A great Fledge Party took place in the parlor tonight. A huge amount of chatters and mods logged in to say "hello" and "so long for now". We had several celebrity cameo visits in chat tonight, including George Clooney, whitestick, The Hideout, a member of the royal family, and even Belle and Pearl took time out of their hunting schedule to log in and say hi to chatters. It was a lot of fun and a lot of great memories were shared by all who participated. The blog will have more Fledge Party updates in the near future, including photo tributes, etc.
03:38-03:43 An adult owl arrives on the porch and enters the box to look around
03:57 Two owls on the porch briefly, could hear small "chirping"
04:33 Adult owl is back and enters box again briefly, I though it was Dale but when you see it outside it looks like a white chest, possibly Roy?
It's about 5:00 and there hasn't been any other sightings but we could hear calls around the box. I think they're near but we can't see them.
Discover 12 fascinating facts about the beautiful barn owl. 1 The barn owl was voted Britain’s favourite farmland bird by the public in an RSPB poll in July 2007. 2 Historically, the barn owl was Britain’s most common owl species, but today only one farm in about 75 can boast a barn owl nest. 3 Barn owls screech, not hoot (that’s tawny owls). 4 The barn owl can fly almost silently. This enables it to hear the slightest sounds made by its rodent prey hidden in deep vegetation while it’s flying up to three metres overhead. 5 The barn owl’s heart-shaped face collects sound in the same way as human ears. Its hearing is the most sensitive of any creature tested. 6 Barn owls are non-territorial. Adults live in overlapping home ranges, each one covering approximately 5,000 hectares. That’s a staggering 12,500 acres or 7,100 football pitches! 7 It’s not uncommon for barn owl chicks in the nest to feed each other. This behaviour is incredibly rare in birds. 8 In order to live and breed, a pair of barn owls needs to eat around 5,000 prey items a year. These are mainly field voles, wood mice, and common shrews. 9 Though barn owls are capable of producing three broods of five to seven young each year, most breed only once and produce, on average, only two and a half young. 29 per cent of nests produce no young at all. 10 91 per cent of barn owls post-mortemed were found to contain rat poison. Some owls die as a direct result of consuming rodenticides, but most contain sub-lethal doses. The effects of this remain unknown. 11 In a typical year, around 3,000 juvenile barn owls are killed on Britain’s motorways, dual carriageways and other trunk roads. That’s about a third of all the young that fledge. 12 Everyone can help barn owls. Leave a patch of rough grassland to grow wild thus creating habitat for voles, erect a super-safe deep nest box, volunteer for your local barn owl group, switch to non-toxic rodent control
March 12th Dale and Ellie 2012
In Memory of McGee 2010.. 2012
March 5th 2012
Three Little Heroes Beak Festing by TwoOwlWingz 2/27/12
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