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onigiri @lemm.ee
Posts 4
Comments 77
Great (Hot! 🥵) Visit to The Raptor Trust in New Jersey
  • So many cool birds! Sonny is very pretty. He looks so soft!

    Can confirm about Red-tailed Hawks being massive. We get one in the yard occasionally, usually eating a squirrel. Which is cool and gross at the same time.

  • Discussing wildlife photography ethics, including the story why this Flammy looks quite displeased
  • It’s pretty crazy to think they could cut a hole in the tree with a chainsaw and not disturb the owls.

    This was a good read. It makes me wonder how much of these documentaries are staged. They often have beautiful cinematography, but probably the animals would be better off without humans in their remote habitats. I suppose they do help bring in conservation dollars, like he said, but at what cost? Perhaps some of the conservation would not be needed if we weren’t traipsing through animals’ homes to make a movie!

    Also, that’s a great shot of the Barred Owl at the end of the article! Just the kind of lucky circumstances that makes photography fun.

    I’m really enjoying these articles you’ve posted lately. I like cool owl pics, too, but it’s nice to have a bit of discussion beyond “I love that shot!”

  • Climate Change and Housing Adaptation: Owl Edition
  • This was an interesting read. I never really thought about all the considerations that go into building a nest box. How sad that things meant to help owls are basically turning into ovens and killing them. Hopefully the alterations will help.

  • NYT article about a federal plan to protect the Spotted Owl: They Shoot Owls in California, Don’t They?
  • Thanks for breaking this down. I was in a rush when I posted the article this morning. I thought it was a good one and wanted to share.

    I like your thought of the owls hybridizing and Spotted Owls living on that way. It’s not ideal, but none of the options are. I just wonder if the hybrids are able to reproduce? I seem to recall hearing that some animal hybrids are sterile, but maybe I’m misremembering.

    I also think that since this was set in motion by humans changing owl habitat so long ago (early 1900s!) that we can’t really know all the impacts that the Barred Owls have had on their new homes. You can’t really untangle it. And killing that large of a population is sure to have repercussions on other aspects of the environment than just saving Spotted Owls. We also can’t know if Barred Owls would have expanded their range without human intervention, and if they had then they are just a more successful species than Spotted Owls and it is just survival of the fittest. That is hard to be ok with, but it is how nature works.

    Anyway, lots to think about in this article. But also some great pictures.

  • NYT article about a federal plan to protect the Spotted Owl: They Shoot Owls in California, Don’t They?

    www.nytimes.com They Shoot Owls in California, Don’t They?

    An audacious federal plan to protect the spotted owl would eradicate hundreds of thousands of barred owls in the coming years.

    They Shoot Owls in California, Don’t They?

    Seems like there is no good solution to this situation.

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    www.nytimes.com Flaco, Central Park Owl, Died With High Levels of Rat Poison in System

    A necropsy conducted by the Bronx Zoo found that life-threatening levels of rat poison and a severe pigeon virus contributed to Flaco’s death last month.

    Flaco, Central Park Owl, Died With High Levels of Rat Poison in System

    Flaco update this morning. Cities are full of hazards for birds of prey. It was nice to think of Flaco being free and living his best life, but he would have been safer in the zoo. I still can’t say that seems like the better option. The enclosures for owls always seem so small in zoos.

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    Saw Whet Owl has a successful recovery!
  • Haha, it was more to keep him from attacking my other cat and give her a chance to escape. He would get irrationally angry when he saw other cats out the window and take it out on her. 😕

  • Saw Whet Owl has a successful recovery!
  • Thanks for sharing. It’s interesting that they can close off parts of the hallway to make the room smaller and smaller. It seems like it would be very tricky to catch them! The towel thing also works on cats that are agitated.

  • [OC] A Sulphur Crested Cockatoo eating seed in a tree
  • ❤️ These are great shots. So weird to see. We have oaks that look like that, but the only way there’d be a cockatoo in one is if someone’s pet escaped. It must be so cool to see a whole flock. (In the US)

  • www.nytimes.com Flaco, Escaped Central Park Zoo Owl and Defier of Doubts, Is Dead

    Let loose by an act of vandalism, the Eurasian eagle-owl died after apparently striking an Upper West Side building, according to the zoo.

    Flaco, Escaped Central Park Zoo Owl and Defier of Doubts, Is Dead

    Sad news this morning. I know he faced many dangers in NYC, but had hoped he’d survive. 😢

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    www.nytimes.com The Year Flaco the Owl Roamed Free

    He fled the Central Park Zoo and made the rest of Manhattan his new home. What has he been up to?

    The Year Flaco the Owl Roamed Free

    Here is an article from The New York Times about a Eurasian Eagle Owl that escaped a zoo and was living in Central Park. Lots of great photos!

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