Meanwhile, cast your mind back to late April. We are constantly keeping an eye on the "owl sycamore", hoping to catch a glimpse of the chicks. Then one evening, with barely enough light for a photo, the first/older chick emerged.
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What an entrance! We stared out the window with binoculars until the light failed, as the chick tested its grasp of the tree's skin. The young owl cannot fly for a few weeks after leaving the nest; they get down to the ground with a three-point stance (beak and two taloned feet) and an occasional but harmless tumble, then waddle to a destination tree and make a three-point climb. Ah, but that's a story about chick #2 a few days later.
Meanwhile, the parent owls kept a vigilant lookout. They harassed and were harassed by crows, especially, but their presence also rasied a ruckus among the robins, and there was a brief tussle with a passing Cooper's hawk that tried to land too close to the sycamore. Owls fly silently -- turn your back and they're gone without a whisper. I did manage one snapshot of the adult in flight.
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