View allAll Photos Tagged owlets
A great view of the Tawny Owlet from my last outing to the roost site. Taken on the 16th May with my Nikon D70. I have not been for a few weeks now, so i hope they are still doing well.....
A family of three owlets have been raised in a local cemetery. They have been great to watch and have grown well. They are flying more each evening so will soon no longer be reliant on Mum for food.
Saturday to check on the Great Horned Owl family after the rains cleared out. The owlet was posing with mom.
This baby Great Horned Owl was not where he was supposed to be! But a cemetery is a peaceful place for a nap!
Tucson Botanical Gardens, Butterfly Magic, Tucson, AZ Oct 11, 2010 — I do not try to pass myself off as an expert, or even a novice when it comes to identifying insects, but I believe this to be a Tamarindi Owlet who makes Central and South America home.
The Butterfly Magic is a great place to go on a nice cold day!
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I imported and tagged the photo with Photo Mechanic. I used Adobe Lightroom for adding color profiles, and basic adjustments. I spruced-up the image using the Topaz plug-ins: Denoise, Detail, and Adjust, then touched-up the image using Adobe Photoshop.
PENTAX 645D
SMC Pentax-A 645 120mm ƒ4 Macro
ISO 800, ƒ22, 1/125
revisited nest from last week and got lucky
Great Horned Owl and Owlet
The Owlets eyes make me laugh
Another first from our last trip to Nyungwe, Rwanda: a Red-Chested Owlet, given away by the fact the he was pissing off virtually every other bird in the neighborhood.
Little Owl (Owlets)
One of I think 3 young Little Owls which seem to be doing quite well at this nest site.
Spotted owlets (Athene brama) in a cozy huddle enjoying winter sun in New Forest, Dehradun, India. They seem to use the same place more often and my earlier photograph was also on the same spot.
Back on April 19th I posted an image of an adult Owl. I had also got shots of another Owl in the same area, so I figured they were a nesting pair. I could not find a nest and for several visits they were only found roosting, no apparent nest activity. Today I got confirmation for what I suspected, there in the tree was a big fluffy Owlet! Then I noticed a second right over my head. You'll probably be seeing more of the whole family in he near future ;-)
This is one of two Great Horned Owlets in staying safe in the cavity of the tree. The other owlet is behind and lower where it can't be seen. They are really hard to spot in nature, as you can tell by the excellent camouflage. Photographed in Silverwood Park in New Brighton, Minnesota. If you like this image, I invite you to please share or see more (without watermark) at patti-deters.artistwebsites.com
The jungle owlet, or barred jungle owlet, is found in the Indian Subcontinent. The species is often found singly, in pairs or small groups and are usually detected by their calls at dawn and dusk. - Courtesy Wikipedia
A couple of years ago we came upon this Great Horned Owlet in Southern Ontario, Canada. wp.me/p71NGf-7iY
The owlets picked the worst time to leave the nest as we had rain for almost 3 weeks straight. This one stayed in the same place for 2 days, never moved an inch.
Tawny Owlets (Strix aluco)
Angus, Scotland.
June 2018
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Sample Image:
I've posted way more images than I usually do on one day. This is because I went shooting with a friend and we shots lots of the same shots and I wanted him to see the variety of choices that I made in cropping and processing. Light conditions were poor, so many of these are shot at ISO 1600, with DxO's PRIME noise reduction applied during Raw conversion.
This shot is Manual mode, but I exposed almost 2-stops over to get good detail on the owlet.