Barn Owls! Barn Owls! Everywhere! 🔺 Catch Up on the Latest 🔺 th-cam.com/video/JoORQIEP2gE/w-d-xo.html 🔺Healer of Angels 🔺 Signed copy only from our site: www.gowildlife.org/healer-of-angels/ Kindle & Paperback from Amazon (with International delivery options): www.amazon.com/dp/B08YHXYLDH 🔺Mailing Lists🔺 www.gowildlife.org/lists/ Monthly Review and/or As-it-Happens + video notifications! 🔺Ways to help 🔺 TH-cam Donate Button (see top corner of video page) Donate at our site: www.gowildlife.org/ Donate at Facebook: facebook.com/southwestwildlifefoundation/ Donate Bitcoin: commerce.coinbase.com/checkout/50e24243-7b19-4a18-b300-db8eff66978a Purchase Martin's Book: www.gowildlife.org/healer-of-angels/ Rodent Pro Gift Certificates: www.gowildlife.org/get-involved/#add Cal Ranch Gift Card: www.calranch.com/c-a-l-ranch-virtual-gift-card-sku11113 Amazon Wishlist: www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/27F8KE8SUWJMD/? 🔺 Mail Donations 🔺 You are welcome to mail us a donation or call to ask any questions about our organization. Phone: (435) 586-4693 • (435) 590-1618 Address: P.O. Box 1907 Cedar City, UT 84721-1907 Checks Payable to: Southwest Wildlife Foundation of Utah Official Site: www.gowildlife.org TH-cam: th-cam.com/users/gowildlifeorg Facebook: facebook.com/southwestwildlifefoundation/ Twitter: twitter.com/swfgowildlife Instagram: instagram.com/swfgowildlife/ Web hosting generously provided by: www.pair.com 🔺 Channel Musician 🔺 Music on this channel has been donated by Casey. Check out Casey's new EP at: www.gowildlife.org/casey 🔺 Our Mission 🔺 Founded in 1997 in Cedar City Utah, we are a 501c3 non-profit organization dedicated to wildlife rescue, rehabilitation and education. _Rescue, Rehabilitate and Release_ The Southwest Wildlife Foundation of Utah (SWF) cares for more than 100 sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife annually. Restoring them to health and returning them to the wild is our primary goal. _Informing, Educating and Inspiring_ The SWF provides over 100 educational programs reaching over 30,000 people annually. We believe providing educational outreach programs to schools, scout groups and community events, with focus on children and families, will make the greatest impact in preserving our wildlife, the environment, our public lands and our resources for future generations to enjoy. _Martin Tyner_ Since age twelve, with a bird on his arm, Martin has captivated audiences sharing his knowledge and experience of his wildlife friends. At age nineteen, Martin was hired as curator of birds of prey at Busch Gardens, CA. He also worked in the movie and television industry training big cats, elephants, primates, sea mammals and raptors. “One of my greatest childhood fantasies was the desire to create a personal friendship with a wild eagle. I found myself with a love and fascination for these powerful creatures.” Martin Tyner is a federally licensed falconer, eagle falconer, wildlife rehabilitator, wildlife propagator, and wildlife and environmental educator. He has been providing wildlife and environmental programs throughout the western United States, to schools, scouts and community groups for over fifty years. “Grandpa believed in a very simple philosophy; that a person should get up every morning and do good. Doing good means that you do well for others and doing well means that you do good for yourself. There is nothing wrong with doing well, but Grandpa always believed in doing good.” Martin's book, Healer of Angels, reflects back on his life: from a young boy terrified of birds to becoming the first man in North America licensed to train a wild golden eagle in the ancient art of falconry. Through a heartwarming collection of true stories he describes his challenging transformation from a shy dyslexic teenager, to the founder and CEO of the Southwest Wildlife Foundation.
Barn owls are sobeautiful. Quite the posturing. Hope he has a wonderful rest of his life, raising lots of babies. Thank you for caring for those beautiful creatures and congrats on your new facility!
