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Mav's image thread of the gorgeous Barn Owls he captured and the subsequent discussion about Barn Owl population numbers, prompted me to hopefully, shed some light on what might be happening.
I'm no expert but I have been involved with an ongoing project recently. I'm not ready to reveal all about that at the moment but if the images come, then the thread will come too.
One of the key factors for Barn Owl survival is weather. They can't fly in rain and will shelter, as they don't have waterproof feathers. This is a drawback of them having 'silent' feathers, the edges of the flight feathers are kind of serrated, which allows them to approach prey silently. The trade off is that they can get water logged, this can be enough to strand a Barn Owl. If there are consecutive and prolonged periods of rain, Barn Owls can starve as they will shelter rather than fly/hunt. They are not keen on flying in windy conditions either, which might affect sightings, as they are more than likely under shelter for that too.
The weather here has been very wet this year, prolonged periods of rain and wind too. 'My' Barnies are there, they're just not flying everyday. So far, they have been able to sustain themselves in the drier periods. It is possible to leave food out for Barnies, (defrosted dead frozen mice or day old chicks) but this should be a last resort.
This is a very brief account of things as they stand here but I'm also assuming this could be the case elsewhere, especially the north of England and here in Scotland.
The best place for facts and figures about Barn Owls is the Barn Owl Trust website, it is a real gem of information and provides way more info and knowledge than I ever could.
I'm hoping flight sightings will pick up for me as the daylight hours get longer, the weather becomes drier and the owls will have to feed/hunt during daylight hours, in the evenings and mornings soon.
@mav @davholla @russellsnr
HTH.
I'm no expert but I have been involved with an ongoing project recently. I'm not ready to reveal all about that at the moment but if the images come, then the thread will come too.
One of the key factors for Barn Owl survival is weather. They can't fly in rain and will shelter, as they don't have waterproof feathers. This is a drawback of them having 'silent' feathers, the edges of the flight feathers are kind of serrated, which allows them to approach prey silently. The trade off is that they can get water logged, this can be enough to strand a Barn Owl. If there are consecutive and prolonged periods of rain, Barn Owls can starve as they will shelter rather than fly/hunt. They are not keen on flying in windy conditions either, which might affect sightings, as they are more than likely under shelter for that too.
The weather here has been very wet this year, prolonged periods of rain and wind too. 'My' Barnies are there, they're just not flying everyday. So far, they have been able to sustain themselves in the drier periods. It is possible to leave food out for Barnies, (defrosted dead frozen mice or day old chicks) but this should be a last resort.
This is a very brief account of things as they stand here but I'm also assuming this could be the case elsewhere, especially the north of England and here in Scotland.
The best place for facts and figures about Barn Owls is the Barn Owl Trust website, it is a real gem of information and provides way more info and knowledge than I ever could.
I'm hoping flight sightings will pick up for me as the daylight hours get longer, the weather becomes drier and the owls will have to feed/hunt during daylight hours, in the evenings and mornings soon.
@mav @davholla @russellsnr
HTH.
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