Unlikely Steller's Jay would be advertising its presence at 10pm. As much as
Cooper's and Goshawks love to eat'em I sure Barred Owls and fellows of their
guild could easily learn to love jaybird flesh.Sent from my Verizon, Samsung
Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: James Todd <toddwac18@xxxxxxxxx> Date:
12/31/21 10:01 AM (GMT-08:00) To: larsond052@xxxxxxxxx Cc:
larspernorgren@xxxxxxxxx, Roger Freeman <freemanbecard@xxxxxxxxx>, OBOL
<obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [obol] Re: Mystery Owl?, Silverton OR Any
thoughts on a Steller's Jay imitation? Fairly often, we hear and see this bird
imitating other birds, especially predators.Thanks,Bergen ToddOn Dec 31, 2021,
at 7:43 AM, David Larson <larsond052@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:That is an agitated call.
My guess is female screech just using the first 3 or 4 call notes. On Friday,
December 31, 2021, Lars Norgren <larspernorgren@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:My mildly
seasoned guess is Saw Whet.C'est chouette. On Thu, Dec 30, 2021, 10:20 PM Roger
Freeman <freemanbecard@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:This evening, about 10 PM I was quietly
playing a Western-screech Owl recording. The owl that responded and made the
attached recording came from a distance and moved around in the nearby timber.
Doesn’t sound like any Western-screech Owl I’ve heard, but …. Anyone heard
something similar or have an ID? Roger Freeman