nesting Great Grey Owl (lappugle) 19 May 2021 |
I have long promised a blog post on the breeding Great Grey Owls that I was lucky enough to see in May 2021 and I am now able to publish it after Stig Helge Basnes who showed them to me finally had his own very good article on them published in the Norwegian magazine Vår Fuglefauna.
I have seen Great Grey Owls at the nest many times
before but what was different this time is that both nests were in the top of
cut off trees about 4m above the ground. This type of natural nest is apparently
very rare in Norway where modern forestry does not leave many large tree stumps
which can rot at the top and then produce the bowl where the eggs can be laid.
Previous nests I have seen have either been in old Buzzards
nests or on platforms put out for them and it was very different to see this
large bird perched atop a tree stump. The stumps were not very large though and looked too small for just the female let alone young and a visiting male (which unfortunately I did not witness at either of the nests on my visit)
Another very surprising aspect was where the stumps
were. One was barely 30m from a cabin and the other less than 10m from a forest
road. There is generally very little activity in the area though as barriers
block the roads and they were not cleared of snow during the winter so there
may have been no human disturbance in the critical period when they chose their
nest sites.
When I visited on 19 May one nest had 3 small young
whilst the other clearly was still in the egg stage. I was unable to visit
again but only 2 young left the nest and the other nest failed with the eggs
seemingly not hatching.
The nest with 3 young:
3 baby beaks |
The female from the nest checking me out:
The nest that failed:
Amazing photos - so sharp! You finally captured a GGO in flight
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