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Can't a guy eat his lunch in peace around here?

Hawk in East Boston

Francisco Urena spotted an East Boston hawk enjoying a light repast this afternoon in Wood Island.

Earlier:
East Boston hawk makes an appearance.

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Comments

The earlier bird was a Red-tailed Hawk. This is an adult Cooper's Hawk. Note the relatively uniform reddish horizontal barring across its chest and belly, unlike the earlier hawk which had a dense brown band across the belly and a white chest. Cooper's Hawks mostly eat other birds; Red-tails mostly eat mammals.

I've changed "the East Boston hawk" to "an East Boston hawk."

Likely a female.

Sharp-shinned Hawks and Cooper's Hawks do look very similar and from that angle it's tough to see the traits that distinguish them. However, this bird is quite a bit larger than the pigeon it's eating. Even the largest Sharp-shinned is smaller than a pigeon and very unlikely to attack one.

In before Elmer's "Adorable!" comment on an animal picture post

The hawk has some refined dining sensibilities, informed by the local ethnic culinary history, no doubt.

Probably subscribes to the nose-to-tail (beak to tail) movement as well.

I'm glad that artisanal gastration is reaching the larger gentrispace