![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPko4ywAJZjuMMPyWDzL0po83IWx6WNTDMO8my6ZOmhlB0ChqGOIOU6-hSqiqQlwQ3xPe1YstOAXPsG_34K2yFAIk2lANJ3G5M5wFGxkYXJFg_dV44AQx2D5g5oMZohZw1VDuwYJahlsiX/s400/sharpieonpost1.jpg)
I've shot him in every light regime, always through windows, for he's wild and spooky.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiW-r6ikFuMX9QktWrNJJrw6QakyBKfIKmrkJKbPaM3bfMf3PUhesQQ0EKenaaR1ew1BOYW1G3qnCz7EaSgziB6v7cJ-uFLGAiv_1NbMIwvOrKN-Bv-OeMHO-iT-WSS-LEaPk59VZl-584q/s400/sharpieperch12.jpg)
It's hard to catch him eating. He takes his prey deep into the woods as soon as he has it subdued. A larger hawk would eat in the open, but he's closer to a jay in size than a crow, and he knows he could easily be killed by another raptor as he's concentrating on his meal.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiSRJK-j4lFnnUuLxGNtKxcILPciOcubbu4ATr0p0HguDwuRwEXfmkzjTuTq-ScKSKsx98e7pzFnLv60j7L3nAO_W8QRKjRRXbLVVgjRI4gKyfuSn_fdx9223G9PcwA7vkxyihka5iCVzX8/s400/sharpieeating.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjec30TsBuc3tdy4m0xY2Rlyit9QSlM0ZNHF3l5h7lJvyNDx6dGNjQASmtK-JHPgcCahnVxT30T_yTuvwzvIkij-w-OkjP9DU1gqzcstOrAu9iol2lvbO2DiQ_H_fJdf2BAPGslT8iROzpj/s400/cardinalkill14.jpg)
I never frightened him; I let him eat, and then I'd go to see what he'd left
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjh_U1pOnyFDPsMXGM8CNaKjS8uMVOC2BhzCENj8aYbH6bffTrVKW_-5TQbW5d7JWDVLD2vUB5IVjiwU_AQOqLhyXqEZns_D6QBDgDLeEXp6_avOh_JYlt5CWNZ2U-gwSpQw4TMiPCdyM6v/s400/sharpiexmarksspot4.jpg)
and who he'd had.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiH-9Q-Zb1DatKT0LPBMOx-jZowhTVdBW_moo41ap4ueOKTH7OXntDwn_sN3547_OYBEUoTHhOieHXtehGwodkOUIlE7h3YiPUaXK-w82OMKYBD29yUm1f-0kJKb6X8ak99V6FBfb3XG1rz/s400/cardinalgirdle13.jpg)
As poignant as these remnants of beauty were to me, I worried for him when he'd show up, eyes ablaze, so hungry that he flubbed every pass
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOXdx8x4dBd_stakyefhWPe7uYZFy8chjCbNKXr7eRX2LGOIS6vSdqAy_4f92JWdQIjZyezq65EoXcWg-TzbP3fFElKrYkxJ10QMK79PRsUJUgX2zGC9ztAavNuGmp7a84Tvel4vaHINK-/s400/sharpiehover10.jpg)
for surprise is his only friend, and he's unlikely to snatch a bird by hovering over the feeders.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjcTYhS_9sgpxNswJiffMksSHIr0TiZIbNjgw4rT4qNUqVpLgdscCogNk-WlKl8W4Da5cWQ7jYMpCSjddLizmpM1_Asx2f-anBstMIMl32qnQkglOzDb2Q3PT8TCGTsu1tCdJeMoj0hxyt/s400/sharpietakeoff2.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjW9Tves3444DotqWITH828zozN2uluoAeTVtJVJ8C5ytptR-DQU-EQ3fYCjIgs24I1fPMNeUnGMfQ_zw0AiNUkfN4-LMFR7zKbO324ney9dH8wF27QwJrF-f0hlXYiEyXnGIIwK1ppO-a5/s400/sharpieoverfeeder11.jpg)
Last spring, an orange-eyed streaky male sharpshin (still in immature plumage) cried out and dove on me as I neared the whitewashed zone of his nest. I like to think it was him, aged two, already paired and raising young. It was the first time sharpshins had nested on our land; I'd watched a nest just over the border about eight years ago, but finally they were on the sanctuary! I hope they are nesting with us again, and mean to find out. Even as populations of its bigger cousin, the Cooper’s, explode in cities and suburbs, the sharp-shinned declines.
Perhaps the woods where I hope they’re nesting will be silent, and I’ll have to wait until next winter to see my ruby-eyed friend again.
I will certainly know him. I have watched him grow in beauty and skill, taken so many photographs of his progress that even I am amazed at the gallery. I don’t begrudge him his living. He is a vital working part of this wildly skewed ecosystem, taking his pay in cardinals.
And leaving us all with an eye to the sky.
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