Winter Pine-Great Horned Owl |
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Robert Bateman Winter Pine Great Horned Owl 1250 s/n 24 7/8 x 19 3/4 325.00 <ORDER NOW> |
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Owls
have long been creatures of myth and mystery.
The ancient Greeks associated them with Athena, the goddess of
wisdom - hence the expression “wise as an owl.”
In other cultures they have been held in awe or viewed with fear.
Sometimes they are seen as heralds of victory or harbingers of good
luck; at other times they are thought of as ill omens foretelling
disaster. The aura of mystery
surrounding owls is heightened by two of their characteristics: the
fringed feathers at the ends of their wings allow them to fly almost
soundlessly, and, with a few exceptions, they are nocturnal and therefore
often very difficult to see. The largest of our owls, the great
horned owl, is a creature of the dark night and the deep forest that nests
up high, usually in an abandoned hawk’s nest or in a tree cavity.
I have spent many hours searching for this fierce hunter, which
will catch and eat birds as large as a small goose and mammals as fleet as
the snowshoe hare. It also
dines on porcupine and skunk. If
I’m lucky, a noisy mob of crows especially reprehensible. (They have
good reason for this, since by night crows become one of this owl’s
prey.) If they find a great horned owl trying to take a nap, they wild
scold it relentlessly. - Robert
Bateman |