These pictures were taken recently in what may have been the short-eared owls last day here. A big event happened and that may have driven them back up north to Canada. The season started out with not much luck for me, but ended with a bang.

I did not have much luck until sometime around mid-February and had more luck after the time change. On weekends in winter the place is mobbed and the behaviour of some of the photographers I believe keeps them far away from where we are allowed to stand. I say some, not all. Most respect the rules of the location and the animals. The short-eared owls usually leave sometime in March, but they stayed until past mid-April. People were hoping they were going to stay year round. (I went to another location yesterday and I was told it was a great year for short-eared owl viewing there as well).

One owl would land on trees, various posts and do close fly-bys. I among others believe it was the same owl every time. When I say close fly-bys I mean within 5-10 feet of you. I hope the same owl returns next year. Otherwise, I enjoyed it while it lasted mid-February through mid-April. Seeing an owl close up was not a daily occurrence. Sometimes it would come up to a nearby post or do fly-bys when there was low light. If the conditions were not right you would not see them close or at all.

One thing I learned and it seems to be true is the short-eared owls do not like wind over 10 miles and hour. It was rare to see them fly when the wind was above 10 mph. I believe on this night it was not promising, but a cloudy day changed into one with no clouds at the horizon and it made for good light after 6. The winds also died down. Right around the time for these two events we started to see them pop up and fly.
Get out and enjoy the wildlife that reside in your state! Have a great rest of your week!
Wow! Very well written post 🙂 thanks for sharing
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Fabulous photos Sharon. So nice to have had this opportunity. Thanks for sharing. Allan
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After a long unfruitful start the last two months were great. I feel lucky.
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Wonderful photos.
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The owl made it easy!
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Wow! Wonderful.
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A wonderful experience!
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Beautiful shots!
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It’s a beautiful bird! It made it easy.
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Awesome pictures!
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Awesome bird!
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Unfortunately some of our wildlife is hazardous to health so one has to be quite brave to get out and watch them!
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The ticks are the dangerous things here mainly. Not everyone gets the telltale circle after a bite. Some never see a tick land on them. They say the baby ones are the worst because they are so small most don’t know they are there. Then years later someone has bad symptoms. The best advice is to use tick repellent, put your socks over your pants , where long sleeves and shower after hiking. We have lack bears here. If you stay away from them they will stay away from you.
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Lots of ticks here as well, and we don’t mind braving them. I was thinking of rather larger animals, like elephants 😀
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No I think you definitely have the animals you need to watch out for. They are nice to see in a zoo or from a distance.
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My favorite image is the 2nd one, the owl’s feet are so cute, looks like they have a skirt on, like a dancer, so amazing.
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It is interesting to see the legs. They look like furry boots or socks.
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I agree 🙂
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Wow… superb captures!!!
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Thanks to the owl!
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Fabulous – I have yet to see a Short-Eared that wasn’t hunting the evening skies. Good to hear the actually sit ha!
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This has been a wonderful series. Thank you for sharing your great photos.
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Thanks! The owls made it easy.
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