![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgx9-WJGtr5E-5K3iyDZPfnv6BTDNTfvlyZSCphm0Pw0EYAllJaIPZiaIHX8s4c-NAcvO4J2qa0NUgaKEqIstRJ5pav8rLrQnif7mBhGrmdKfyocApDQJFr4M8mnDmzYkAdt55YRxryWpSt/s400/hawk1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEMfpWlyNkcKIE1wsIZwS-fjgvoR9os1GmdJh3SDakcxTTIzPgUusUfpOS5no6atbTfcp_4KKkl6IQqmYRW8O1ThQgzdrLCyxwY0F93xghi1IeP7knHvjb8o2QB_-tSt2f9-2XZ8EOyNjK/s400/hawk2.jpg)
Didn't have time to set up my tripod. Cooper's Hawk? Pigeon Hawk? The breast coloring was that of a Cooper's Hawk, but the shape was more that of a Pigeon Hawk/Merlin. As it preened, its distinctively patterned black and white tail feathers were displayed, more like the tail of a Pigeon Hawk/Merlin. Before I got out my binoculars, my first thought was Peregrine Falcon.
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