
[More Owls]
Update: There was a great article in the Des Moines Register about the Snowy Owls in Iowa - Read here.
![]() Yay. My first Snowy Owl this winter. I've driven hundreds of miles already this winter looking for a snowy owl to photograph in Iowa. Despite reliable reports from other birders and photographers I have not found one where I could get a good photo. I did see one last week about 75 yards from the road but it was well after sunset with just a little light in the sky, but not enough to get a good photo. Tonight I went for a drive with my 13 year-old grandson to look in the same area as last week near Wesley (Hancock County) and he spotted this one on a power pole about a mile west of the one I had seen last week. We stopped about 100 yards away and I took a few photos out the sun-roof of the car just at sunset.. This image taken with a 600mm lens is heavily cropped as we did not want to approach too close. Snowy Owls in Iowa are often stressed at this time of year after a long migratory flight from the northern tundra. They have to work pretty hard to find enough mice and voles to eat and may be under weight and suffer from malnutrition. They need to conserve their energy, and approaching too close or getting out of the car to photograph them can cause them to unnecessarily fly away. [More Owls] Update: There was a great article in the Des Moines Register about the Snowy Owls in Iowa - Read here.
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![]() Moorehead Pioneer Park near Ida Grove, Iowa is a mecca for wintering Northern Saw-Whet Owls. They have been there every winter for many years. Local volunteer at the park, Don Poggensee, helped me find three owls, but I wasn't able to get good photos of all three. These tiny owls roost during the day in the branches of pine trees about 6 to 12 feet off the ground, sometimes in very thick branch cover. They are difficult to find but usually easy to approach if done quietly, and generally won't flush while taking photos because they need to conserve their energy for flying and hunting at night. Two of the owls were clutching a dead mouse in their talons on the branch and did not move at all while we observed them. Very cool. [Click images to see larger.]
![]() Driving home from the Lime Creek Nature Center and Conservation Area after an unsuccessful hike to look for a Saw-whet Owl I spotted a couple of deer along the pond by the road. Not an unusual sight, but I noticed a reflection on the frozen pond and it looked like they were trying to drink from the pond. I stopped, grabbed the camera and telephoto lens and quietly crept up through the tall grass and weeds to get to a point where I could take a photo. The deer were licking the ice, trying to get a drink. I'm not sure if they actually broke through to the water, but I did get a few photos before they wandered off in to the prairie grass. I liked the reflection on the ice. |
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July 2024
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