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US Wild Animal Rescue Database: Animal Help Now
International Wildlife Rescues: RescueShelter.com
Australia Rescue Help: WIRES
Germany-Austria-Switzerland-Italy Wild Bird Rescue: wildvogelhilfe.org
If you find an injured owl:
Note your exact location so the owl can be released back where it came from. Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitation specialist to get correct advice and immediate assistance.
Minimize stress for the owl. If you can catch it, toss a towel or sweater over it and get it in a cardboard box or pet carrier. It should have room to be comfortable but not so much it can panic and injure itself. If you can’t catch it, keep people and animals away until help can come.
Do not give food or water! If you feed them the wrong thing or give them water improperly, you can accidentally kill them. It can also cause problems if they require anesthesia once help arrives, complicating procedures and costing valuable time.
If it is a baby owl, and it looks safe and uninjured, leave it be. Time on the ground is part of their growing up. They can fly to some extent and climb trees. If animals or people are nearby, put it up on a branch so it’s safe. If it’s injured, follow the above advice.
For more detailed help, see the OwlPages Rescue page.
Community Rules:
Posts must be about owls. Especially appreciated are photographs (not AI) and scientific content, but artwork, articles, news stories, personal experiences and more are welcome too.
Be kind. If a post or comment bothers you, or strikes you as offensive in any way, please report it and moderators will take appropriate action.
AI is discouraged. If you feel strongly that the community would benefit from a post that involves AI you may submit it, but it might be removed if the moderators feel that it is low-effort or irrelevant.
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Cover girl?
You should have seen her grandma back in the day.

"Clever Girl."
Put your hand near the Screech and it will act just like that raptor! 😅
Perhaps offer a succulent cracker or dead mouse and your hand will fare better than the poor game warden?
The owls have never eaten in front of me, but if I'm quiet and unobtrusive, the hawks often will. Some of the crows will come right up and try to beat the others to the meaty bits too.
A pro po (sp?) of nothing, I just by happenstance discovered my apartment neighbor has a ball python.
Barely related beyond 'uncommon pet', but uh... I guess sorry, my dead mouse is now allocated to the danger noodle next door =P
Sneks gotta eat too. Owls eat sneks. I'm sure a snek would eat an owl, though that I've never seen.
Apropos (s is silent) is what you were looking for.
Its a fairly young and thus not yet huge constrictor, but given the relative size of what the owl in the image seems to be... yeah I'd give about even odds to either winning or it being a draw with mutual retreat.
But I've also never seen a constrictor and a bird fight each other, so I'm not really sure at all.
Maybe there is some kind of TierZoo video about this, lol.
Also thank you for the spelling correction =D
Pythons climb trees I believe? That could land them an egg or a pre-fledged birdy.
I am always happy to share any knowledge with you guys! You were pretty close, but for the silent letter, and your usage was correct, so I thought you did well using a word you weren't totally sure of.
Hah yeah, its a term I've used in speech for like 20 years... and then I realized I've never actually bothered to learn how to put it in writing properly.
But anyway, yeah, constrictors do often go for sleeping birds or nests in the wild, but I've not seen or heard of one ever like... aggressively attack an otherwise cogent and aware bird, that isn't already badly crippled or something.
They're subtle, not fast.
... Like the slow blade that passes through the personal shield in Dune.
As opposed to many other kinds of snakes, that will make very rapid, precise, aggressive attacks.
So I'm just having trouble trying to imagine how anything resembling a 'fair fight' would go between a constrictor and roughly comparably sized owl.
The owl can fuck up the constrictor with talons and maybe its beak, but getting that close puts it act extreme risk of being enveloped or getting a limb cruppled, and the owl is, imo, unlikely to do so much damage that it would seriously affect the constrictor, unless it is extremely peristent and also lucky.
Owl beaks are fairly weak from what I hear, but the talons are really set up to deliver some extreme leverage with some daggers for good measure. If it could return the squeeze so to say, it might give the snake second thoughts, especially if it gets a good poking in the process. Like you said though, I assume any healthy owl would just nope out of there before the snake could do its thing.
Alright, I'm glad we agree, and as representatives of our patron species, have established the logical framework for at least a general non aggression pact, lol.