dam those owls

Brocktor

Banned
Jul 25, 2006
211
0
uk
im pretty sure it was a owl i heard just now outside, ive never seen an owl so i went for a walk around the streets to see if i could see it, but no :( . last year i heard a whole group of them outside, i guess it was a mum with her family. its a very loud noise.
then i thought - how silly of the owl to be so noisy, it was alone so not calling to anyone i think, so why make your prey alert of your presence? i guess it was hunting as it is well after sunset now. anyone know why?
 

leon-1

Full Member
Sound travels a lot farther at night, the chances are that it was calling to it's mate or letting someone else know that "this is my territory".

An owl can hear the heartbeat of a mouse when the mouse is six inches under snow and it is 30 feet away.

That would give you a rough idea as to how far away the call could be heard.
 
M

mikehill

Guest
More than likely a Tawny. Hearing them is easy, seeing them is more difficult ... unless they sit on rooftops like round my way :)
Mike.
 

scanker

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Aug 15, 2005
2,326
24
52
Cardiff, South Wales
AFAIK tawny owls are the traditional "twit twoo" sound and barn owls the blood-curdling screech.

The "twit twoo" is more phonetically "ke-witt" *pause* "hoo-hoo" and is a call from one tawny owl answered by another. I can't remember which is the male and which the female.
 

morch

Native
May 19, 2005
1,800
6
61
Darlington
I have tawny's in the woods next to the farm, and i think its the female that does the "ke-witt". They're at it all night long, one of my favorite sounds.

We rescued an injured female in April and i stupidly picked it up without making sure i had hold of BOTH of her legs. I've never felt pain like i did when she sunk her talons into the side of my hand, but i'll know betta if i have to do it again lol
 

philaw

Settler
Nov 27, 2004
571
47
43
Hull, East Yorkshire, UK.
I'd seen very few of them until my hike at the weekend, when I saw two and heard another during the night.

The first one I saw circling over a field with long grass and thick bushes at about 8pm. The second was swooping up to hide in a tree at 10pm when I arrived late to the place I planned to sleep at. For the third, it was midnight and I was lying on my bivy bag in the middle of a field, two miles from the nearest village. I heard it killing a rabbit, I think.

Maybe you have to go out of your way to see them, because I've only seen them then.
 

weekender

Full Member
Feb 26, 2006
1,814
19
55
Cambridge
outdoor005

Hopefully ive posted a picture of a barn owl that landed on gate post about 8 feet behind my van one early sunday morning as i was finishing a shift at work caught it on my phone camera so the quality is not that great.
If it dosent work could someone tell me how to post pictures :rolleyes:

weekender
 

weekender

Full Member
Feb 26, 2006
1,814
19
55
Cambridge
Thanks Led
Not being very computer literate i will give that a go when i have a bit more time and work is not looking over the old shoulder.
weekender

ps anyone wanting to watch for owls early evening or early morning is the best time i was actually sat in the van at the time and just kept quiet and still while it sat on the post, which was a farm railway crossing gate in the fens near manea for those that know the area.
 

bikething

Full Member
May 31, 2005
2,568
3
54
West Devon, Edge of Dartymoor!
Agree with the early morning / early evening bit.. there's a barn owl that regularly hunts the fields behind my house.
It usually perches on one of two fence posts at the far corner of the field behind my house, although last week it decided to perch on a post at the end of my (8m long) back garden !!
 

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weekender

Full Member
Feb 26, 2006
1,814
19
55
Cambridge
P7perfect said:
Beautiful creatures, there is something very special about owls...


i agree and its also amazing how confident they are and where they they suddenly appear sometimes in the places you least expect them. nice picture bikething
 

Seagull

Settler
Jul 16, 2004
903
108
Gåskrikki North Lincs
Yup, great to see them, but rare nowadays.

I recall quite a few times, usually evening, catching owls (Barn?) in the loom of the car headlights, as they ghosted over the narrow country lanes.

Seeing them like that, always used to invoke an image of a gull with no apparant head!

Ceeg
 
T

Temper

Guest
bikething said:
Agree with the early morning / early evening bit.. there's a barn owl that regularly hunts the fields behind my house.
It usually perches on one of two fence posts at the far corner of the field behind my house, although last week it decided to perch on a post at the end of my (8m long) back garden !!

Wow! What a fantastic picture and how honoured you must have felt to see it so close!
 

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