All posts by richardhoeg@gmail.com

Great Gray Owl Hunting Before Winter Storm

We are forecast to be hit by a winter storm in a few hours here in the Northland. This morning I decided to head out and see if any owls might be hunting before the storm arrived. It is amazing how at times birds seem to understand impending bad weather, and make ready. This morning was one of the those occasions. I watched a Great Gray Owl hunt for over 60 minutes. It gave up the effort when the wind blew so strongly that hearing voles running beneath the snow became impossible. I drove away from the owls hunting grounds after it flew to a wind protected perch and obviously decided rest was now in order.

Normally Great Gray Owls are hard to find, but this bird was sitting on the edge of a remote road … right out in the only patch of melted snow. It actually waited for me to drive 80 yards past the bird, park and walk back for a photograph. Cooperative bird!

The owl then flew up into a nearby tree where it posed nicely for me!

For a while we both watched something flying overhead. I looked up but never saw what the owl was tracking. I suspect a high soaring eagle.

The owl then decided it was time for a new hunting perch. It flew within five feet of my head. I did not exist in the Great Gray’s world!

The Hunt! The owl launched and landed less than ten yards from where I was standing!

Unfortunately it missed … no vole this time. Time to take-off.

Time for some more hunting …

Way to windy … hunt over. It flew to a protected perch right after I took this windblown photograph.


Great Gray Owl Hunt … The Movie! (45 seconds long)(video link for email subscribers)

Snowy Owl Sayonara

As I noted in yesterday’s post, the south wind was bringing Bald Eagles north, and had the prospects of encouraging Snowy Owls to head back up to the Arctic. It is a time of changeovers. I was able to find one Snowy Owl yesterday afternoon … I had been watching four. Enjoy these final (?) images of this winter’s Snowy Owls. (see Snowy Owl flight maps from Project Snowstorm)

Bald Eagle Migration Day … Change in the Wind

Near the end of Mary Poppins – when the blue bird of happiness a-wing -there comes a shift in wind direction. This was important because Mary Poppins had agreed to stay only until the wind changes. With the weathervane’s spin, it is time to leave.

Birding is a bit like the Mary Poppins movie. This morning the winds blew strongly out of the south for one of the first times this late winter. When I went out birding this morning I saw numerous bald eagles migrating north on the south wind. This evening I will drive over to Superior, Wisconsin in search of Snowy Owls. The same strong winds which brings Bald Eagles back to the Northland, will drive the Snowys up to the Arctic. Today is a changeover day.

Bald Eagle taking off in the Canosia Wildlife Area.