Birds Of Broad Ripple - by Brandt Carter and Jeffrey L. Stone
posted: Sept. 19, 2024
The Wise Ones Fly
The Barred Owl is the most common our in my neighborhood. We have been lucky to have two to five young owls haunting the canopy in the summer. Their hissing sound for young juveniles to their hooting (that sounds like "Who cooks for you?) of the adults announce their hunting forays. They are named for the vertical bars on their abdomen and horizontal bars on their chest.
The Barred Owl does not usually migrate. They can be enticed by a commercial owl box but often nest is the hollow of trees. They feed on mammals (rats, shrews, and voles), but will also consume other birds, reptiles, amphibians, crustaceans, and even fish and earthworms. No other owls look like them. Their greatest predator is the Great Horned Owl. They are easier identify by hearing their call around dusk and early evening rather than spotting their well camouflaged bodies.
image courtesy of Jeffrey L. Stone
image courtesy of Jeffrey L. Stone
brandt@broadripplegazette.com