I got thinking about a pet Short Eared owl I had back in the early 70's. I had him for about 7/8 years before Barney passed away. If you have or had a pet owl I would like to hear about your experience.
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The vet told me to feed Barney chicken necks/gizzards & live mice. We'd also feed him diced up red meat. He had to have the mice so he could regurgitate the fur ball for his digestive tract health.what did you feed it?
"WHO" are you asking exactly?I got thinking about a pet Short Eared owl I had back in the early 70's. I had him for about 7/8 years before Barney passed away. If you have or had a pet owl I would like to hear about your experience.
D/A; I absolutely assure you a short eared owl makes the BEST of pets! On top of that they BOND for life with their mate. Barney was a wounded owl as some ruthless bass-turd scatter gunned the poor little fart(destroyed his left wing) leaving him to die a slow death, so he didn't get to have a mate after I got him. Soooo Barney just adopted me & eventually my entire family! S/E owls are extremely affectionate/playful & dedicated. As far as intelligent they have BIG heads with BIG ear canals & small brains. I was stroking Barneys mask(he just loved this!) with the tip of my index finger one evening down in the basement, & the edge of his mask(above & to the outside of his left eye just came lose. It shocked me because I thought his face had come lose & was falling off his head. As I pulled his mask out further I seen all this purplish/pinkish colored membrane that I took as infection/putrid rotten flesh.Beautiful animals. Not sure what kind of pet they'd make though. They don't even look like birds. They also seem much more intelligent