Anne Elliott's photos with the keyword: supper

A tiny owl from the past

14 Jan 2016 13 8 609
I have been meaning to post one of these photos for almost a year now! I did post a different one ages ago, taken when this tiny (popcan or fist-sized) Northern Pygmy-owl flew up to this branch, but the colouring and light were different. By the time I took this particuar photo, the light was fading and the image is not quite as sharp as I would have liked. It's difficut to see, but the owl had already started on its meal - Meadow Vole brains on the menu. www.owlpages.com/owls.php?genus=Glaucidium&species=ca... Another reason I felt like posting an owl photo is that yesterday, 13 January, I was all set to drive a short way east of the city to look for owls. I was desperately in need of taking a break, of something to take my mind off other things (mainly the fact that my daughter was just out of hospital the day before, after surgery, and knowing that she will likely need major surgery) for a short while. My maps were printed, and I had summoned up enough courage to make the trip and I wanted to do it before the forecast snow arrived (today!). Needed to fill up my car with gas and then off I could go. However, my car was making an almost constant squeaking/rubbing sound - not the kind of screeching sound made when a person's brakes are wearing out and they come to a slow stop at traffic lights. This squeaking sound was happening all the time I was driving. So, instead of escaping from the city and my worries, I found myself once again driving to the car place to have my car checked and fixed. Wonderfully, they were able to fit me in for today, though I dropped it off yesterday afternoon to save getting up very early today. Just waiting to hear what they found - and how much it will cost. Saturday, 24 January 2015, was a great day for seeing the tiny owl in Fish Creek Park. For once, I was up really early so that I could go on a birding walk, which was being held at the same location. Other than the usual Black-capped Chickadees, Nuthatches and Downy Woodpeckers, the two main species that we saw were the Pileated Woodpecker (a male and a female together) and a very distant Cooper's Hawk. When we were at the furthest spot, we got news that the Northern Pygmy-owl had appeared. Needless to say, we joined the photographers who were all lined up with their enormous camera lenses pointed upwards. A long time after getting back to where the owl was and seeing it on several different branches that were not particularly easy to photograph, it suddenly flew down to the mass and tangle of bushes right where all the photographers were now standing. A few people knelt or lay down in the cold, melting snow so that they could get a better view through the thin branches. There was no way I could do that, so my view was not as good. All my photos, except maybe two or three, were no good at all and needed to be deleted : ( However, as far as actually seeing the owl at such close quarters was concerned, it was a great chance. It was amazing to see this tiny bird of prey up close, and it was really good to see how at ease it seemed. It then flew down, caught a Meadow Vole and flew up into the thin, forked branch seen in this photo, where it posed beautifully along with its catch and then began to eat the Vole's brains. After about four hours of standing around, it was time to go home, especially as I had originally arrived at the park for the 3-hour bird walk seven hours earlier! Some people do this all the time and I don't know how they are able to do so. It requires so much patience (and free time!), and I'd never be able to do it if it weren't for friends to chat with while waiting and waiting. Two hours, maybe three, is my maximum - and it's definitely not good for the back and knees! It happens so rarely, though.

Northern Pygmy-owl with snack

24 Feb 2015 1 303
Saturday, 24 January 2015, was a great day for seeing the tiny, popcan-sized Northern Pygmy-owl in Fish Creek Park. For once, I was up really early so that I could go on a birding walk, which was being held at the same location. Other than the usual Black-capped Chickadee. Nuthatches and Downy Woodpeckers, the two main species that we saw were the Pileated Woodpecker (a male and a female together) and a very distant Cooper's Hawk. When we were at the furthest spot, we got news that the Northern Pygmy-owl had appeared. Needless to say, we joined the photographers who were all lined up with their enormous camera lenses pointed upwards. About three (!) hours after getting back to where the owl was and seeing it on several different branches that were not particularly easy to photograph, it suddenly flew down to the mass and tangle of bushes right where all the photographers were now standing. A few people knelt or lay down in the cold, melting snow so that they could get a better view through the thin branches. There was no way I could do that, so my view was not as good. All my photos, except maybe two or three, were no good at all and need to be deleted : ( However, as far as actually seeing the owl at such close quarters was concerned, it was a great chance. It was amazing to see this tiny bird of prey up close, and it was really good to see how at ease it seemed. Can't remember if it had just caught a Meadow Vole before I took these photos or whether it caught one and then flew up into the thin, forked branch seen in this photo, where it posed beautifully along with its catch and then began to eat the Vole's brains. Still haven't looked properly at the photos I took of this last pose, so I'm hoping this is one of the better ones. After about four hours of standing around, it was time to go home, especially as I had originally arrived at the park for the 3-hour bird walk seven hours earlier! Some people do this all the time and I don't know how they are able to do so. It requires so much patience, and I'd never be able to do it if it weren't for friends to chat with while waiting and waiting. Two hours, maybe three, is my maximum - and it's definitely not good for the back and knees!

What's for supper, Mom?

24 May 2013 5 1 462
Oh, boy, this image looks even blurrier than it did in the wee hours of this morning, when I was editing it! It was taken at 9:00 p.m. on 10 May 2013, when it was beginning to get dark. Better than nothing, though, as this is not what most people ever get the chance to see : ) (Apologies to the squeamish!). This is the female Great Horned Owl (alias "Mom") down at Sikome in Fish Creek Park. Both her young ones had managed to claw and flap their way up to the top edge of the nesting cavity - you can just see the top of the second one's head. Along came Mom with take-out supper - no preparation time, no cooking time, just ready to go, lol. We think it could have been a Blue-winged Teal that she had just caught. Both young owls fledged in the following few days and now are way up in the trees, greatly hidden by the freshly bursting leaves. They are going to be very, very wet owls today, as it is raining again. There is a Heavy Rainfall Warning in effect for us. This species of owl will eat other kinds of owl, birds (from Kinglets to Great Blue Herons, including Pheasants!), rabbits, mice, voles, fish, squirrels, insects such as earthworms, and many other prey. The Great Horned is also a natural predator of prey two to three times heavier than itself, such as Porcupines and Skunks. Also, dare I say it - cats and small dogs! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Horned_Owl "The Great Horned Owl is the only animal that regularly eats skunks. It will take large prey, even other raptorial birds. It regularly kills and eats other owls, and is an important predator on nestling Ospreys." www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/great_horned_owl/id