Animal Dreaming by Scott Alexander King
Australian farmland - the growing lands Australian wilderness and bushlands Australian outback and desert The massive Australian coastline Australian cities and surrounds
The Dreamtime is the time before time - when all things were being created and when everything was 'learning' to exist. Depicting all things as equal, the teachings of the Dreamtime suggest that we are capable of communing with the forces of nature and to speak readily to the animals, birds, reptiles, fish and insects.
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OWL WATCH

A rare opportunity to watch the hatching and development of a clutch of BARN OWLS

'Horned Owl' - original artwork by Scott Alexander King (Copyright 2008)

 

Special thanks to Linda (the photographer) and her partner, Mark [USA] for their kind permission to use the images on my site.

You can visit their website by clicking HERE

OWL WATCH 2009!

It's happening all over again!

I've received news from Mark that the first eggs have been laid in the tower (the first eggs for 2009, that is!)

Instead of posting photos this year, though, Mark has installed a video camera where the Barn Owls nest, and as the footage is captured, he has been uploading it onto YouTube.

To view the videos of this year's young, click HERE or on the YouTube logo below:


 

OWL WATCH

What a wonderful opportunity we have been offered here, I am sure you'll all agree. With thanks to Bec Campbell [of Circle of Stones, Warburton, Victoria] for helping make this happen, we feel very proud - and honoured - to offer this rare peek into the very private world of the Barn Owl.

Linda, the lady responsible for taking the photographs, and her partner Mark have a pair of Barn Owls [see the pics on right] visit their home each year. They nest in the tower [See the pic below. The tower is on the left] - where they settle to lay their eggs and raise their young.

Linda makes the short climb every now and then to check the babies and to offer food to the parents. She is the only one to climb the tower to minimise disturbance, and because of this 'Mr. and Mrs. Barn Owl' have come to know and trust her.

With Bec's encouragement, we decided it would be a beautiful thing to set up this page - OWL WATCH - so we can all keep track of the little ones as they hatch, fledge and spread their wings for the first time.

By the way - this page will be regularly updated as new pics come in from the US, so don't forget to come back every now and then to keep check!

Enjoy!

Scott

 

The first egg of the season - March 2008

The full clutch - March 29, 2008

Soon after the eggs began to hatch - April 23, 2008

Fast growing Owlets - April 28, 2008

What a big yawn! April 28, 2008

Healthy Owlets - May 08, 2008

Stand Back!! June 05, 2008

Sleepy Time for Owl Babies. June 05, 2008

Owlets - June 2008

Unfortunately, Mark and Linda were unable to get any more photos after these ones were taken - it just became too difficult.

But, it's good to hear that 'our babies' are now fully fledged and hanging out in the trees with their parents, learning to hunt and fend for themselves.

Thank you Mark and Linda for affording us this sneak peak into the very private world of the Barn Owl. What an honour it has been!

And thank you Mr. and Mrs. Barn Owl for allowing us into your sacred space and for sharing your beautiful babies with us.


'BARNY' the Barn Owl

The following photos are of 'Barny', the first chick born at Linda and Mark's place way back in 2005. Apparently, right from birth, Barny was a bit of a showoff! 

The really special thing about Barny, though, was that he returned the following year to help his parents feed his six new siblings. Mark and Linda would sit out on their veranda and watch them fly in with all sorts of critters for the babies to eat. "Snakes go down like spaghetti!", says Mark. LOL!

Each year Mark and Linda haul approximately four good size trash bags of fur and bones from the stairwell leading up their tower; mainly detritus from the Owl's nest.

Sometime soon, Mark plans to build a barn up the hill (away from the house), incorporating several nesting boxes fixed to its side with a video camera that will monitor and capture on film the growth and development of the Owls that he hopes will nest there. Now, that's cool!

 

 

Have you ever seen anything as amazing as this?

Instead of pictures of Barn Owls (as you would normally expect to see on a page called OWL WATCH), I have decided to post these amazing images of two Rattle Snakes performing their ritualistic mating dance (a very rare thing to witness). The pictures were sent to me by Mark, but were taken by his good friend Opa Tuklo, a Choctaw man whose name literally translates to 'Owls Two'', or 'Two Owls'.

