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Thursday, June 19, 2025 at 9:23 AM
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Eastern screech owl was a most welcome visitor

Eastern screech owl was a most welcome visitor
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I’ve had lots of wildlife use my backyard birdbath, including white-tailed deer, a gray fox, squirrels and black vultures.


On a recent early evening, I was surprised to see a brand new visitor – a small eastern screech owl. It was splashing around and having a high old time.


I have heard screech owls at early nightfall around my place and their high-pitched cry sounds like a cross between a horse whinny and a lady’s scream. Not exactly music to retire to. But this is the first time I’ve seen this plucky little creature cavorting in my birdbath.


It was a most welcome visitor and I got a kick out of watching it splash around. I have an owl nest box on the side of my garage, so maybe this visitor will become a permanent resident. I sure hope so.


Found in the eastern half of the U.S., this small, mostly nocturnal owl, has piercing yellow eyes and prominent ear tufts. It is mostly gray and lives in tree cavities and human-provided houses such as mine.


Eastern screech owls dine primarily on large insects, spiders, scorpions, snails and earthworms. They swallow their prey whole and then excrete the remnants as small, hard pellets.


This owl breeds in late winter and early spring and if you would like to see one, just put up a nest box and install a birdbath. If you provide these, hopefully one will come.


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