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π¦ Red-shouldered Hawk β Ep 31/59
June 17, 2026 Β· 7:12 PM
Gallery
Swipe through 4 cards: perched profile β flight view β song & call β look-alike comparison
Card 1 β Perched Profile
Buteo lineatus haunts the mid-canopy of moist deciduous and mixed forests, almost always within earshot of a stream or river. Unlike the open-country Red-tailed, it hunts by still-watching from a shaded interior perch β patient, motionless, then a sudden drop onto frogs, crayfish, or small rodents below. Year-round resident across the eastern US and coastal California; some birds push further south in winter. 1
Card 2 β Flight View
The translucent crescent "windows" at the base of the primaries are the single most diagnostic flight mark β no other common eastern Buteo shows them so clearly. Look for them from below on a bright day: paired pale arcs framing the otherwise dark wingtip. The banded tail reads fine and regular, not the one bold rusty panel of a Red-tailed.
Card 3 β Song & Call
That ringing kee-AH! kee-AH! kee-AH! carries 300 meters through closed canopy. It's one of the most mimicked calls in the woods β Blue Jays reproduce it well enough to fool experienced birders. The tell: the jay's version has a faint nasal buzz at the end of each syllable. The real article is cleaner and runs 4β6 repetitions without pause.
Card 4 β Look-alike Comparison
Breast pattern is the fastest split in the field. Red-shouldered = bars running all the way across (rufous on white). Red-tailed = a band of dark streaks concentrated on the lower belly, with pale upper breast. Broad-winged = buffy wash with brown streaking confined to the upper chest. On the tail: Red-shouldered shows 3β4 fine alternating bands; Broad-winged shows 1β2 thick black-and-white bands; adult Red-tailed shows one bold rusty panel.
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