The whole gallery of 'em is delightful  - there are several I prefer to the one you singled out - for his pose and the background.. and one very sweet tight closeup where he islooking right at you. You should do well with these.. Owls are such a thing

ann

On 5/6/2018 1:01 AM, Alan C wrote:
You were fortunate to encounter such an accommodating owl, especially in broad daylight.

Alan C

-----Original Message----- From: PhotoCapturesbyJeffery.com
Sent: 6 May, 2018 4:12 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: PESO: Portrait of Hoot Barred Owl perched

While at Radnor Lake I took the road trail close to the lake first off
early morning on a mission to hopefully get the privilege of seeing
either the otters or the beavers. Well I didn't get that privilege but I
did get to see one of the Barred Owls. Later in the visit and before I
was going to leave I decided to head back around again to see if I could
get lucky and see the owl again. Well to my surprise it was still at the
same spot but just a bit higher up. There is another trail that goes
into the wood above the lake so I took it to get a closer look. While
standing there for a bit the owl decided to fly up beside me on its way
to a nice meal. It was the first time I have been touched by the wings
of a Barred Owl in flight.

This is one of it perched before it was took off:

http://www.photocapturesbyjeffery.com/owls-in-nature/eaa2b4fe9

Now for those of you that don't mind seeing what it was eating on, here
is one of it perched a top of a dead tree having a mid morning meal.

http://www.photocapturesbyjeffery.com/owls-in-nature/eaa2b4f6e

I am still working on the rest of the images from the visit to Radnor Lake.



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