Yea exactly. There's NO way those two littlest ones would have survived in the nest with those older ones. They wouldn't have had a chance. That last egg probably would have hatched or did hatch depending how they "threw it out". Martin knew that too. That's why he was kind of worried about it. But there was nothing he could do. But what would have been probably 8 babies!! One nest that is a LOT. Nature is nature but I don't understand the point of mom laying that many eggs when there's basically ZERO chance of the smallest surviving. IDK why that would be in their genetics. But anyway. Glad all 7 were given a chance. They're great mousers 😀🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉7 lol
Sure is, I just would like for people to be able to tell them (in a way they can understand) "We mean you no harm", I'm pretty sure these people would like it too
This video is pure magic Martin and Susan. I'm always in awe of how gentle and patient you are with the critters, especially when they don't co-operate with you. Thank you for sharing ❤
Thanks for all you do. I have to turn the sound do when the raptors screech… my chickens are cuddling in my arms as I watch. They don’t like it. Glad you are doing well. Just thinking of Stryker this morning - he literally saved your life. The birds repaid your kindness.
Barn Owls, of all of the nocturnal raptors, are my most favorite bird. The beauty of their feathers, their color, the choices of their nesting locations, I just cannot get enough of them. I love all raptors but the Barn owl is the single most favorite. and although I love the diurnal raptors that get large, I especially love the smaller more agile diurnal raptors like the Peregrines Falcons, American Kestrels, Merlins, Northern Pygmy Owls and we also get the large ones as well in our region, even the migrating species that we only see during times of Migration we see a lot of Raptors here, and I love them all. I even had a Red-Tailed Hawk accidentally trap himself in my barn when he tried chasing my Chickens into the barn, which immediately freaking him out but not as badly as it did my Chickens! LOL but Red-Tailed Hawks are always around my region, they aren't vagrants, but residents. We had a Long-Eared Owl living in the trees near my farmhouse, I couldn't see him, but he made his presence known every night for quite a while, looking for a mate. I used to go out in the late evening just to listen to him. There was LOTS of food near my hobby farm, my Acreage alone must have had a mouse density of at least a thousand or more mice per acre of land I had. Not including all other choices of food animals he had, like Richardson's Ground Squirrels, we commonly call gophers. and other birds he could feed upon if they had the inclination like the Northern Flickers and the Yellow Shafted Flickers that were always after the Wild Strawberries that grew all over my front yard and amongst the 80-foot-tall Pines that lined my southern property line. That old Barn property looks fabulous, even though it is falling down, I love old homesteads, I would Love to do some metal detecting out there, especially since it was a stagecoach stop! I bet you could find some good old coins and other trinkets there.
We used to have a pair living in our eucalyptus trees as they hunted in the tall trees that hung over the street lights. They ate pretty well. One wind storm they’re nesting bough fell to the ground and they were exposed to us like they were we watched as they gradually found another bough to nest into. I’ve found they’re calls and moth like flight, silent but deadly to their prey to be unique. Thank you for helping them
I had one of these fly by me at night when I was in my parents' backyard and it made that raspy scream. Scared the everloving crap out of me. Realized afterward that it was a Barn Owl and was happy it was there as there were plenty of rodents in the area as our semirural property adjoined an open field.
In Poland we call Barn Owls "Płomykówki", "Płomień" being the Polish word for Flame (no idea why are they called like that) and in the pagan times they had a totemic significance, unfortunately it involved nailing a dead barn Owl to the door of your house to ward of evil spirits, nowadays it's treated as pure superstition and is done extremely rarely additionally it would be a very weird day to see a farmer that's unhappy to see a barn Owl living nearby since they hunt pests
I'll Name this one Owly.. Be it by Barn or be it by Storm, a new wing of life has just been born To be free is your goal but never it's free, with life and love you bend my knee's The flight-less ledge that delivers beyond, has made my heart sing this song Be free forever my little one's & may the screech within you contine on...
I saw a picture of a baby owl sleeping on its face a while ago and the caption said they sleep on their caces because their heads are too heavy to sleep upright. Do all baby owls sleep looking like a passed out student after partying too hard or is it only for some species?
You guys I have one or maybe a pair out in my back yard that go to “hoooootin” around midnight each night! I can never see it or him or her but boy do I hear it each night. I have pines in my backyard galore and about a five acres field of summer corn and fall soy beans full of tiny mice that come running into my garage every time they cut fields. Wonder how I can find where this thing is nesting.
