Friday, April 8th, 2022

If you follow me and read the tags you’ve seen me whining about my failure to ever actually see a Northern Pygmy-Owl. I’d heard them 8 or 9 times over the last few years. Just never seen one.

Until this morning.šŸ™‚

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/680995465133719552.

Tuesday, April 5th, 2022

sweetd3lights:

Ā All rights reserved byĀ Darek D

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/680704940265619456.

Wednesday, January 5th, 2022

swarmkeepers:

great-and-small:

awwww-cute:

Petey, a pygmy owl, finally found his perfect glove! The glove is a falconry glove keychain. (Source: http://ift.tt/2t6fJRK)

Whoever thought to use that particular keychain for that particular purpose deserves a raise

[ID: a pygmy owl sits on a tiny falconry glove that is so small the person wearing it only has their index finger in the glove. The owl looks wide-eyed at the camera. The Alaska Raptor Center logo is in the top right.]

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/672554995083771904.

buginmymargarita: Third times a charm. Three trips to try to…

Sunday, March 22nd, 2020

buginmymargarita:

Third times a charm. Three trips to try to find the Norther Pygmy Owl. First couple times came out empty handed which was rather disappointing considering it is such a long drive up the mountain. But the third trip made it all worthwhile. Patience and perseverance paid off.

Despite its small size, the Northern Pygmy Owl is an aggressive hunter, and has been known to capture birds bigger than twice its size

NOPO! šŸ™‚

Reposted from https://lies.tumblr.com/post/613300910357135360.

sensitiveevolution:Northern Pygmy Owl by mikeo765 Fun story:…

Sunday, October 1st, 2017

sensitiveevolution:

Northern Pygmy Owl by mikeo765

Fun story: yesterday afternoon I was coming back from a hawk watch at which I saw my first Broad-winged Hawk (yay!), hiking down the Romero Canyon trail in Montecito with two other birders. One of them paused while we were passing through the big trees in the creek bottom and tried calling a Northern Pygmy-Owl by doing a really good impression of its hooting. He tried for a minute or so, then shrugged and we kept walking.

Today I was reading the sbcobirding mailing list, and another birder whoā€™d been at the hawk watch and was behind us on the trail posted that while passing through the canyon around 6 p.m. heā€™d had a Northern Pygmy-Owl. Thatā€™s the same time we were there, and the location he gave was right where weā€™d been, so I wondered: had he IDā€™d the owl by ear, such that what heā€™d heard was actually our group member imitating the owl rather than a real one?

I emailed him to mention the possibility, all in good fun and haha; hope youā€™re not too bummed if thatā€™s what happened. But the joke was on me: He wrote back to say that no; heā€™d IDā€™d the bird visually. Heā€™d seen our group ahead of him on the trail, and just as we left the spot where weā€™d tried calling the owl one flew in behind us. He shouted ā€œowl!ā€ to us, but we didnā€™t hear him and just kept walking.

He got a cool photo of the bird. Those things are adorable. Theyā€™re less than 7 inches long; you could hold one cupped in the palm of your hand ā€“ if you didnā€™t mind its wee deadly talons! šŸ˜€

Reposted from http://ift.tt/2kfFzCJ.