Originally Posted by
Insidious
I saw my first Barn Owl. In England and Scotland they are relatively easy to see but in Northern Ireland they are exceptionally rare and anyone who knows where they are (Bird ringers, conservationists) don't give out info - which is understandable.
A few factors make them difficult to see here. One is the rarity (could be between just 8-15 pairs for the entirety of Northern Ireland) but they are also renowned for being extremely nocturnal here, whereas in England they are quite Crepuscular - loads of photographers get them at Dawn and Dusk.
In England about 80% of the diet would be the Field Vole and those aren't present in Northern Ireland. We also don't have Tawny Owls, which bully the Barn Owl, so a theory I have is that the Barn Owl might be more nocturnal here as they don't have to avoid the Tawny - but it's just a theory. It could be that Field Voles are active at Dawn and Dusk - hard to say.
What made it especially lovely is I got a Barn Owl print for a good friend recently and she had sent me a picture literally as I was looking at the Owl of the print at the top of her stairs - extremely serendipitous timing.
I have been trying to see a Barn Owl in NI for years - countless attempts at night time on various bits of farmland, endless false leads, discussions with farmers and land owners, boxes I have built to encourage them and freezing cold all-nighters in uncomfortable terrain.
Tuesday I got my first and there ended up being a second one. Went again last night and got reasonable pictures and video as I was in my bag hide (think of the invisibility cloak in Harry Potter films draped over me, thin camouflaged mesh) and thus unlikely to disturb the Bird.
Genuinely burst into tears on the Tuesday which I can expect many wouldn't understand but it was just a brilliant moment for me after so many years of trying - and yet if I went to somewhere like Norfolk I could probably see one in about half an hour! It's the sheer rarity/challenge of getting one here that upped the experience a lot.
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