It is summer time and I have found myself too busy to take the time and write to the blog. I really do not know how some people write daily, or even several times a day. Summer means hiking, biking, camping, and canoeing. I sit behind a computer enough at work as it is.
Time to catch up. I never finished posting about the owls that nested in our back yard. About a week or two after the first post, they flew from the nest. Here is a picture of one of the babies on its first night out.
He was in a tree about 4 feet of the ground. I walked up to it and stared him right in the eye while he stood stone still. For the next few days, they lived in the woods just on the edge of my yard. I learned to call like the mother owl and the babies always called back to me. It made it easy to locate them. Here is a picture of them sleeping during the day, about 20 feet up in the trees.
The baby is hiding behind the large branch. The mother had three babies, of which two survived. I found the one who didn't make it and could not find any thing broken about it. I can only assume it fell from the nest and was injured internally.
We enjoyed watching them eat and hoot at night and I hope that we'll see them again next spring.
For some of you, there are ideas and worthwhile reading to be found. For the rest of you, I guess we're just...
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Owls in the Owl Box!
Several years ago, I built a screech owl box, using these plans (click here). I installed it about 30 feet up in an ash tree. Since then, I have seen squirrels examine it out of curiosity, but not much else. Until this year. This year, a pair of screech owls have decided to take up residence and they have a couple of babies.
She feeds them each evening starting around 8:30 pm. Her pattern is to fly to a nearby branch and call to them. They squeal back, and then she flies up and feeds them bugs. Apparently, she is quite skilled at catching them because she flies back to the nest about every minute. Here she is in action; the best I could do considering it was after dark.
I also learned that owls make a warning sound when you get too close, a sharp snapping of the beak. She has flown just overhead snapping her beak at me a couple of times while I have been taking pictures. I read that owls will sometimes rap a human on the head if they get cranky enough and if a person gets too close. We sit back a little farther now and use the binoculars to watch her feed. It's a great show at sunset!
Here are the babies making their sounds... you'll have to excuse the loud whistling at the end; it's me:
We enjoying watching them in the evenings. I hope they will make it on their own and we'll get to hear them at night making their high pitched calls. If I get any better pictures or video, I'll post it.
She feeds them each evening starting around 8:30 pm. Her pattern is to fly to a nearby branch and call to them. They squeal back, and then she flies up and feeds them bugs. Apparently, she is quite skilled at catching them because she flies back to the nest about every minute. Here she is in action; the best I could do considering it was after dark.
I also learned that owls make a warning sound when you get too close, a sharp snapping of the beak. She has flown just overhead snapping her beak at me a couple of times while I have been taking pictures. I read that owls will sometimes rap a human on the head if they get cranky enough and if a person gets too close. We sit back a little farther now and use the binoculars to watch her feed. It's a great show at sunset!
Here are the babies making their sounds... you'll have to excuse the loud whistling at the end; it's me:
We enjoying watching them in the evenings. I hope they will make it on their own and we'll get to hear them at night making their high pitched calls. If I get any better pictures or video, I'll post it.
Labels:
nature
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Honor
I don't know where to credit this photo... it is found all over the net. But it reminds me that actions always speak louder than words. And while I'm at it, kudos to the men and women in uniform. Where ever there is a dirtbag that needs tossed overboard, or a nation that needs a chance to be rebuilt, the US is there to try and make it happen. Our soldiers are buried all around the world for their efforts to bring freedom to the people. God bless the USA!
Labels:
America
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Times Square, New York at night
I had an opportunity this week to travel to New York city for a couple of days and take in the sights and sounds. We had a gruelling schedule of landmarks and activities to try and take in while taking a bite out of the big apple. I have to admit that I missed the culture and buzz when I returned to my quite home in the mountains. Of course, culture and buzz have quite the premium these days, so I am thankful that the company I work for covered the costs.
We took in the subway, rode a taxi with a driver hell bent on qualifying for the Daytona 500, and saw the New York skyline from the Staten Island ferry. Of course we took in some Broadway shows, explored international cuisine, and managed to do some shopping as well. We also took a stroll through Central Park, which I have never done before. I managed to literally walk into Sigourney Weaver, but that's a story for another time. Overall, I give New York a thumbs up as a vacation destination if you've never visited before. Just do your homework and find a hotel you can afford near a subway station.
I'll leave you with this video of Times Square at around 11 pm at night. You can't really tell it's night unless you look between the skyscrapers!
We took in the subway, rode a taxi with a driver hell bent on qualifying for the Daytona 500, and saw the New York skyline from the Staten Island ferry. Of course we took in some Broadway shows, explored international cuisine, and managed to do some shopping as well. We also took a stroll through Central Park, which I have never done before. I managed to literally walk into Sigourney Weaver, but that's a story for another time. Overall, I give New York a thumbs up as a vacation destination if you've never visited before. Just do your homework and find a hotel you can afford near a subway station.
I'll leave you with this video of Times Square at around 11 pm at night. You can't really tell it's night unless you look between the skyscrapers!
Labels:
scene from the road
Monday, April 25, 2011
Blue Ridge Mountains
These are the Blue Ridge Mountains as seen from I-26 in North Carolina. A photo from the front seat of the pickup hardly does it justice, but it was too scenic to pass up. I never get tired of seeing these mountains. This morning they are dressed in the heavy clouds of an approaching spring rain.
Labels:
scene from the road
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