Last week I mentioned that seeing a barn owl in flight was the visual highlight of my trip to England. Today I’ll give you a taste of what it was like to watch this beautiful bird.
Barn owls (Tyto alba) live around the world (see map) but declined 50-70% in parts of their range after World War II due to intensive farming practices, the conversion of farmland to housing, and the introduction of pesticides. In the U.K. the population fell 70% by the 1980s. In North America they’re now endangered in Vermont, Connecticut and the Midwest, including Ohio.
Because barn owls are so secretive and rare in the U.S. I had seen only one in the wild — and it was roosting. I had never seen a barn owl fly. What a thrill it was to see one hunting the tall grass near the River Wensum in England.
The short video below is similar to my experience, though not the same owl.
I know I wouldn’t have seen a barn owl in Britain if it weren’t for the decades-long efforts of local wildlife agencies and trusts working to restore this bird to the English countryside. One such group is The Barn Owl Trust located in Devon near Dartmoor. Since 1988 they’ve worked to conserve barn owls and educate the public about these beautiful birds. Learn more in their video below.
Thanks to conservation efforts around the world, we’re still thrilled to see barn owls float by on silent wings.
(photo from Wikimedia Commons; click on the image to see the original. Flight sequence video from the BBO Wildlife Trust on YouTube. Video on the history of The Barn Owl Trust UK from YouTube)
There is a PBS show that explains how the owl is silent in flight. Very interesting show.