Farm, near this city, with three young ones in it. The luxurious and voracious habits of the Owl may be
imagined from the contents of this nest, which consisted of two leverets, one rabbit, three blackbirds, one
thrush, and two large trout. They were all fresh, and had been apparently caught during the night.”
This statement interested me so much, that I requested a friend then living in Bath to ascertain who was its
a u th o r; and the following is an extract from a letter o f the writer, which was immediately transmitted to m e :—
“ You may rely upon it that the article entitled ‘ An Owl’s Larder ’ is strictly t ru e : when I sent it to the
'B a th Journal,’ I felt convinced that most persons would doubt its being so. The pair o f birds alluded to
built their nest and fostered their young in the spring o f this year at Burnett’s Farm, near Saltford. I t was
the great quantity of fresh-killed food which attracted my attention and induced me to make a note o f it.”
Were I to enumerate all the localities in England and Scotland which are inhabited by the Brown Owl, I
might fill many pages to no purpose; I may mention, however, the great woods of Tregothnan, the seat o f
Viscount Falmouth, in Cornwall, where, if it be not strictly preserved, it a t all times enjoys the friendship o f
the noble proprietor. Keepers will, however, often retain their own opinions, in spite o f advice and remonstrance,
and I fear the poor bird finds but little favour in that quarter. In the romantic and beautiful
woods on the banks of the Thames, at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire, the Brown Owl lives in comparative
safety, breeding yearly in the deserted fox-holes and hollow tre e s ; and it gives me great pleasure to say
that the Duchess o f Sutherland extends to it the most friendly protection. Within a week o f the time I am
writing (April 8, 1864), a t the close o f the most wonderful evening carols o f Thrushes and Blackbirds I
ever heard, the Brown Owl commenced his nightly serenade, his hollow hoo-hoo-hoo resounding over the
water until it was lost in the distance. At Elveden, in Norfolk, the bird has always been befriended by those
excellent ornithologists Alfred and Edward Newton, Esqrs., as will be seen from a note given below from
the ‘ O otheca Wolleyana.’ I might go on particularizing many o ther friends whose estates the bird frequents,
and who favour it with their protection. I f allowed to do so, the Brown Owl would contentedly live in any
o f the wooded districts of England and Wales and the southern parts o f Scotland In the far north of the
latter country it becomes more scarce; and I believe we have no authentic account of its having been killed
in Ireland. On the Continent the Brown Owl enjoys a wide range, for it is found everywhere except in the
extreme n o rth ; it also occurs in Northern Africa, and doubtless in Asia Minor and P e rsia ; while the Himalayas
are frequented by an Owl so closely resembling it, that it can scarcely be regarded as distinct.
“ From 1844, and probably for a much longer time,” says Mr. A. Newton, “ a pair of Brown Owls had
frequented some clumps o fo ld elms near the house a t Elveden. There were three o f these clumps, in one
o r the other o f which they invariably laid their eggs. The trees were o f considerable age, and mostly quite
hollow, with an abundance of convenient nesting-places. By waiting quietly about an hour after sunset, my
brother Edward or myself could generally discover whereabouts the Owls had taken up their quarters for
the season; but it sometimes happened that we did not find the nest until the young were hatched.
Throughout the winter the Owls kept pretty much in company; but towards the middle o f February they
used to separate, the cock often passing the day in a tree a t some distance from the hen. As soon as he
came out in the evening to hunt, he announced the fact by a vigorous hoot. Upon this the hen would
emerge silently, and, after a short flight, reply to her mate’s summons by a gentle note. He then generally
joined her, and they would fly off together to procure their food. The eggs were commonly laid about the
second week in March, and the nests were almost always easily accessible. I never knew these birds occupy
the same hole for two successive years; but, after an interval of two or three years, they would return to the
same spot. There were never any materials collected to form a nest, the large white eggs being always
placed on the rotten wood, which in most cases formed a sufficient bedding. We never found more than
four eggs in the nest. These often, but not always, proved to have been incubated for different lengths o f
time, showing that the hen bird sometimes began to sit as soon as the first egg was la id ; but we could never
divine what might be the cause o f this irregularity o f habit. After the young birds had left the nest, it was
some time before they began to shift for themselves; and they used to sit in the shadiest trees for the best
p art of the summer, uttering a plaintive note, like “ keewick,” night and day, almost without cessation, to
attract the attention of their parents, who assiduously brought them the spoils o f the chase.”
Every ornithologist who has directed his attention to our native birds must have noticed the g reat variation
which occurs in the colouring o f different examples o f the Brown Owl—differences so g reat as to have induced
even Linnaeus to regard them as specific, and to characterize them as such under the terms aluco and stridula;
and I must admit that I was for a long time sadly puzzled respecting them 5 the generally received opinion,
however, is that the rich russet-coloured birds are the young of the year, and that this colour gradually
disappears as the bird attains maturity, when it gives place in both sexes to a greyish brown: the former
state has given rise to the trivial name of Tawny Owl, the latter to that o f Brown Owl. When first hatched,
the young birds are clothed with a grey down, upon which, as they progress in stature, crescentic and
circular markings of reddish brown gradually appear, until they assume the colouring which has obtained
for them the former appellation.
The front figure in the accompanying Plate is somewhat less than the natural size.