Backstops

On Monday, February 22nd, I arrived after eating dinner. Reports where that the owl spent time in the trees around the Compost Heap and hunted at least once. It was unclear if it caught anything.

When I arrived it was on a backstop #10. It flew to backstop #12, and then over to the western fields and softball backstop #2, and backstop #4.

It then flew all the way up to the Compost Heap, before being found again on backstop #12. It left briefly and returned to the exact same spot on backstop #12 before flying out of sight.

Brown Rat For Dinner

I arrived a bit late on Sunday, February 21st, but found the Snowy Owl in trees around the compost area were it flew between two trees for a bit. It then flew to the eastern portion of the North Meadow. We lost track of it, but it was then spotted in the field eating a Brown Rat. The meal took about an hour to complete. Then it was on a backstop, and I called it a night.

Earlier Stop

We’ve been trying to figure out where the Snowy Owl comes from each evening, and on Saturday, February 20th, I was able to confirm that it makes a stop at the Compost Heap before going to the North Meadow.

The Compost Heap has a pair of tree that are used by the local Red-tailed Hawks that has a great view of the northern section of the park.

Before dusk a Peregrine Falcon perched on the Annenberg Building of Mt. Sinai, flew down rapidly towards the trees. When I looked at Cooper’s Hawk was in the tree.

I kept an eye on the tree and after sunset, it had the Snowy Owl. The owl preened and stretched just like a Barred Owl or Great Horned Owl does. A wing down and then both wings back.

The owl then ended up on the eastern side of North Meadow, moved around a few times, left for a few minutes, returned with a rodent, ate, cleaned its beak in the snow, and seemed to enjoy having the meadow to herself.

Late for dinner, I left the park.

Bad Luck

Wednesday, February 17th was difficult night for owl watching. While I saw the owl a few times, it moved almost every time I saw it.

Hunting seems to be concentrated around two areas, the Tennis courts and the Compost Heap.

For a lot of searching, I have only have a few seconds of video.

Baseball Then Tennis

On Tuesday, February 16th, Snowy Owl appeared on the baseball fields of the eastern side of the North Meadow on schedule. It was first on a backstop, then the ground, returned to a backstop and was on the ground again before flying southwest. It made lots of playful jumps on the ground, which was now partially without snow.

Later it was on the Tennis Court fences and then on the ground. We lost it for awhile, but it was found again on a Tennis Court fence about thirty minutes later.

This owl continues to delight. It played with leaves and grass, much like a young Red-tail pounces on sticks.

See an owl defecate? Expect it to fly off within ten seconds.

Valentine’s Day

The Snowy Owl had been using both the Eastern and Western halves of the North Meadow ballfields since it arrived. On Sunday, February 14th, the owl made a few passes, and I believe one visit to a backstop, but didn’t linger like it had been doing on other nights.

I stayed until about 7, and then went home to cook dinner. After dinner was done I returned to the park. I started at the North Meadow, since I’ve seen the owl eat here late in the evening, but then went around to other locations it has been seen.

I ended up at the western of the two North Gatehouses of the Reservoir and there was the Snowy Owl. (Many birders call them pump houses but the Croton Waterworks system is gravity fed.) Without anyone there, it stayed perched there from 10 pm until at least midnight, except for two brief flights over the Reservoir.