Date: 4/27/26 6:51 am
From: Green Mountain Access <durand...>
Subject: Re: [VTBIRD] Owl call question
Their territories can overlap . Try the Cornell Lab All About Birds site and listen to the first listed Long-eared Owl sound . It might ring a bell .

----- Original Message -----
From: "Charlie Teske" <cteske140...>
To: "Vermont Birds" <VTBIRD...>
Sent: Monday, April 27, 2026 9:09:37 AM
Subject: Re: [VTBIRD] Owl call question

Last night I got the "who cooks for you." Same owl, or do they compete for territory?



On Sun, 26 Apr 2026 19:53:21 -0400, Ian Worley <iworley...> wrote:

Hi Charlie,

Yes, It would be helpful if you listened to some Northern saw-whet owl
recordings.  If you are able, note how an individual call (what you are
calling a hoot) ends.  Also, it is possible that the bird will give an
entirely different call at times. So don't be surprised.

Ian

On 4/26/2026 6:22 PM, Vermont Green Mountain Access wrote:
> Sawhet owl?
> Sent from my iPad
>
>> On Apr 26, 2026, at 2:19 PM, Charlie Teske wrote:
>>
>> 9:30 at night in hemlock trees just across a brook. I'll listen tonight re timing of hoots.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, 26 Apr 2026 10:28:02 -0400, Ian Worley wrote:
>>
>> Hi. Nice puzzle! Can you describe in detail a single hoot? How long
>> was each hoot? How long between each hoot? Did the hoots vary at all?
>> Distance from you?
>>
>> Time of night? What kind of woods? I don't remember where you live.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Ian
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>> On 4/26/2026 10:08 AM, Charlie Teske wrote:
>>> Last night we had an owl repeat a "hoot" at short intervals for several minutes. No "who cooks for you" or other song like the barred or great-horned ones we've had in the woods previously.
>>> Is anyone familiar with this communication?
>>

 
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