Northern Saw-Whet Owl
A Northern Saw-Whet Owl was found in the Eastern Pinetum this afternoon. It’s a great little owl! I got some great looks of it just before fly out.
A Northern Saw-Whet Owl was found in the Eastern Pinetum this afternoon. It’s a great little owl! I got some great looks of it just before fly out.
The Barred Owl that was in the Tupelo Meadow was rediscovered a few hundred yards further south today. Bird Watchers also found the Barred Owl in the North Woods, that hadn’t been seen for a few days. I had a chance to photograph the one in the Ramble.
Central Park is blessed with two Barred Owls this week. Here are more photos of one of them.
At least one Barred Owl remained in Central Park on Monday, even after all of the commotion from the NYC Marathon.
I finally got to see the Barred Owl that has been hanging about the Ramble for the last week this morning. It was high in the Tupelo Tree of the Tupelo Meadow. The tree has just started to lose its leaves making it fairly easy to spot the owl. Another Barred Owl was spotted in the Ravine later in the day, so I suspect we’ll have more owl sightings in the next week.
There was a Barred Owl in The Ramble of Central Park this morning. When I arrived in the park this afternoon, after hearing Blue Jay cries, I found an owl. I though it was the Barred Owl at first, but then it looked like a Great Horned Owl, which I tweeted out using the #birdcp hashtag. It was tucked in most of time, far away and obscured by leaves with an oval face and plump body. But perched birds can be deceiving. Lots of folks saw it, but after two hours Ryan Zucker came by and said, “I think that’s a Long-eared Owl”. When I got home, I discovered one of the youngest birders in the park got it right. It was a Long-eared Owl. I’ve never seen one so early and never in a deciduous tree in Central Park. Thanks for the correction Ryan.
Making the wrong I.D. is a big faux pas in birding, so I’ve been trying to figure out how I got it wrong. I think I was biased by my previous Long-eared sightings, which where in snowy conditions, mid-winter. Plus the bird was obscured and very, very high in the tree. I looked up the frequency map on eBirds for New York County and Long-eared Owls, and while it showed mostly winter sightings, there are plenty of fall and spring sightings. I’ll need to give up my winter bias, and concentrate on chest stripping and color going forward!