wow….wow. What a GREAT morning wathcing hawks just outside the Fort at Ft. Morgan. I only had two hours to observe (from 9 a.m. until 11:00 a.m.), but what an exciting two hours! Before I even got to my “spot”, I had to pull over and watch a kettle of broad-winged hawks cross the Mobile ship channel toward Dauphin Island, along with some accipiters, small falcons and a few general unidentified raptors…things started happening fast (couldn’t even keep my reporting sheet updated!)…everywhere you looked, you’d see raptors. When I got to my post, i’d barely got out of the truck when a sharp-shinned nearly took my head off! I love that! Even the cliff or bank swallows were flying around this open piece of ground buzzing me, which was a lot of fun…but the hawks! Unbelievable! Streams of sharp-shins, Coops, kestrels, an occaisional merlin, and broad-wings were everywhere, it seemed. Even got to watch an immature bald eagle eat a (nasty) stiff-as-a-board hardhead catfish (gross) about 100 yards away…fun. There were about 50 Broad-wings (BWs) just hanging around the Fort, drifting west, then east, then west, then south, then east, first high, then looow, then right over head—all morning. Loved it! I saw four species within 25 feet of me today: BWs, Coops, Sharpies, and kestrels. The gusty, windy day had them playing with ground effect lift, i guess, and they were just “intimate”. Anyway, for me, the highlight came in the second hour, when, amongst a kettle of BWs, one big bird looked “different”…sure enough, it was a Swainson’s hawk…but, almost (to me) unbelievably, another came by about 20 minutes later. And later, a small group of red-tails (9 in all) came in to end the morning (for me)…birds were everywhere…Awesome! I’ll digress, but in two hours of observing, I counted 10 species, and 249 individuals! What a day….