Stranger in a Strange Land?
This afternoon we were contacted by the local
newspaper to help identify a strange looking owl that
had been spotted locally, and also asked for some
information on the day-time habits of our feathered
friends..
A reader had sent some pictures to the East Anglian
Daily Times, and they posed quite a puzzle. To be
honest - we were undecided: at first glance the
subject looked like a Bengal Eagle Owl - a desert
dweller if ever there was one, and therefore (unless
it was an escaped captive bird) way off it's normal
beat - or, it was a long eared owl, much more likely
because the species is a native of these isles
(though in itself quite a rare siting as these birds
are notoriously shy). Both species are quite similar
in size. What do you think? Click here to e-mail us your
opinion.
On the question of an owl being seen in the daytime,
it is not unusual to see Owls during the day during
the winter months as the trees are bare and the owl
does not have the same cover to hide as it normally
would in the summer. It is a common misconseption
that all owls are purely nocturnal, but many species
native to the British Isles are "crupuscular", which
means they will hunt mainly in the low light at dusk
and dawn.
Long Eared Owls hunt mainly on open range land -
clearings, fallow fields and river banks - rather
than the woodlands where they roost and nest, which
is usually in old un-ocupied stick nests belonging to
crows, magpies, ravens or herons.
Maz. Robinson