Despite its manicured gardens and bruising security detail, the White House is wilder than you’d think. Over the centuries it has served as the temporary residence of not just every president since John Adams (the Clinton years were especially untamed) but also birds, racoons, and even a rogue fox. The latest visitor? A juvenile Red-tailed Hawk. The young raptor has been exploring the VIP territory over the last few days, and has opted for the comfortable ledges of the building’s East Wing, which suit its species’ penchant for high roosting places that oversee open swathes of land for hunting. The hawk was probably attracted by the relative lushness of the White House compared with the rest of D.C.; a thriving population of gray squirrels on the grounds likely sealed the deal, says 约炮视频 data scientist Tom Auer. (In fact, the bird has caused quite a stir already by publicly and voraciously feasting on one unlucky rodent in the Presidential driveway, the New York Times...