First of all, I should note that I have a high level of ignorance where birds are concerned.
Yesterday I discovered an owl perched on a tree limb just outside my kitchen window (approximately 12 feet/3.7 m from the glass). I believe it is a Barred Owl. As far as I can tell, it never moved from the limb during the daylight hours. It is relatively sheltered where it is, but it still had a layer of snow covering it by the end of the day. Our sink is adjacent to the window, so there was a lot of activity that failed to disturb the owl.
I have no idea if it left its perch after dark, because we kept the outside lights off. Today, the owl is in exactly the same place. We have had owls perching nearby over the past few years, but they have never remained in one spot for more than an hour or two that I know of. I'm wondering if there may be cause for concern.
We had an ice storm a couple of days ago, and there are a number of trees down. Because of snow and sloping terrain I cannot inspect any of the downed trees to see if one of them might have been its shelter. The temperature is just below freezing, and lows have been ranging from single digits (Fahrenheit) to the low 20s. The current forecast is for more snow but no extreme temperatures. Does this behavior (the owl's, not mine) seem abnormal?
Thanks!
Yesterday I discovered an owl perched on a tree limb just outside my kitchen window (approximately 12 feet/3.7 m from the glass). I believe it is a Barred Owl. As far as I can tell, it never moved from the limb during the daylight hours. It is relatively sheltered where it is, but it still had a layer of snow covering it by the end of the day. Our sink is adjacent to the window, so there was a lot of activity that failed to disturb the owl.
I have no idea if it left its perch after dark, because we kept the outside lights off. Today, the owl is in exactly the same place. We have had owls perching nearby over the past few years, but they have never remained in one spot for more than an hour or two that I know of. I'm wondering if there may be cause for concern.
We had an ice storm a couple of days ago, and there are a number of trees down. Because of snow and sloping terrain I cannot inspect any of the downed trees to see if one of them might have been its shelter. The temperature is just below freezing, and lows have been ranging from single digits (Fahrenheit) to the low 20s. The current forecast is for more snow but no extreme temperatures. Does this behavior (the owl's, not mine) seem abnormal?
Thanks!