Post

Gleb Lubentsov

Gleb Lubentsov

30 September 2021

Kazakhstan

The Barn Owl is a nocturnal raptor measuring nearly 40 cm, with a wingspan of nearly a metre.

It has a characteristic face, heart-shaped, white plumage on its breast and mottled yellow-brown on its back and wings. Its legs are feathered right down to its claws. The wing-feathers have a flexible edge and sound-absorbent down, in such a way that it flies noiseless and thus surprises its prey, essentially small rodents. Highly useful in countrysides, this bird however has had a bad reputation in the past; its disturbing appearance, its hoots and its nocturnal activity in attics and bell-towers frightened the credulous and the Barn Owl was thought to be a harbinger of misfortune: in order to dispel that bad augur, they used to be killed and nailed to barn doors – not so long ago by the way… Sedentary, the Barn Own spends the winter without migrating. It nests on the ground or in niches of towers and barns, laying from 4 to 13 eggs which hatch after approximately two weeks; the older chicks have often been observed to feed their leftovers to the younger ones, which is rare among birds.

The Barn Owl is a nocturnal raptor measuring nearly 40 cm, with a wingspan of nearly a metre.
The Barn Owl is a nocturnal raptor measuring nearly 40 cm, with a wingspan of nearly a metre.

/

Tags

The Barn Owl is a nocturnal raptor measuring nearly 40 cm, with a wingspan of nearly a metre.

The Barn Owl is a nocturnal raptor measuring nearly 40 cm, with a wingspan of nearly a metre. It has a characteristic face, heart-shaped, white plumage on its breast and mottled yellow-brown on its back and wings. Its legs are feathered right down to its claws. The wing-feathers have a flexible edge and sound-absorbent down, in such a way that it flies noiseless and thus surprises its prey, essentially small rodents. Highly useful in countrysides, this bird however has had a bad reputation in the past; its disturbing appearance, its hoots and its nocturnal activity in attics and bell-towers frightened the credulous and the Barn Owl was thought to be a harbinger of misfortune: in order to dispel that bad augur, they used to be killed and nailed to barn doors – not so long ago by the way… Sedentary, the Barn Own spends the winter without migrating. It nests on the ground or in niches of towers and barns, laying from 4 to 13 eggs which hatch after approximately two weeks; the older chicks have often been observed to feed their leftovers to the younger ones, which is rare among birds.

30 September 2021

No tags yet

No comments yet

See other posts Gleb Lubentsov

Hunter

UH.APP — Social media network and application for hunters

Store image

UH.app — social media network and application for hunters.

© 2025 Uhapp LLC. All rights reserved.