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AutumnRED-TAILED HAWK

Buteo jamaicensis

CONNECTICUT STATUS: Very common.

HABITAT: Deciduous woodlands

FOOD: Rodents, small mammals, birds

The Red-tailed Hawk is one of North America's most widely distributed hawks, as well as one of its largest. Females may weigh over 3 pounds; the smaller males weigh approximately 2 1/2 pounds. Wingspan is around 4 feet. The Red-tail is a soaring hawk, and may remain aloft for hours at a stretch. When it is in the air, its trademark chestnut-red tail, typically spread like a wide, rounded fan, can often be easily seen. However, only mature birds over one year old sport the red tail. Immature birds wear a dark gray tail, marked with several darker bands.

GLORY

Glory is a beautiful older Red-tailed Hawk who was rescued by the side of a highway in late December of 2007 by our rescuer, Jae Wolf.  We thought that she may have been hit by a car and then suffered a stroke.  Although she was near death, she is a survivor and struggled to recover. Glory is a strong hawk but has had significant head trauma problems affecting the use of her feet and vision. She does not grasp food with her feet as a wild Red-tailed Hawk would to be a successful hunter. Her vision is also a problem. She seems to be able to see distance, but not up close. These disabilities would be very serious in the wild. Glory was determined to be nonreleasable, and so she began preparing her life in environmental education. She has learned  quickly and has already participated in a number of programs. One of Glory’s favorite interests is eating! 
 

 

 

 

Lady RedTribute to Lady Red
1976-2006

During the spring of 2006, Lady Red, this magnificent Red-tailed Hawk, completed her 3000th environmental education program with Hope Douglas. Lady Red died at the old age of 30. She was the matriarch of Wind Over Wings.
Ten years earlier, Lady Red was given to Wind Over Wings by the Department of Environmental Protection after they discovered her in someone’s basement in a small, concrete box. She had lived down there illegally for 19 years. We moved her to a big aviary outside. It took her eight months to come out into the sun. Unable to be released back to the wild due to an eye injury and years in captivity, she joined the educational service at Wind Over Wings. She taught many volunteers how to hold a raptor. Letters have been arriving since people have learned of her death. These are some of their comments:

We will all miss Lady Red! She was a wonderful bird, and it is comforting to think that the respect, care and love she received at Wind Over Wings helped to offset all those years in the basement. She truly was a lady.         —Best wishes, Cia Marion

Lady Red was the first raptor I ever held, with thanks to you Hope. Because of that moment, I have never been the same! She may have passed in a sense......but not all of her! She was and still is a great spirit.         —Mike Celantano

She will be missed; yet I will forever carry memories of her that make me smile. The first time I held her at the Shepaug I was so nervous about doing the wrong thing. As soon as she settled onto the glove and I felt her strength and received that look only a raptor can give you, I was mesmerized. All sense of time was lost. Now there on my arm was everything a hawk was to me and more. I found myself holding her closer to my body to shelter her from the wind. Her natural curiosity surfaced and in an instant she reached over and tapped at my glasses with her beak. She held on only briefly, made some sounds I had never heard a Red-tailed make, then tucked her head under my chin. How amazing, I thought, that a bird so mistreated could be so gentle and so trusting again. Ah yes, the lessons this raptor shared. So as I smile through the tears, I want to thank you for sharing her with all of us and for giving her a home she was truly happy in. I know her spirit will live on and I will hear it echoed every time I hear a Red-tailed's call as it sails across the sky.          —Lorraine Amalavage

We all knew that her time here was coming to an end, but that does not make her passing any easier to mourn. I am so thankful for the chance to have known this wonderful bird and to have worked with her. She was a great example of how to forgive when her start in life was by a cruel human, she was our friend anyway. I will never forget her!             —With Love and Sympathy, Pat Mulcahy

 

 

 


 

The Board of Directors of Wind Over Wings wish to thank Acorn Computing for this web site and

Ken Mulcahy for ongoing updates.

Wind Over Wings
22 Old Road
Clinton, CT 06413
(860) 669-4004
E-mail: windoverwings@comcast.net