My next door neighbor is hearing a Great Horned Owl between 10-12 p.m. in our 
HOA just north of N Table Mt.  He is from Duluth, MN and knows them well.  I 
played the Sibley calls on my phone for him and, Yep, that is exactly what he 
heard and he said it sounded like it was on top of one of our roofs or one of 
our 12-yr old trees!  I must have slept through it!  Will stay up later and 
listen!  He also saw a red fox sniffing around his front yard at that late hour.

 

I think there has been a pair of owls nesting on N Table Mt.  Assume they still 
are.

 

Kay

 

Kayleen A. Niyo, Ph.D.

Niyo Scientific Communications

5651 Garnet St.

Golden, CO 80403

303.679.6646

k...@kayniyo.com; www.KayNiyo.com

 

From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of DAVID A 
LEATHERMAN
Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2018 10:27 AM
To: rorigh...@earthlink.net; COBIRDS <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Great-horned Owls--started hooting (Denver Co)

 

Bob et al,

What I have noticed in the past at Grandview Cemetery in Fort Collins is the 
initiation of Great Horned Owl pair-bonding in late summer.  I have not seen it 
this year, but the pattern in the past has been as follows:

 

During June and July thru most of August, adults are difficult to find but seem 
mostly involved with teaching young from the previous spring the ropes.  The 
young birds are vocal (sound more like beginning cello students than large 
owls), tend to move all around the cemetery, choose different roosting spots, 
and, thus, the parents tend to move around, also.

 

Usually in August things change.  The status of the kids changes.  In the big 
eyes of their parents, what was yesterday a dependent is today viewed as 
competition.  No doubt pressured by the parents, the young disappear to start 
their own lives elsewhere.

 

Usually in late August I notice one parent, presumably the male, start sitting 
in the huge, champion honeylocust in the southeastern part of the cemetery.  
This magnificent tree is about 100 yards from the traditional nest site in the 
crotch of a large American elm in the center of the cemetery.

 

After a period of weeks extending into September, which may involve some 
calling by the male at night when I am not present, he is joined by a second 
bird in the honeylocust.  When the second bird shows up, they often sit in 
disparate parts of the crown.  Over several days, if they decide "this is the 
start of something big", the distance between them lessens and eventually they 
literally sit shoulder to shoulder.  Again, I am not there at night, but I 
think this period of time involves calling back and forth, and rarely I hear 
some of this during the daytime.  I suspect that sort of thing may what you and 
Greg have posted about.  So, rather than "setting up a territory", I think it 
is more pair-bonding, with the traditional territory, at least in the case of 
the cemetery that I'm familiar with, being already established.  It's more a 
case of a long-term lease being extended.  Some of the chatter may be 
discussion of the terms, but I tend to think it is mostly about commitments by 
the future tenants.

 

Over the course of autumn into early winter, the birds tend to roost closer and 
closer to the traditional nest tree.  Lots of hooting during this time.  Around 
the turn of the year, the female seems to disappear, the male takes up 
residence in a big spruce looking down on the nest elm, and then, bingo, some 
time in late winter (January to early March), she appears in the nest crotch 
and away the tedium and hard work of nesting progresses.

 

At least this is how I interpret things in my patch.  Certainly there could be 
other reasons for hooting at any time of year but I would wager what you report 
involves mate selection.  Thanks for your posts, Bob and Greg.

 

Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins

 

  _____  

From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <mailto:cobirds@googlegroups.com>  
<cobirds@googlegroups.com <mailto:cobirds@googlegroups.com> > on behalf of 
Robert Righter <rorigh...@earthlink.net <mailto:rorigh...@earthlink.net> >
Sent: Friday, September 21, 2018 8:04 PM
To: cobirds
Subject: [cobirds] Great-horned Owls--started hooting (Denver Co) 

 

Hi 

 

On recent, loosening up the back, evening walks around the greater DU area in 
Denver, I’ve detected Great-horned Owls hooting starting at 7PM and continuing. 
Actually I’ve heard them hooting, to a lesser degree, during the day. The 
extent of their hooting suggest they are already setting up territories, the 
end of September! Anyone else hearing them?

 

Bob Righter

Denver, CO 

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