Thats is unfortunate for the brood of 4. I bet the parents, mostly the mom, were looking around for them. They will keeo feeding them outside of the nest, even more so if all of them are together outside of the nest shelter
Barn Owls! Barn Owls! Everywhere!
🔺 Catch Up on the Latest 🔺
th-cam.com/video/JoORQIEP2gE/w-d-xo.html
🔺Healer of Angels 🔺
Signed copy only from our site:
www.gowildlife.org/healer-of-angels/
Kindle & Paperback from Amazon (with International delivery options):
www.amazon.com/dp/B08YHXYLDH
🔺Mailing Lists🔺
www.gowildlife.org/lists/
Monthly Review and/or As-it-Happens + video notifications!
🔺Ways to help 🔺
TH-cam Donate Button (see top corner of video page)
Donate at our site: www.gowildlife.org/
Donate at Facebook: facebook.com/southwestwildlifefoundation/
Donate Bitcoin: commerce.coinbase.com/checkout/50e24243-7b19-4a18-b300-db8eff66978a
Purchase Martin's Book: www.gowildlife.org/healer-of-angels/
Rodent Pro Gift Certificates: www.gowildlife.org/get-involved/#add
Cal Ranch Gift Card: www.calranch.com/c-a-l-ranch-virtual-gift-card-sku11113
Amazon Wishlist: www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/27F8KE8SUWJMD/?
🔺 Mail Donations 🔺
You are welcome to mail us a donation or call to ask any questions about our organization.
Phone: (435) 586-4693 • (435) 590-1618
Address: P.O. Box 1907
Cedar City, UT 84721-1907
Checks Payable to: Southwest Wildlife Foundation of Utah
Official Site: www.gowildlife.org
TH-cam: th-cam.com/users/gowildlifeorg
Facebook: facebook.com/southwestwildlifefoundation/
Twitter: twitter.com/swfgowildlife
Instagram: instagram.com/swfgowildlife/
Web hosting generously provided by: www.pair.com
🔺 Channel Musician 🔺
Music on this channel has been donated by Casey.
Check out Casey's new EP at:
www.gowildlife.org/casey
🔺 Our Mission 🔺
Founded in 1997 in Cedar City Utah, we are a 501c3 non-profit organization dedicated to wildlife rescue, rehabilitation and education.
_Rescue, Rehabilitate and Release_
The Southwest Wildlife Foundation of Utah (SWF) cares for more than 100 sick, injured and orphaned native wildlife annually. Restoring them to health and returning them to the wild is our primary goal.
_Informing, Educating and Inspiring_
The SWF provides over 100 educational programs reaching over 30,000 people annually. We believe providing educational outreach programs to schools, scout groups and community events, with focus on children and families, will make the greatest impact in preserving our wildlife, the environment, our public lands and our resources for future generations to enjoy.
_Martin Tyner_
Since age twelve, with a bird on his arm, Martin has captivated audiences sharing his knowledge and experience of his wildlife friends.
At age nineteen, Martin was hired as curator of birds of prey at Busch Gardens, CA. He also worked in the movie and television industry training big cats, elephants, primates, sea mammals and raptors.
“One of my greatest childhood fantasies was the desire to create a personal friendship with a wild eagle. I found myself with a love and fascination for these powerful creatures.”
Martin Tyner is a federally licensed falconer, eagle falconer, wildlife rehabilitator, wildlife propagator, and wildlife and environmental educator.
He has been providing wildlife and environmental programs throughout the western United States, to schools, scouts and community groups for over fifty years.
“Grandpa believed in a very simple philosophy; that a person should get up every morning and do good. Doing good means that you do well for others and doing well means that you do good for yourself. There is nothing wrong with doing well, but Grandpa always believed in doing good.”
Martin's book, Healer of Angels, reflects back on his life: from a young boy terrified of birds to becoming the first man in North America licensed to train a wild golden eagle in the ancient art of falconry.
Through a heartwarming collection of true stories he describes his challenging transformation from a shy dyslexic teenager, to the founder and CEO of the Southwest Wildlife Foundation.
