An important note from ebird.org:

"An important word of caution about this striking and photogenic
species--the birds we see in the states are already stressed, since
they moved from locations in the north due to a lack of food. One of
the southeast Wisconsin Snowy Owls in Ozaukee County was seen for a
few days and then found dead by a farmer. Apparently the bird was
extremely emaciated, so it likely starved to death. While very
beautiful and often approachable, life for them can at times be very
difficult, and keeping a good distance so as not to disturb them is
the best approach. Please don't use live mice to lure them in to
roadsides for photography. Flushing a large raptor, especially a white
one can catch the attention of nearby crows causing unnecessary
mobbing. We want these birds to successfully over-winter and then
return back to the tundra to breed next spring."

I agree - better that these owls survive than collect "digital dust"
on someone's hard drive or photo site. As this species roosts during
the day for the most part if you flush them, you are causing energetic
stresses on the bird. If they flush, you need a better camera/scope,
or a blind.

--Scott

Scott E. Severs
Longmont, CO

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