Post
by Sally » Fri Nov 05, 2010 1:41 am
Owls are very precocious, mature quite early. I was in the bird room today, and heard a very soft, tiny Owl song. Peeked around the corner, and here sat a little juvenile, barely two months old, practicing his song--so sweet. Too bad I didn't have colored plastic bands on them, so I could ID the one that was singing.
The man who got me started on Owls told me they should be at least 9 months old before being allowed to breed. My babies all try to have clutches before 9 months, and sometimes I have to separate them to get them to wait.
Some of my male Owls are not good about singing, so it is hard for me to sex them. Today, I happened to have an empty cage above one that held 4 Owls. I know one is a hen, but which one? I needed to catch a male, so I caught up one I was pretty sure was a male, placed him in the cage above so he was out of sight of the others but could hear them, and within minutes, he was singing. I've tried putting them in a separate cage but where they could see each other, and they didn't seem to be as willing to sing.
3 Purple Grenadiers, 1 Goldbreast + 1 cat.
National Finch & Softbill Society -
http://www.nfss.org