ProfessorRoush set out this morning to face a dreaded chore; bush-hogging the pastures nearest the house (on this side of the draw where it's semi-safe to drive a tractor). I only do it once yearly for the primary purpose of mowing down noxious weeds on the prairie; foremost among which are the thistles, with the Wavy-Leaf Thistle,
Cirsium undulatum, most common here (upper right). I grew up mowing bull thistles on the home farm in Indiana and, as I've mentioned before,
my maternal grandfather always said to mow them on June 21st to control them. I'm a little late this year, but years of observation has convinced me that the purpose of the date is to mow them near bloom and before these biennials set seed and I'm still within that window.
I dread the annual pasture-mowing for a number of reasons. First, I don't trust my inherited tractor on the Flint Hills; it's top-heavy and too powerful for its weight, with a tendency to want to jump as you let off the clutch. I'm extra-darned careful with it and don't trust it for an instant. Second, it's normally hot and miserable out there this time of year and mowing takes a full afternoon. Third, I don't want to mow because it alters the prairie ecology, cutting down forbs before they bloom (particularly stealing milkweeds from the migrating monarchs). But its a necessity to control the sumac and thistles.
This year, however, I had a close observer the whole time, watching the every move of the loud green machine and tired primate riding it. Watching me, literally, like a hawk. To be specific, watching me like a red-tailed hawk, hoping, I'm sure, that I would flush out dinner in the form of a nice prairie mouse or rabbit.
I first spotted it atop my barn gate about 1/2 hour after I started mowing. Since I always have an iPhone handy, I stopped and opened the camera app, only to be immediately disappointed as I zoomed in and it began to fly away ( 2nd photo, left).
Thankfully, it came back, again and again, first on the same gate as seen in the 3rd paragraph (I'll leave you to decipher the meaning of the Greek language "Molon Labe" sign), then on a fence post (4th paragraph, on the left), and then on a native Mulberry tree (here, right), always nearby as I went round and round the pasture. I apologize for the pictures; I wish they were clearer, but alas, the iPhone was all I had available, placed at full zoom, and held as still as I could on a vibrating, roaring tractor. And the stark, full sunlight in a cloudless July prairie sky also isn't good "photo-quality" lighting.
I could only pray to see it catch something, and so Hawk and I were both excited as it swooped down on something in the tall grass next to a just mowed area (5th paragraph, right). I hadn't seen anything bounding into the tall grass, so I was hoping to see Hawk rise up with a snake, but Hawk, clearly disgusted by a miss, looked back at me as if it was blaming me for its lack of success. I'm sorry, Hawk.
While still on the ground, it did give me this last profile shot, however, the best glimpse yet of the red-tail feathers of its name. And then it took off again, returning to its vigil, a sweeping shadow passing back and forth over me for the duration of my mowing, hunting prey, I surmise, in each pass. Hawks will be hawks and I appreciate my moments spent with this one.