Category Archives: New England Pond Ecology

Happy May! Red-tailed Hawk Casting a Pellet

Hello Friends,

So many wonderful wildlife stories to share and I am so very behind is posting. We are in the final, final week of editing the Plover film for film festival release. After the film is “in the can,” so to speak, I’ll be able to get caught up sharing stories.

May is truly the magical month for migration in Massachusetts. Not only are we seeing a riot of migrants, but some birds are laying eggs, others are already raising babies, and the creatures that stay year round are letting themselves be known to prospective mates.  The earliest days of May in New England are especially magical not only for the heightened wildlife activity but because the trees, for the most part, have not yet leafed out.

This past week, I was able to film the return of the Brown Thrasher, Baltimore Orioles, a Kingfisher up-close (very briefly), Warbling Vireos, Northern Flickers, a not-so elusive female Red-winged Blackbird and male Black-crowned Night Heron, Piping Plover battles, Catbird building a nest, three Hummingbirds and a Red Admiral Butterfly in our garden, Wood Ducks, cygnets, and perhaps one of the most interesting, a young Red-tailed Hawk.

The hawk perched on a limb in the midst of an area where a number of songbirds were nesting. This of course created a mini ruckus. All the blackbirds in the vicinity flew in and began to harass him, including Grackles, Orioles, and Red-winged Blackbirds. They perched on adjacent branches and bravely dove at his backside, repeating the attacks over and over again for about one hour. The hawk eventually moved on, but not before he cast a pellet, to my great surprise. Just as do owls and kingfishers, hawks cast pellets. Although the pellets are much smaller than the owl’s pellets I have seen, that they cast them is no less interesting. Now if the tree had been fully leafed out, we would very likely not have seen this behavior.

Happy May!