God Bless you for all the amazing work and God Bless all wild things.🙏
Barn owls are sobeautiful. Quite the posturing. Hope he has a wonderful rest of his life, raising lots of babies. Thank you for caring for those beautiful creatures and congrats on your new facility!
Absolutely "A beautiful little owl!"
These are a couple of humans who I wish would live forever. Such selfless dedication is so rare in this world.
The littlest owl should be happy. There will always be enough food for him and “mama” will make sure he gets all he will eat!
Yea exactly. There's NO way those two littlest ones would have survived in the nest with those older ones. They wouldn't have had a chance. That last egg probably would have hatched or did hatch depending how they "threw it out". Martin knew that too. That's why he was kind of worried about it. But there was nothing he could do.
But what would have been probably 8 babies!! One nest that is a LOT. Nature is nature but I don't understand the point of mom laying that many eggs when there's basically ZERO chance of the smallest surviving. IDK why that would be in their genetics. But anyway. Glad all 7 were given a chance. They're great mousers 😀🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉7 lol
I love this channel! So educational! Also love robert e fuller’s channel!
I absolutely love the older one that was by itself and would hide behind the plant in the corner. They're all adorable.
I find the owl’s protective behavior is fascinating. He looks menacing for sure! 😮😊❤
Really, I think he looks pretty comical myself. Now the sound on the other hand… that’s truly terrifying.
Sure is, I just would like for people to be able to tell them (in a way they can understand) "We mean you no harm", I'm pretty sure these people would like it too
This video is pure magic Martin and Susan. I'm always in awe of how gentle and patient you are with the critters, especially when they don't co-operate with you. Thank you for sharing ❤
what's so fascinating is i didn't know barn owls lacked a crop. but goodness i thought baby owls looked so weird but they're oddly cute little aliens.
Look up a picture of owl without feathers, or dont because yea they are aliens alright
@@mechwarrior13 this made me laugh thank you LOL
Hi,love,love your channel!!! Keep up the great work you do.Those baby Barn Owls are so ugly they are cute!
They make an intimidating sound!
I have never seen so many barn owls.
Especially so many young barn owls 😊
Oooh!! He is mad at you!! If looks and that screech could get you, you’d be toast!! Love it!
How totally lovely and wild.
I love the tomohawk hair on the second owl. As you've said before the teeny babies are so ugly they're cutie pies. Thank you Martin and Susan
Martin and Susan, thank you so much
The very first bird I ever raised right out of the shell was so geeky looking that became its name. Geeky Bird.🥰
What a great creature ! Love the sound !!! Thank you for another great video !
so awesome.
the first time i saw an owl when i visited family in enoch i couldn't help but think it was an owl you helped raise haha
Have you ever, despite your best efforts, had an owl grow attached to you and refuse to leave or couldn't be released?
Thanks for all you do. I have to turn the sound do when the raptors screech… my chickens are cuddling in my arms as I watch. They don’t like it.
Glad you are doing well. Just thinking of Stryker this morning - he literally saved your life. The birds repaid your kindness.
Beautiful critters. 🫶🇳🇱
Barn Owls, of all of the nocturnal raptors, are my most favorite bird. The beauty of their feathers, their color, the choices of their nesting locations, I just cannot get enough of them. I love all raptors but the Barn owl is the single most favorite. and although I love the diurnal raptors that get large, I especially love the smaller more agile diurnal raptors like the Peregrines Falcons, American Kestrels, Merlins, Northern Pygmy Owls and we also get the large ones as well in our region, even the migrating species that we only see during times of Migration we see a lot of Raptors here, and I love them all. I even had a Red-Tailed Hawk accidentally trap himself in my barn when he tried chasing my Chickens into the barn, which immediately freaking him out but not as badly as it did my Chickens! LOL but Red-Tailed Hawks are always around my region, they aren't vagrants, but residents. We had a Long-Eared Owl living in the trees near my farmhouse, I couldn't see him, but he made his presence known every night for quite a while, looking for a mate. I used to go out in the late evening just to listen to him. There was LOTS of food near my hobby farm, my Acreage alone must have had a mouse density of at least a thousand or more mice per acre of land I had. Not including all other choices of food animals he had, like Richardson's Ground Squirrels, we commonly call gophers. and other birds he could feed upon if they had the inclination like the Northern Flickers and the Yellow Shafted Flickers that were always after the Wild Strawberries that grew all over my front yard and amongst the 80-foot-tall Pines that lined my southern property line. That old Barn property looks fabulous, even though it is falling down, I love old homesteads, I would Love to do some metal detecting out there, especially since it was a stagecoach stop! I bet you could find some good old coins and other trinkets there.
