Photo sequence of a red-tailed hawk dining "a la serpentine"
Seconds before I snapped this photo, the red-tailed hawk pictured above was perched on a tree limb. And that's usually where it's situated whenever I've set foot into its domain. From its lofty vantage point it can detect movement in the goldenrod field, the grassy meadow or the swale.
But no matter where it's perched, whether it be in the big oak tree or an adjacent cottonwood, whenever I enter his hunting ground the red-tail immediately takes wing, giving me a wide berth and soaring high overhead in ever-widening circles that take it in the opposite direction before eventually disappearing over a distant woodlot.
But on this day it showed no sign of alarm as I approached. Instead of paying me any mind, it seemed preoccupied with a potential meal.
In the blink of an eye the hawk departed its perch and was on the ground investigating its intended prey. It turned out to be a snake slithering beneath the remains of last year's goldenrod.
The snake is an unwilling participant, making a hard right in its attempt to elude the hawk.
Finally, the red-tail lowers its head to the ground to administer the coup de grace.
The snake minus its head is protruding from the left side of the red-tail's razor-sharp bill...
while a smaller portion dangles from the right side.
Apparently even swallowing a dead snake is no cakewalk for a raptor. The red-tail did this several times, twice with its head tilted back and at the time it looked as though it was gargling -- I'm guessing he was giving his dinner a bit of prompting on its way "down the hatch."