Go to Kikinda in Serbia, hundreds in the Town square and it's a very easy, weekend trip.
Pygmy Cormorant can also be had easily in Belgrade in winter.
Thats kinda outside Hertfordshire though Andy8-P
It's a really nice weekend trip, much better than the typical view you'll get of roosting birds in the UK.
A few of my wife's shots attached.
That is just absolutely wonderful, Andy! I hope you don't mind if I copy the last picture, just for my own collection. What's the max recorded at the site? The older I get, the more special every single Owl encounter seems: I don't care whether it's Barn, Long-eared, Tawny, Brown Wood or Barred Eagle Owl, they are just a completely different sensation to seeing any other kind of birds...
Thanks for the replies everyone so far!
I would never ask someone to just blurt out a roosting spot, I know how detrimental that would be!
I was just asking for some advice and broad locations I could try to spot them |=)|
AFAIK Deeping Lakes in S Lincs is OK to mention simply because the owls roost on the island of a lake and are therefore far less prone to disturbance. There have been up to 6 there recently. It's probably good to have a site such as this fairly public to stop them being harrassed elsewhere.
Autumn migrants can turn up almost anywhere and are less likely to be kept quiet. They're often on the east coast but we had a nice one just outside Cambridge a few years back. But like most other migrants it wasn't there for more than a day.
Hope this helps.
James
I know this has been previously asked but not for a long time...
I live in Hertfordshire in the UK and was wondering could anybody give tips or advice for seeing Long-eared Owls in Hertfordshire and around Cambridgeshire?
It's the one owl I'm yet to see!
Can be risky - there's a case of someone who did that, ending up with their lips pierced by a Tawny Owl's talons :eek!: :-OA tip for you...Owls can be very responsive to high-pitched squeaking, if you can perfect the international distress call of a rabbit/rodent. I was told this while watching a roosting Northern Saw-whet Owl one December in the US. After watching the bird slip off its perch at dusk, I thought I'd try out the advice to see if I could attract any others (there were hundreds being caught nearby at the time). Within thirty seconds of me squeaking, I felt the wing of a LEO brush past my face and there it was, perched up, ears erect, staring back at me. I've done the same with SEOs after dark too; and I know others have attracted Barn Owls this way. Remember, it's squeaking, not pishing that works best.
Can be risky - there's a case of someone who did that, ending up with their lips pierced by a Tawny Owl's talons :eek!: :-O
Yes - the location ability of their hearing is so acute, they can nail the exact position of prey by sound alone. And no, not Eric Hosking's incident, which was nest defence.
Sure, we know they locate by call alone, but where is the incident you refer to? I'm prepared to be amazed, but it still seems implausible that they would make that mistake? FWIW I do exercise caution where appropriate and suggest others do the same, but as I said, it's not something to be recommended with breeding birds; it's a technique I occasionally employ in the winter time and one I've had some notable success with. It involves 'kissing' the back of the hand, so the hand is there as self-defence, even if some discombobulated owl is unable to recognise a human presence as the source of the sound.
Hmm, sounds like an interesting idea, I might give that a go next time I'm out looking for owls thanks! ||