Superbowl
For owls that are superb.
If ever there was a photo that illustrated how owls are really just sky cats lol
I have heard legend various Chinese names for them mean "night cat", "cat headed hawk", or "cat eagle". I can't verify if any of these are true or if it's just internet legend, but it still seems appropriate. But owls were here first, so cats are land owls!
Might have to start calling my cat land-owl.. 🤔😹
I always assumed all my cats called me far worse things than land owl, so it's only fair... 😺
It isn't even an insult! lol
They'd look at me like it was! 😁
Ha, true.. 😹
Other way 'round.
cats are wingless owls.
Ahh, I've finally gotten another of you on board with this stance!
Owls have been here 65.5 million years, while the line that became housecats are only 10-15 million years old.
What an adorable little pieface!
The better to hear you with, my dear!
The owls must have been so confused by what sounds like a whole cluster of paparazzi that turned up at their tree😂
Let them enjoy the fame now. It's the only point in their life they will want to be the center of attention. Once they leave the nest, it's a stealth assassin's life for them!
it took me longer than I'd care to admit to realize that bit of wood at the top of the cozy hole was not in fact another owl looking down on them.
It does look rather raptor-like!
The Tree Mother!
This is so cool. Are you climbing to get the photos? Big lens?
A couple of days ago, I heard a screech sound behind my building. Thought it was foxes, but my Merlin app said it was the begging call of young Great Horned Owls. Last night, I heard an adult more faintly. I would love to actually see them.
I do not take the photos. I share stories and photos from a bunch of different sources. The camera lenses used are typically very large and look like small telescopes. The owls don't really want people around them, and shooting in lower light needs bigger optics to let in what light is available or the photos get very grainy.
I don't know much about cameras myself, so here is a primer from a wildlife photographer and here he is with one of his typical lenses.
Screech Owls can be tough to spot. They are quiet, so when you hear one it is typically quite close, but they are tiny like a beverage can, but extremely camouflaged. Horned owls tend to move around a bunch and hang out later at night so they can be a bit tougher to find. Barred Owls are pretty vocal and tend to hang in the same trees every day, so they can be easier to spot. They all work a bit differently. If you patrol around regularly at dawn or dusk and listen for them, you can narrow down their territory.
You're awesome for this answer, thank you.
I try to be useful sometimes! Looking things up teaches us both, so it's a win-win.
Fantastic! What a shot!
And, btw kudos on the title. It’s perfecto!
Yes, I try to grab really unique and exciting photos. The owls are great by themselves, but if I just gave you head shots of owls all day, you guys would get bored. I try to bring you guys the best of the best! You deserve it after all.
I'm glad somebody got it. I feel I struggle with titles sometimes, and this seems like an old reference, but I thought I really nailed it for anyone that did pick up on it.
For those who missed it, it was a commercial aimed at the impressionable heads of children that ran about every three minutes during Saturday Morning Cartoons.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8Y_vEKbZhU
tbh, it’s pretty nostalgic now. Ah, such is neuroplasticity I guess. 😄
Back when ads were cartoons and cartoons were ads.
SuperbOwl still remembers...