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Of course she first showed up the day AFTER the Christmas Bird Count, the Cooper's Hawk. Then she came back today, two days later. Maybe it was a good thing, because that way I had the free time to borrow my son's camera, which had been left without an occupation for a few hours while he was off on a wild salmon chase, and got to focus refreshingly on a single bird instead of the thousands of a couple days before. We usually see one tormenting the feeder birds every year, and getting tormented by the crows. But this one seems special.
She is a first-year bird, full of naivete about the dangers of urban gardens. A crisply pin-striped breast reveals her youth, as well as her total trust in my presence. So focused she was on the tantalizing seed-crazed sparrows and juncos busily flitting about the garden feeder, that she allowed my approach to within 3 meters, while I clicked away with the miracle of modern technology that is a digital camera. The camera did all the work, all I had to do was point and click. Evan's Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM makes it look like I knew what I was doing, but the reality is it was the camera, and a very cooperative bird.
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