OWLS. 



For some reason owls have always been treated with a certain amount of 

 ridicule and contempt. In the minds of the ignorant and superstitious they were 

 associated with cats and witches, and were supposed to possess a certain amount 

 of influence with the lattei-, whose orgies they entered into with a good deal of 

 spirit. In mythology, however, this bird was treated respectfully. Minerva, the 

 goddess of wisdom, selected it as her attendant, and "as wise as an owl" has 

 passed into a proverb by reason thereof. 



Most of the owls seen in the day-time appear to be stupid, clumsy and inert 

 creatures, as they sit winking and blinking in the unaccustomed light, striving 

 as much as po.ssible to shade their wonderful eyes from the too-powerful rays ; 

 but see these birds at dusk and after — what a transformation takes place ! They 

 are then as alert as any hawk ; their soft plumage enables them to skim noise- 

 lessly around our farm buildings and over the fields in search of their food, 

 unlucky then is the mouse or rat that ventures to .show itself, or even utter a 

 squeak from its hiding place in the grass, (for an owl's ears are as wonderfully 

 constructed as its eyes, and their hearing is as acute as their sight). The fate of 

 that mouse will be sealed, and it will vex the farmer no more. 



Some of the owls however, are day feeders — the Snowy Owl and the Hawk 

 Owl I think entirely so — while the Great Homed Owl seems to be almost as 

 active on dull days as at night ; and whether the day be bright or dull these birds 

 •can always see well enough to take care of themselves and keep out of the range 

 ■of a gun. In the cultivated poi-tions of the Province of Ontario we have five 

 species of owls that may be treated here as residents. They are not strictly so, 

 as there is a certain migratory movement amongst them, caused probably by the 

 failui-e or abundance of their food supply, which may cause them to either leave 

 certain districts for a time or gather there in larger numbers than usual. Many 

 instances are on record of plagues of mice having been stayed and the trouble 

 removed by the arrival on the infested spot of large numbers of owls ; these birds 

 rapidly killed off the mice and then scattered again. Our resident species are the 

 Great-Horned Owl, Long-eared Owl, Short-eared Owl, Barred Owl and Screech 

 Owl. 



The Great Horned Owl, or "Cat Owl," as it is often called, is the only one I 

 liave ever know to attack poultry, and it can work havoc amongst them if they 

 are left out to roost in unprotected places. The destruction of this owl is cer- 

 tainly justifiable and necessary whei-e it has taken up its quarters in a locality in 

 which poultry is kept. It also captures great quantities of our favorite game 

 birds, more particularly Ruffed Grouse, many a brood of which goes to .satisfy the 

 hunger of the Horned Owl's family, and are so lost to the sportsman. But as 

 against the charge of poultry and game killing which has been proven against it, 

 tbis owl has some redeeming qualities. It kills great numbers of rats, mice, 

 squirrels and other rodents that are injurious to farmers, and sti'ange to say it 

 seems to be a determined enemy to the skunk. Numbers of cases have been 

 cited in which the flesh and hair of this animal have been found in the .stomachs 

 of these owls, moi-e particularl}' in the spring, and I know that fully one-half of 

 the bodies of these birds that I have handled, were well perfumed with the odor 

 ■of skunk — in many cases so much so, that I have had to throw away many fine 

 specimens the smell being quite unbearable. Possibly these birds are fond of 

 strong odor, for those whose feathers are not scented with skunk perfumery, 

 have generally a sf.rong odor of muskrat, the flesh of which they also appreciate. 

 I have frequently known them to hunt and kill these rats in the spring, during 



