Nature Happens
University Park resident Hallie Lawrence recently sent me an attention-grabbing e-mail:
I took some amateur pictures of a large red-tailed hawk eating a squirrel on Purdue between Hillcrest and Airline — if you’re interested. It was really cool!
Darn skippy it was. If I hadn’t revealed what the hawk was doing, I doubt you would have noticed the squirrel in the photo at the top of this post. For a more disgusting pic, click to the jump.
I feel bad for the squirrel, but how cool to see a hawk right here in the city, up close & personal, dining out on someone’s lawn. Hawks are gorgeous and I frequently almost drive into ditches looking for them on road trips.
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We see this every now and then from our office window. But I was surprised a few weeks back to see a hawk eating a squirrel in a yard in my suburban neighborhood. We stopped and watched him for a little while. He was quite impressive. Unlike mk, I did not feel sorry for the squirrel. We have hundreds of crazy squirrels in our neighborhood who create plenty of havoc.
A pair of hawks have been in residence for years now in the communications tower behind University Scooters. Last week a hawk swooped down into our yard for a squirrel. There are two teacup pups that roam their yard two doors down and I fear the worst. Has anyone lost a pet to these beautiful, albeit deadly birds?
Who the Hell feels sorry for squirrels? All they do is try to eat their way into your attic, dig up your flowers, and antagonize your dog. F’ em’.
Wait! Now he can buy some beer or wine in University Park to go with that squirrel.
Dan, it’s a peregrine hawk, a beautful falcon prevalent in NYC as well as along Turtle Creek. One morning early I watched a peregrine in a cottonwood eye-balling a squirrel hugging the backside of a cedar elm doing its best to avoid a swift demise.
Buddy
think of it as business! he was hungry!
Buddy, I disagree. It’s a Red Tailed Hawk. Head and over all size, among other factors, are a dead give away. I see them nearly every day from my Preston Center office.
not as bad as the occasional turkey vulture i see circling my back yard.
hope its not an omen of further deterioration of the real estate market in the bubble.