Red-tailed Hawk landing on nest, Bobst Library, NYU, New York City

Blue Jays and butterflies during a nest break – May 6th, 2019

It was a beautiful spring day in Washington Square Park. I tore myself away from the live nest cam and checked on the Hawks for about an hour and a half.

Sadie was nowhere to be seen at first but then appeared on an east-side flag pole. This pole is on a building where she can look over the nest and the whole park.

It wasn’t long before a Blue Jay came over and yelled at her while dive-bombing her:

Blue Jay divebombs Red-tailed Hawk on flag pole

Sadie yelled back:

Blue Jay bothers Red-tailed Hawk

Blue Jay harasses Red-tailed Hawk

A second Jay showed up and joined the other to harass Sadie:

Blue Jays attack Red-tailed Hawk

She could only take 4 minutes of their bullying before she flew away from them:

Washington Square Red-tailed Hawk Sadie

She rose higher and higher in the sky. I thought it was mysterious until I spotted a second Hawk flying near her. It was a juvenile Red-tailed Hawk. It all started to make sense; she was ushering the youngster away from her territory.

This young Hawk had a gap in its tail feathers. It reminded me of the young Hawk I saw on January 12th in my neighborhood who had a similar feather gap but it’s impossible to know if it was the same bird.

Young red-tailed hawk flying with tail feathers missing

The two Hawks separated. Sadie perched on the tall One Fifth Avenue building shortly afterward:

Sadie Hawk sitting on One Fifth as seen through trees

She leapt down toward low buildings lining the northern border of the park:

Sadie Hawk jumping off One Fifth Avenue

That was it for my Hawk sightings for the day.

I was tempted to study the several migrating warblers and butterflies nearby but I didn’t want to miss catching Sadie return to the nest.

One of the butterflies, an American Lady (Vanessa virginiensis), landed on the lawn right in front of me so that was awfully nice:

American Lady Vanessa virginiensis butterfly in Washington Square Park

I gave up waiting for Sadie to return.

A hopeful squirrel watched me leave, eyeing me to see if I had treats for it:

Squirrel on Washington Square Park branch watching me


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7 thoughts on “Blue Jays and butterflies during a nest break – May 6th, 2019

  1. Thanks for the pics,Roger_Paw.
    Good to be able to step into the park , if only in the virtual sense.
    I enjoyed your description of Sadie “escorting” the young hawk out of her territory…too much a lady to”kick him out”
    A wondrous butterfly in your lens!

  2. The pics of the bluejays are awesome. It looks as if they’re only chatting together. The clarity of the squirrel pic is very professional. Love them.

  3. Hi Roger Paw. I followed and enjoyed your blog for years and was sorry there was no way to communicate with you on the blog so I am delighted with this comment section. I once lived near Washington Square (Bobby and Violet sometimes even perched on my terrace!)but now I reside uptown. So I greatly appreciate your website and photos since I rarely get downtown to see the hawks in person. However, a question. I thought Sadie was the last mom and the current one is Aurora. That is the name the chat people on the NYU stream (where I lurk) call her. Again, thanks for all your efforts for these wonderful creatures.

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