Nice Looks At Central Park’s Established Great Horned Owl
Tonight was fairly standard. A few hops in the tree she was roosting in, before flying out to two nearby trees. One brief hoot. Then she was off to the southwest in one long flight.













Tonight was fairly standard. A few hops in the tree she was roosting in, before flying out to two nearby trees. One brief hoot. Then she was off to the southwest in one long flight.
After watching our resident Great Horned Owl for over a year, I finally got to see it go to the ground tonight for the first time! She hooted twice. It was a fun fly out.
I finally had a chance to look for the Immature White-crowned Sparrow that had been reported by Leo Bix on the 15th of January. The sparrows it had been hanging out with on the dirt path north of Sheep Meadow had moved about a block north to the hill just south of the Falconer’s Statue. It was in a mixed group of House Sparrows and White-throated Sparrows. There was also a single Fox Sparrow and a single Dark-eyed Junco.
I went up to a park in the north of Manhattan to see both a Barred Owl and an Eastern Screech-Owl today. The Barred Owl was tucked into some branches and difficult to photograph, so I concentrated on the Eastern Screech-Owl.
After a few nights of not seeing Central Park’s resident Great Horned Owl, and one night where reports were she was flushed by hawks and left the roost early, tonight was back to a very normal schedule. A roost where she was very visible for an hour before fly out, a few hops in the tree, then a flight to the highest tree and a high branch, a few hoots, and then off for the night.
The Common Loon returned to Central Park’s Reservoir on Tuesday and was there on Wednesday morning. There were reports of a Red-throated Loon on the Reservoir Tuesday, but the bird I photographed in the late afternoon was a Common Loon, so either we had two different Loons, or there was confusion about the ID.
Tuesday Afternoon
Wednesday Morning