BirdNote ® Barred Owl
Air Date: January 25, 2013
As the frigid long nights of January grip much of the country, Mary MacCann has an unexpected encounter with a Barred Owl.
Transcript
CURWOOD: January 27th sees the first full moon of 2013, called the Wolf Moon by Native Americans. But in our BirdNote ® today, Mary McCann has a tale of an encounter with a different creature of the night.
MUSIC

MCGANN: Winter grips the land and dawn comes late. Our house sits at the edge of a field of grasses that are limp and broken, tunneled through by voles. I awake as two Barred Owls fly in tandem, low, by my windows, swift dark shapes against the grey and brooding light. How close they are – banking at the corner of the house.
Then, a loud and mighty smack! I find one owl lying on the floor of the porch, upside down beneath a window, a heap of feathers, one wing protruding, barely breathing. Shall I cover the bird with a blanket, put it in a box and keep it warm? Has it broken a wing, cracked its beak? Or shall I keep my distance, so as not to frighten it further? I decide to hold still and watch.

Minutes pass. Then the owl rights itself and moves its head. Our eyes lock. Dazed, it sits quietly, turning its head from time to time. More minutes pass. I leave to get my binoculars to study it more closely. When I return, it is gone. It has flown away.
Tonight, temperatures will plunge and a winter moon will illuminate the new snow. I’m Mary McCann.
CURWOOD: To see some photos of the barred owl, swoop on down to our website at LOE.org.
Written By Chris Peterson Musical selection from “When Comes December” composed and played by Tim Story, on A Winter’s Solstice, Windham Hill Records. Producer: John Kessler Executive Producer: Chris Peterson © 2013 Tune In to Nature.org January 2013 Narrator: Mary McCann
