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And just how do you know when an owl is sick enough to allow someone to get a net over its head?
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moss wrote:
A healthy Great Horned Owl will not allow a person to place a net over it, never mind get into the same tree with it.
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Well was this bird hanging upside down or something? How did you guess it wouldn't just move to the next tree?
Great Horned Owl have large and very sharp talons, some caution was required in handling.
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moss wrote:
I was able to get it into the net by using the net to push it off the branch, it then flipped upside down with talons still grabbing the branch. With a little side pressure I encouraged it to let go and it dropped into the net.
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...It may have been too sick to survive that he/she allowed you to get so close to it during the rescue without trying to at least fly or move away.
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