Birders
Related: About this forumHow does one tell if a soaring bird is a hawk or an eagle or a falcon? There are many large ones flying over
the trees and lake here. Thanks.
hlthe2b
(112,818 posts)It is free.
I am good identifying them when perched and get good practice between the red-tailed hawks, falcons, and bald or golden eagles (both have a major nesting site very nearby, so I get practice). Likewise owls, but most nearby are Great Horned (no mistaking THEM!)
sinkingfeeling
(57,229 posts)surfered
(11,552 posts)in winter.
usonian
(23,564 posts)From my very limited experience, I'd say that more experience is the key.
I'm really good at identifying red-tailed hawks and not much else.
https://avianbliss.com/eagle-vs-hawk-vs-falcon/
Rather thorough, but tiny pix.
https://www.audubon.org/magazine/three-basic-ways-identify-hawks-eagles-falcons-and-other-raptors
Not so visual, but includes falcons.
https://animals.howstuffworks.com/birds/red-tailed-hawk.htm
I got this one. We only have a red-tailed hawk in this neighborhood.
Video. Vultures? We have ravens and vultures here.
https://iere.org/how-do-you-tell-if-its-a-hawk-or-eagle/
No pictures
https://animalko.com/hawk-vs-eagle/
https://afjrd.org/hawk-vs-eagle-difference/
sinkingfeeling
(57,229 posts)2MuchNoise
(723 posts)WestMichRad
(2,932 posts)One such is Hawks in flight
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/hawks-in-flight-david-sibley/1000120053
Basically it comes down to recognizing the silhouette/shape and any discernible color pattern. If you can get an edge view (looking at front or back) of the bird, the angle made by the extended wings (called the dihedral angle) is very diagnostic for many species.
Good birding to you!