BIRD IN FLIGHT ONLY -- share your BIF photos here

Thanks, Eric! I do think these shots were post-kill of some prey. On my earlier shots, they had a nice clean beak.
A guy was walking his dog and spooked the Harrier that was behind some brush. It flew right up by my side and circled around a few times. Maybe wasn't finished eating. :(
That must be the reason. I hope the Harrier could comeback before the prey got stolen, but I'm sure once they become good hunters, it could find something else to eat.
 
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Very disappointing day today: went to the shore for see-birds. They were there but at unreasonable distances. After ~1h packed the camera and when looked for the tripod there was something close and closing at me. Erratically unpacked the camera and when I had it in my hands that bird was going back from where it came! Took burst but the shots were from behind (no way to ID!). Put the camera on the tripod with hope for second chance from closer distance but it didn't happen :cry:! My first shots of Laughing Gull! From ~75 meters (+/-100% crop). We don't have naturalized Gulls on Hawaii, all are vagrants. The Laughing Gull is coming on Oahu almost every year like 1-2 birds (hard to count: they are cruising "big" swats of the (usually) East cost of Oahu (nothing is really big on Oahu :)) and you never know if is it the same bird or another...

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The RF 200-800mm at 800mm on the R5 is OK at long distances. Some Lapwings flying in and a Red Kite soaring.

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I really miss the lapwings in Alsace. They have become so rare now...:cry:
Kites, fortunately, seem to have recovered (black and red ones).
In French, they are named "milan", like the Italian city (we skip the "o").
 
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I really miss the lapwings in Alsace. They have become so rare now...:cry:
Kites, fortunately, seem to have recovered (black and red ones).
In French, they are named "milan", like the Italian city (we skip the "o").
We, fortunately, have lots of Lapwings. Kites have made a welcome return. Unfortunately, we don't have any Ortolans, possibly because M. Mitterand and friends ate them all.
 
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Few from yesterday. Pretty angry ocean and the birds were flying relatively far from the shore. The red-footed Booby (first four photos) is not small bird at ~70cm length and ~150cm wing-span and see how it looks in front of that water-walls. After that Sooty Tern and Brown Booby.

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It most certainly is. Those breast markings and the eye colour nail it.
I 100% agree with the ID! I disagree of the way it was done:)
"Those breast markings and the eye colour nail it" - up to the three real Hawks in Europe (Accipiter)!!!
The third one, the Levant Sparrowhawk doesn't reach Germany and is rare even in East Europe. The adults (and that photo is of adult!) are easy to separate from the other two European species by the black underwing tips of the primaries.
The problem is to separate the Northern Goshawk from the Eurasian Sparrowhawk by photo (you don't know how big is the bird...). Since the bird on the photo is adult the things (and thinks) are easier: the Goshawk has lighter underwings, lighter upper head and lacks the rusty colors present in adults Sparrowhawk.
Otherwise the breast markings and the eye colors are about the same for both species...

 
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