[NatureNS] Saw-whet Owls at Grand Manan!

Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 08:38:16 -0400
From: Helene Van Doninck <hvandoninck@eastlink.ca>
To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
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Hello all,

I get several starving Saw Whets every winter. Luckily,  if they can be
brought in early enough, i can do an emaciation protocol on them and most
make it to be released in the spring. You know where I am if you find one :)

Helene Van Doninck
Cobequid Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre
893-0253

ps.rehab centres all over north america are receiving an influx oF snowy
owls, starving, seems to be cyclical as already discussed


-----Original Message-----
From: naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca
[mailto:naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca]On Behalf Of Brian Dalzell
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 12:57 AM
To: naturenb@listserv.unb.ca; naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
Subject: [NatureNS] Saw-whet Owls at Grand Manan!


Flush from my success with Snowy Owls last evening, I bought new
batteries for my tape player, put on my long-johns and heavy felt boots
and hit the Dark Harbour Road at 8 pm in search of small woodland owls.
I began on the new Crabbe Lumber access road above Dark Harbour and had
my first Saw-whet respond within a minute at the first place I stopped.
It was a good omen.  My fingers are so stiff I can hardly type right
now, but the last four hours have been the most incredible night of
owling I've ever had in 30-odd years.

To make a long story short, I made 14 stops between 8:13 pm and midnight
and heard (and also saw!) a total of 15+ NORTHERN SAW-WHET
OWLS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  I was like a crack addict searching for my next hit
of meth.  It just kept getting better and better.   At two stops I
didn't hear anything, but a three stops I had two Saw-whets each!  I was
actually beginning to lose track of how many I had heard/seen.  Never
get tired of hearing those little guys.  Usually, within 30 seconds of
playing my tape, I had a response.

Sometimes the owls tooted back, but usually they just let out a strange,
"mewling"call, or something like that.  When they float over your head
in the dark, or answer from right beside the road, shivers run up and
down your spine and out along your arms (it was -8C too).  And I should
have brought my binoculars too.   One juvenile bird allowed me to come
with 15 feet while it intently watched the ground below for meadow
voles.  It was only eight feet up.  When it fluttered through the trees
it reminded me of a large Cecropia moth -- you couldn't hear the wings
flap at all.

It is the kind of bittersweet experience that Jim Wilson described a
couple weeks ago while viewing two Cave Swallows while he was alone at
Point Lepreau.  No one to share the excitement with.  It was the most
perfect night I've ever had for owling.  Not a breath of wind, the
logging roads were frozen solid and no moon, just Orion and the other
guys hanging overhead.  I wanted to keep going, but finally had to quit
at midnight because I couldn't feel my toes.  I'm sure I could have
found many more.  The spirit was willing, but the flesh was, well, frozen.

If anyone has ever wanted to hear and see Saw-whet Owls without so much
as trying, now would be the time to come to Grand Manan.  This may well
be a once-in-50-year event.  I don't know what is going on, but it is
far outside my experience.  They were just everywhere I stopped.  SIMPLY
EVERYWHERE!  I would go so far as to say the island is simply infested
with them.  A wild guess at their numbers on this 55-square mile island
would be in the range of 250+ owls, as I found 15 in about a five-square
mile area.

However, the downside is, if we get heavy snow this winter, there is
going to be incredible mortality amongst the little owls.  I'm sort of
hoping they move on over the next couple of weeks for that reason.
There must be an awfully high number of meadow voles around to sustain
such numbers.  I spaced my stops about a kilometer apart, played 100-200
call notes, and had replies usually within 30-60 seconds.  I do not
believe the owls were following me from stop to stop.  They simply could
not have traveled through the dense woods fast enough to keep up to me.

The marine forecast calls for winds of 25-50 knots and rain right
through until Thursday, so no more owling for a few days!  In fact,
tonight was the first night it was fit for owling in almost two weeks.
But if anyone should want to come over and experience this
"Owl-megeddon" just check that the wind is forecast to be less than 10
knots.  The Grand Manan CBC is on Dec. 14th, and with a couple of teams
of owlers and perfect weather, the Canadian CBC record could easily be
set (I believe the record is somewhere around 25-30 birds at Wabuman
Lake, Alberta).

Brian Dalzell
Bancroft Point
Grand Manan, NB.

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