‘ Transactions o f the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh.’ .............I have recently been favoured by Dr. Edmonstone
with the following notice respecting this beautiful b ird :— ‘ The first time I saw it was in 1808, when an
individual had been shot by a lad, and hung up as a scarecrow. My next opportunity o f seeing one was in
the spring o f 1812, when I succeeded in shootiug the individual, the skin o f which I presented, about a
month or two afterwards, to my friend Mr. Bullock. He had seen the bird in Orkney in 1812 ; but this
was the first specimen he had obtained, and it was the first recorded instance o f its being killed in Britain.
I t coutinued to be exhibited in his collection till its dispersion.’ ”
Mr. Stevenson, o f Norwich, informs me that “ this beautiful species has occurred in Norfolk in several
well-authenticated instances, although an interval of nearly thirty years elapsed between the appearance of
the earlier specimens and those more recently obtained. Two examples are recorded in Hunt’s ‘ Norfolk
Birds ’ to have been taken in this county—one in April 1814, and another in January 1820. O f these, the
former was killed at Felbrigg, the latter a t Gunton, both in the vicinity of the coast near Cromer. From
that time I can find no record o f its appearance until 1844, when a fine specimen was shot a t Beeston, also
near Cromer. In the early part o f 1847 a large White Owl was seen more than once in the neighbourhood
of Brooke; and in 1849-50 no less than three were met with in different parts o f the county in the short
space o f six months. Of these, the first was seen, but not shot, a t Swannington, during the autumn o f 1849;
the second, a young male, was also shot a t Beeston ; and the third, a young male, though more advanced iu
plumage, was killed at St. Faith’s, iu February of the same year. I know of none since.”
Similar instances might be given o f the accidental occurrence o f this bird in nearly every county of
England and of its still more frequent occurrence in Ire lan d ; but these visits do not appear to be regulated
by any fixed laws: to detail, therefore, where every specimen has been killed, would be useless; but I may
mention that the ' M orning Advertiser ’ o f November 10, 1859, contained the following paragraph respecting
this b ird :—
“ Snowy Owl (Sarnia nyctea).—A very perfect specimen of this beautiful Owl was lately shot on the open
moor at Knockie, in Invernesshire; it was stalked and shot with a rifle at eighty yards’ distance. The extent
of the outspread wings is 4 feet 9 inches; length 22 inches; weight 3 lbs. 5 oz.; plumage pure white, barred
and spotted with dark brown.”
Speaking of the Snowy Owl, as observed by him in Lapland, Mr. Wheelwright says:—
“ Considering the number of eggs—eight or nine— that the Snowy Owl lays, and the wild inaccessible
nature of the country in which its nest is usually built, I cannot help wondering that this bird is not more
common on these fells; but if we take into consideration the immense fell-tract stretching from the Dovre-
fell, in Norway, right up to the North Cape, and think of the thousands o f acres whereon human foot
never treads, but over which these birds have almost an undisputed range, our wonder ceases. The old
birds appear rarely to leave the high fells ; and if we want them, we must seek them in their wild mountain
home. They appear, however, to make periodical migrations after the Lemming, and therefore, in some
seasons, are common in districts where they have perhaps not appeared for years. Still I fancy the Snowy
Owl is more local than erratic.
“ An opinion is held here that the Snowy Owl becomes whiter in the winter (which I think very
probable), and that the female is always purer in colour than the male. I t is clearly a diurnal b ird ; for
any day when we went out on the fells we could see the White Owl perched on a distant rock watching us,
or beating over the fells with a stately measured flight—always, however, out o f gunshot. Its shriek, when
on the wing, resembles a loud ‘ krau-au,’ repeated three or four tim es; but it is seldom heard except when
the bird is excited. Some of the movements o f this bird are very extraordinary, and I once saw one
fall from a considerable height on to the ground, where it lay for a time perfectly motionless, with
outstretched wings, as if it were shot. I tried to creep up within gunshot; but it rose out of distance, and
sailed away, uttering a wild loud cry, “ Rick, rick, rick,” as if mocking me.
“ The egg of the Snowy Owl measures ju st the same iu length as that of the Eagle Owl ( 2 f inches); its
breadth is I f inch, that o f the Eagle Owl being 2 inches full. The nest was nothing more than a large
ball of reindeer moss, placed on the ledge o f a bare fell. The old birds appeared to guard it most jealously;
in fact the Laps often kill them with a stick when they are robbing the nest.”— Field, Jan. 31, 1863.
The Snowy Owl bears confinement remarkably well, as evidenced by the state o f contentment in which
several examples have lived, in the Gardens of the Zoological Society, for many years.
Much variation occurs in the plumage o f this species, some individuals, of both sexes, being entirely
white, while others are more or less numerously marked and barred with brown.
The front figure in the Plate represents a female, in the barred (and probably adult) state of plumage, about
two-thirds o f the natural size.