestern states. It perched in a tree in the meadow, flew sorties around the point, and hovered searching for mammal snacks, looking to my eyes like some kind of predator angel.

These photos are by Frank Gallo, director of the Connecticut Audubon Society's Coastal Center at Milford Point -- a man who runs like the wind when there is a rare bird to be snapped.


The calls went out, the crowd soon gathered.

2 comments:

  1. Holy crap, what a beautiful bird!

    And Frank Gallo is less a birder than a force of nature when it comes to this stuff. Great pix, Frank!

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  2. Ha! Yes, a force of nature indeed! And what a beautiful raptor it is: the way it knifes through the air, a perfectly engineered machine.

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