I'm jealous! Sounds like a beautiful bird. Dave Benson in his recent Owls of 
the North book describes these 'Arctic' or 'Taiga' forms of the Great Horned 
Owl as 'seen mainly well to the North, but some winters they may show up as far 
south as the northern tier of states...They are not albinos, or even partial 
albinos; rather, like many northern creatures, they have a paler cast than 
their southern relatives.' See Christian Artuso's very cool photo of a pair of 
'Arctic' Great Horned Owls on page 25 of the book. The photo was taken in 
southern Manitoba.Sparky Stensaas2515 Garthus Road Wrenshall, MN 55797 
218.341.3350 cell sparkystensaas at 
hotmail.comwww.kollathstensaas.comwww.stoneridgepress.comwww.sparkyphotos.com 


Date: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 08:33:06 -0600From: Doug.Kieser at clynch.comTo: mou-net 
at moumn.org; mnbird at lists.mnbird.netSubject: [mou] Unusually plumaged Great 
Horned Owl, Bloomington, Hennepin County

Yesterday morning while birding along the Bluff Trail west of the Old Cedar 
Avenue bridge I had a short encounter with an almost-white Great Horned Owl.
I was on the second long boardwalk (the one with watercress in the stream) 
sorting through a robin flock when I thought I saw a large white bird out of 
the corner of my eye.  I scanned a bit, didn't locate this bird, and turned my 
attention back to the robins.  Within a few seconds they all took flight, I 
looked up and saw what I felt was a Snowy Owl land at tree-top level just up 
the hill from my location.  I was wondering what a Snowy Owl was doing in these 
woods when it turned its head and faced me, I could see it was actually a Great 
Horned Owl, but with black on white plumage, I could only detect the slightest 
hint of light brown tones.  The facial disc was pale yellow, rather than 
orange, and was framed in black.  The "horns" were plainly visible and were 
black.  Other than these features the bird appeared the same as an immature 
Snowy Owl.  After 30 seconds or so a dogwalker came through and the owl flew 
off to the east, towards Cedar Avenue.  In flight, the owl seemed nearly all 
white, the only visible dark markings were those on the underwings.  
 
Doug Kieser
Minneapolis
_________________________________________________________________
Shed those extra pounds with MSN and The Biggest Loser!
http://biggestloser.msn.com/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20080128/9d11dfeb/attachment.html
 

Reply via email to