Juvenile Morning: Great Gray Owls and Ospreys

I did not plan to be gone for 7 hours when I left home shortly after 5 am yesterday morning, but when I was treated to a magical morning of birding …

Upon leaving the house I was presented with heavy fog upon climbing away from Lake Superior. Although I could not see much, only a few hundred yards, the fog ended up being a blessing in disguise. The dark, calm conditions were perfect for some Great Gray Owls I have been tracking since late Winter. The darkness meant the owls were still talking to each other when I arrived on location, and better yet in addition to all the hooting, there were now distinctive screeches coming from two different directions … owlets / juveniles!

I had almost given up hope of discovering a Great Gray Owl family. Mid August seemed way to late in the summer for younger juveniles, but just like my own local Great Horned Owls, raising families is running way late this year. Having had snow on the ground well into May in the deep forest, and lakes which did not go ice free till the middle of May obviously delayed nesting for many bird species.

Here are the four member of the Great Gray Owl family. You may ask how I am able to uniquely identify each member of the family. Each owl had a distinctive call, and was located in a slightly different direction from the other family members. The fog made photography difficult, but I am NOT complaining.

Juvenile Great Gray Owl #1 (owlet)

Juvenile Great Gray Owl #2 (owlet)

Screeching … the Movie (owlet)
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Momma Great Great Owl

Foreground: Mom — Background: Juvenile

Poppa Great Gray Owl


Eventually the fog burned off after a few hours, and I turned my focus to one of my local Osprey families. Over the past five days I have watched the two juvenile ospreys very closely. It is obvious they are ready to make their first flights, but are scared to make the first jump.

Thus, what is a Poppa Osprey supposed to do when your youngsters just refuse to take their first flight?? For this Dad it meant land with a fish, but take off very quickly w/o letting either of its two juveniles have a bite to eat. The parent osprey made this trip four times, never leaving the fish! Momma Osprey is to the far right, and the “two chicks” are in the middle.

Poppa Osprey Arrives … and Leaves Again Quickly
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Images of the happy osprey family

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