Opa Tuklo got his name as a small child when, one night, he was out hunting with his father and other family members. It was his job to keep the fire burning while the others were off in the forest hunting. He was told to keep the fire small so as not to use all the wood. But, as he sat there alone, he became frightened by a strange sound coming from the darkness. Fearing it to be a monster, he built the fire up so that it burned strong and bright, but in doing so, he quickly used up all the wood. When the men returned, they asked him why he had wasted all the firewood, and he described the noises he had heard. They listened to his story, and then told him that it wasn't a monster that he'd heard, but rather two Owls talking to each other. And from that night on, he became known as 'Two Owls Laughing', or 'Two Owls' for short.

These Snakes are Rattle Snakes, and the photos were taken in Texas, USA. To get an idea of how big these Snakes are, compare their size to the Pick-up tracks made in the grass. And if you consider that a Snake is only able to lift a third of its body length off the ground ... then it becomes pretty clear that these 'Rattlers' are not creatures to pick a fight with!! Thank you, Opa Tuklo for giving permission to share these images with the world.


Barn Owl - Visitation

Barn Owls, Monkey-faced Owls or White Owls, are found throughout the world, including North and South America, Europe, Africa, India, Southeast Asia, and Australia. They inhabit farmland, forests, bush land, plantations, woodland, marshland and suburban areas alike. They feed on rodents, reptiles, insects and small birds, nesting in tree hollows, crevices in walls and cliffs, abandoned buildings, barns, chimneys and warehouses. They have flat, heart-shaped faces, snowy white and ochre-coloured plumage and felted edges on their wing feathers that afford them the gift of silent flight.

If a Barn Owl enters a house via its chimney, is seen sitting and calling from the roof of a house or is heard during the day or for three nights in a row, British tradition says there will be news of a death or a sudden ending. The indigenous people of Australia say that Owls personify the souls of women. Therefore, according to legend, they are considered sacred. Owls are our sisters and our sisters are essentially Owls. Pueblo Indians are said to avoid entering a building containing a body or feathers of an Owl, while according to Navajo belief, Owls are the embodiment of the souls of the dead and are messengers of the Underworld. It is interesting to note, too, that twilight is otherwise known as ‘Owl-light’; a perfect time to set about communicating with the dead, according to esoteric tradition. Often the totem of mystics, shamans, spiritual healers and seers, the Barn Owl, or the Ghost Owl, is the sentry that guards the passage that leads to the Underworld. It is my experience that when one is visited by a Barn Owl, a loved one in Spirit is trying to make contact or is wanting to reassure those left behind of their wellbeing and happiness. The Barn Owl is an emissary of change and a harbinger of the inevitabilities of life and death and is therefore also associated with people whose work centres on death. Rather than portraying death as a final destination, however, Barn Owl Dreaming portrays it as the beginning of a journey rather than an ending. The word death is often taken literally, rousing confronting images in the mind of emotional upheaval, funerals and cemeteries. When the word death is used in a spiritual context, however, it usually refers to a necessary ending: a transition from an outworn aspect of life into a new phase or the closing of one door so that another may open. Although it can indicate the passing or visitation of a loved one, Barn Owl Dreaming more often than not represents the death of the old familiar self – and the eventual rebirth of the new. It affords the clarity to see through the gloom, confusion and grief associated with death or change while encouraging us to reassess our life and how we live it. It primes us for a time of awakening, a period of regeneration and growing awareness. It nurtures our dormant understanding of the bigger picture by offering insight into the darker mysteries of Creation. It helps us understand or find peace with why things happen while vowing to give them purpose. Barn Owl Dreaming offers death to the recognized self by daring us to ponder who, what and why we are the way we and then to seek our greater purpose and grow spiritually.

Extract taken from Animal Messenger [published by New Holland Australia]

 

Mr and Mrs Barn Owl (AKA - 'Owls In Waiting')

The pair must remain vigilant at all times for the local Horned Owl that would just love to make a meal of them both! Let's hope they always stay safe.

 

2007's clutch of Owlets, taken May 23, 2007

Now, they're something to be proud of, huh?!

Barn Owl Pellets found on the stairs leading up the tower

Owls swallow their prey nearly whole; however, the fur and bones of their prey cannot be digested. The food goes into the proventriculus which is found just before the gizzard. (Owls do not have crops like many other birds.) As food starts to digest in the gizzard, the muscles separate the fur from the bones. The fur and bones are then pushed forward to the proventriculus. About 12 hours after eating their prey owls spit out a pellet, an ellipsoidal to spherical glob. Owl pellets are clean of all flesh and odourless.

[Information gleaned from www.msnucleus.org]

What you might find in the pellet of a Great Horned Owl