Outdoor Ontario

Birding Reports => Migration Movements => Topic started by: JTF on October 04, 2008, 09:22:52 AM

Title: Owls
Post by: JTF on October 04, 2008, 09:22:52 AM
Anyone know when Northern Saw Whets may start appearing in the amherst island area, south of kingston.
Title: Northern Saw Whets
Post by: Craig McL on October 04, 2008, 03:55:25 PM
thay are on ther way right now !! right throught southern Ont. this is the start of ther movmint south( oct 4 08 ) and with the volle crash
up north it might be a good year ....

Craig
Title: Northern Saw Whets
Post by: JTF on October 04, 2008, 04:36:18 PM
Thanks Craig.
Title: Northern Saw Whets
Post by: Craig McL on October 04, 2008, 05:22:48 PM
funney anoff Farley Mowat and I got in a frendly debeat over the movmint times in southern Ont years ago ,,, haha I won
when we look up and ther was one .... :lol:

he still is a superour birder !!!
Craig
Title:
Post by: Axeman on November 08, 2008, 12:45:41 PM
Nothing to do with migration but I was following another thread about owls on the spit and I was reminded of Bernice Inman...she was Roy Ivor's g/f...he left her a beautiful property across from UTM (Mississauga road just north of Dundas in Mississauga), for her to operate a bird sanctuary...anyway, she used to have a couple of Great Horned Owls around her place...she would give visitors a dead chick to hold in their palm (arms outstretched)...the owls would swoop from a tree, usually behind you...and delicately snatch the chick from your palm...it was incredible..usually ended up scaring the crap outta me b/c you can't hear them...they just appear...silent...and so accurate with those deadly talons...an absolutely magical experience I will never forget.

The property itself was incredible...it had a log cabin at the end of a long drive that wound its way through the woods...you'd never believe you were in the middle of an urban centre...

I remember she used to have a crested caracara...but apparently some evil n'eer do wells broke in to her aviary and stole it along with some other birds.