[wisb] Re: owling query

  • From: "Terri Welisek" <terriw@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <dkkearns@xxxxxxxxxx>, <wisbirdn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2009 10:43:43 -0600

I enjoy owl prowls this time of year. I find the recordings to be very 
effective IF the owl is in the area. My strategy is to call just the one type 
of owl that habitat suggests would roost there. So if I'm in a marshy spot with 
thick pines I'll try for Barred Owls, mature hardwoods Great Horned. Set up at 
sunset. 20 minutes after sunset I play recordings for 2 minutes. Wait a few and 
listen for responses. Try again. I might do this for 30 minutes. I generally 
get a response within the first 20 minutes. If my intention is to count a 
presence and not photography I'll just quit when the first calls start and let 
that owl do the work of drawing the mate in for my count. I do not call more 
than one type at any location for the predation reasons already suggested and 
it is recommended that you space the attempts. I never call for the same 
species more often than 3 days apart. 

It's best if you can set up with the twilight behind the direction you expect 
to attract the owl as that light will aid is spotting the silhouette 
approaching. I've found that owls especially screechies sound much further away 
than they are so if you hear one, he's very close. And I suggest you leave your 
rabbit mad bomber hat at home less you risk an unpleasant raking.

Good Birding,

Terri Welisek
Sherwood, WI
Calumet County
-----Original Message-----
From: wisbirdn-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:wisbirdn-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of Kevin
Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2009 9:02 AM
To: wisbirdn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [wisb] Re: owling query 

Could we get a few tips on owling, I have never really understood how it works? 
Do you do it like a BBS where you stop every half mile and listen for a couple 
minutes? Do you whistle or hoot similar to pishing? Do you play recordings to 
entice a response? Owling techniques have always eluded me.

Thanks for any info you can offer, 
Kevin Kearns
Neenah

-----Original Message-----
From: wisbirdn-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:wisbirdn-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of tuttech@xxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 2009 8:37 PM
To: wisbirdn@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; agstutz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [wisb] Re: My Mount Horeb & Sauk City CBC highlights, owling
query & other observations


Hi,  
Here are some thoughts on Aaron's questions.  I think owls are most vocal just 
after dusk and just before dawn...much like all birds are most vocal at the 
beginning and end of the day, only night is day to an owl.  The problem with 
CBC owling just after dusk is human interference.  (At least there is a lot 
less of this at 3 am.)  This is important because of the nearly undetectable  
audio clues to an owls presence. 
Having said that first, the question that Aaron raises about time is 
interesting. If we exclude obvious owls like Great Horned and their tendency to 
call at dawn and dusk, it would be interesting to keep records of call backs in 
order to have actual facts to use. I like to concentrate on Saw-Whets and Long 
Eared but I don't think I could pattern their call backs.  In the fall and 
winter S.W. seem to respond to tapes with squeals or cat like me-ow sounds.  As 
spring approaches they seem to sing more. I can't remember many times on a CBC 
when they sang at all.  Usually you see them flying around your head or hear 
them land on  a branch and then later, esp. if you shine a light on them will 
they call (squeal), if you keep after them then they seem to begin to sing 
more. Sometimes they will not sing at all until they no longer hear your tape. 
(Long Ears vex me a lot because they don't seem to call back).
 Wind seems to be a factor for detecting them because it is so hard to hear 
them land on a branch or things like that.  I also think my recording-broadcast 
system is loud enough to over power the wind noises.  Maybe to an owl wind is 
no issue, but to me it is.
 Although there is nothing like hearing a Saw-Whet singing across a swamp under 
a full moon I am not at all sure how darkness affects our efforts to detect 
them. John O'Donnel and I were working on our memories about this while we were 
doing the Riveredge CBC and could not come up with an answer.  I do know that a 
lot of my memories of success have been on dark nights.
Tom Utech
Oz.Co.
> Hi all,
> 
> I did the Sauk City CBC on Saturday with Jim Schwarz and the Mount Horeb 
> CBC on Sunday by myself.  Here are my highlights...
> 
> Sauk City CBC--my best areas are probably the Dam and the VFW Park
> 3 E. Screech Owls--1 apparently flew a few feet over our heads in 
> response to a tape--only Jim saw it.
> 3 Great Horned Owls
> 15 Bald Eagles--most observed from the Dam in the early AM
> 1 Fox Sparrow
> 1 white-headed Junco
> about 100 Herring Gulls at the Dam--only there in the AM.  Very few 
> settled on the water.  There is very little ice, so most of the 
> waterfowl were spread out all along the river and the Madison Lakes.   
> There was 1 B1 Thayer's Gull candidate in the gull flock, but it flew 
> overhead in bad light and I didn't feel comfortable calling it.
> a flock of Robins and Cedar Waxwings on the golf course north of the Dam.
> 
> Mount Horeb CBC--my area is the region southwest of Mount Vernon--very 
> few cars, good oak woodlots and some sizable grasslands and wetlands.
> 
> By best owling morning ever--no wind/ideal listening conditions despite 
> temps ranging from -2 to 10 degrees F. 
> Between 5:15AM and 7AM I heard 16 different owls. 
> 
> 10 Great Horned Owls--every other stop basically had a pair duetting
> 3 E. Screech Owls--as is usual they were in oak woodlots too small to 
> harbor a pair of Great Horned Owls.  I only heard a Screech Owl at one 
> stop where I also heard a Great Horned Owl and the two species were 
> about as far away from each other as they could possibly be and still be 
> in hearing range.
> 2 Barred Owls
> 1 N. Saw-whet (possibly 2)--"toot-tooting" in a stand of conifers 6-10 
> feet tall.  This belt of conifers stretches from Rettenmund Rd to Colby 
> Rd.  I thought this area looked ideal for Saw-whets last year and made a 
> note of it on my map.  Hearing some "toot-toots" in response to my i pod 
> made my day.  I only played calls from Rettenmund, but the habitat on 
> Colby looks just as good (there are more houses though)--there is also 
> good Long-eared Owl habitat on Colby (I will tell you if I hear any next 
> year). 
> 1 juv. Northern Shrike--on 92 south of Messerschmidt
> 2 Rough-legs
> 5 flyover Snow Buntings on Primrose Center Road
> large numbers of Tree Sparrows, Cardinals and Blue Jays feeding in 
> un-harvested cornfields
> other common species were only found near feeders--typically I can find 
> a handful of birds by just pishing at every woodlot.  This year the 
> woods were empty unless there were feeders nearby.
> 
> Notably absent--no Ring-necked Pheasants or Pileated Woodpeckers.  I 
> suspect the deep snows of the past two winters are doing a number on the 
> pheasants that make it past the hunters.  The absence of Pileated 
> Woodpeckers in my Sauk City and Mount Horeb Counts has me a bit 
> stumped--it will be interesting to see the numbers from all the areas. 
> 
> Owling query:
> What time of morning do other CBC owlers have the most success?  On the 
> Madison and Sauk City CBC's I was out starting around 4:30, but did not 
> hear much until closer to 5:15.  I have had owls call and/or fly in to 
> check me out in the 4AM-5AM range, but vocal activity typically picks up 
> after 5AM.  Any other comments on conditions affecting owl activity 
> would be appreciated (e.g. wind or no wind, temperature, moonlight, 
> overcast or cloudy, etc).
> 
> Aaron Stutz
> Madison, WI
> Dane County
> 
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