They are migratory, leaving us in the fall for warmer places. One town in Ohio, Hinkley, celebrates their return in the spring.
I found a large group soaring over the Babcock Quarry. I wonder if there was a thermal there. Earlier in the morning I had searched south of town, trying to find them roosting. The first place I checked did not have them, so I went a bit further south and found a bunch of them warming in the morning sun.
They sometimes spread their wings to capture more heat, and look a bit eerie when they do so. I wish I could have gotten closer or had a better camera. They are shy birds and do not care to have people close to them.A couple days after I took the pictures above, I found the vultures dining on fish.
Less than a week after the water had dried up, this is what was left of the carp. I do not know how much the vultures ate and how much the insects ate (the area was crawling with maggots), but the forces of decay are pretty potent.
(In a conversation I had during the intermission of the Children's Summer Theater play, I was told that the vultures started to spend summers here only about ten years ago. Anyone know anything about that?)

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