What lovely little animals! (with quite a voice!)
We used to have a pair living in our eucalyptus trees as they hunted in the tall trees that hung over the street lights. They ate pretty well. One wind storm they’re nesting bough fell to the ground and they were exposed to us like they were we watched as they gradually found another bough to nest into. I’ve found they’re calls and moth like flight, silent but deadly to their prey to be unique. Thank you for helping them
I had one of these fly by me at night when I was in my parents' backyard and it made that raspy scream. Scared the everloving crap out of me. Realized afterward that it was a Barn Owl and was happy it was there as there were plenty of rodents in the area as our semirural property adjoined an open field.
Thank you for being so kind to the owls!
I love barn owls so much. So beautiful and adorable. So happy the bbs are going home. ❤
Such fierce babies!!
The hissing sounds like a kitchen sprayer on full blast. Great montages. Thank you.
In Poland we call Barn Owls "Płomykówki", "Płomień" being the Polish word for Flame (no idea why are they called like that) and in the pagan times they had a totemic significance, unfortunately it involved nailing a dead barn Owl to the door of your house to ward of evil spirits, nowadays it's treated as pure superstition and is done extremely rarely additionally it would be a very weird day to see a farmer that's unhappy to see a barn Owl living nearby since they hunt pests
Interesting!
Lester we had barn owls in our barn where I was growing up. It was the best life I could have ever dreamed about.
Wow, what a beautiful owl
This video was pure enjoyment! :)
So adorable! Tysm! ❤
Not the sound I was expecting from an owl ha ha
Look up the sound of a Bald Eagle if you want to be surprised. The movie sound is not an eagle but an Hawk.
Look up on all about birds site and listen to adult barn owls! They are wicked sounding!
Thank you.
Martin God Bless you
Youre good people. I wish you the best
Love 💕 it ❤
I'll Name this one Owly..
Be it by Barn or be it by Storm, a new wing of life has just been born
To be free is your goal but never it's free, with life and love you bend my knee's
The flight-less ledge that delivers beyond, has made my heart sing this song
Be free forever my little one's & may the screech within you contine on...
Fascinating!
I saw a picture of a baby owl sleeping on its face a while ago and the caption said they sleep on their caces because their heads are too heavy to sleep upright. Do all baby owls sleep looking like a passed out student after partying too hard or is it only for some species?
Such cool looking birds, love them all❤❤
3:34 What a cutie 😘 kinda the routine of getting my son to eat vegetables
The level of grumpiness from the older one toward you is sick funny! Why release them right by the road tho?
Martin, you sure are brave!!
You guys I have one or maybe a pair out in my back yard that go to “hoooootin” around midnight each night! I can never see it or him or her but boy do I hear it each night. I have pines in my backyard galore and about a five acres field of summer corn and fall soy beans full of tiny mice that come running into my garage every time they cut fields. Wonder how I can find where this thing is nesting.
Thats is unfortunate for the brood of 4. I bet the parents, mostly the mom, were looking around for them. They will keeo feeding them outside of the nest, even more so if all of them are together outside of the nest shelter
FR, barn owls are so ugly before they get their feathers in. Used to see them around here, but too many ppl now. Shame. :(
Beautiful creature makes a sound like demon-spawn.
I loved the title of this video.
Bellissimo
It's almost a dance that he's doing for defence. 😳
14:26 Cute little fluff balls
That juvenile owlet is SO spoiled. 😠
❤
😍😍
🦉🦉🐁🍀
Why the long face? Insert joke
Oh Hell Naw!!!
when young and small how do you tell which is male and which is female
can they survive after release, when raised by humans? Thought once an owl ist imprint on human it's not capable living a real owl life.
Wish they would outlaw barbed wire fences