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Personal Narrative: The Day I Portrayed The Brown Creepers

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This past week, the same day I photographed the Brown Creepers in my last post, I was making the trip home after work, when my good karma finally paid off. I was starting to change lanes to turn when I saw this on the roadside.

[singlepic id=1093 w=450]

I often have trouble distinguishing a Cooper's Hawk from a Sharp-shinned without putting some work into it, but this one was large enough to remove any doubt. This was a Cooper's and likely a female since they are larger than males. And this was a large Cooper's.

Still running 70 mph, I couldn't stop in time to pull over. That meant turning around, driving a mile back and making another pass. I was ready this time, stopping at a distance, shooting the photo above before moving closer. …show more content…
Do they sit and let you approach or are they like Red-tails, so skittish that it seems they bail if you so much as think of pulling over.

The road was busy, including too many 18-wheelers for my comfort, so I had to wait for an opening to creep down the shoulder to get closer. Plus, there's a Highway Patrol office a half mile back towards town and the last thing I needed was a trooper getting after me for driving on the shoulder.

Close enough to shoot through the passenger window, I killed the engine and stopped. I had the camera halfway up and the hawk seemed like she was going to stay put. But as she appeared in the viewfinder and the autofocus engaged, she took off, flying down the fenceline and landing behind me.

She didn't go far, maybe 100 yards, but I wasn't backing up on the shoulder for even that short distance. Didn't want to have that conversation with a trooper and it's a good way to get yourself dead besides. In a quandary, should I make another pass or try walking closer? Tired of dealing with the traffic, I decided to try it on

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