Fierce!
They just get cuter the scarier they try to look! π
Those are some of the cutest owls I've seen. I guess they're mostly fluff, but they look a decent size considering they only weigh 3 ounces.
Owls have a high fluff ratio, I want to say 40-60% of their volume is feathers.
This picture of a Great Grey gives a good idea of it. The GG is up at the higher percentage.
Saw Whets are so cute, and they're like snowflakes: each one seems a bit different then the last.
How do they hide their giant bobble head? Amazing cuties. Glad the rescue was successful.
They blend back into the background when they've gotten satisfactory attention.
I knew they loved the attention!
I've read some accounts of people saying many of the Saw Whets come from so deep in the Canadian wilderness that many have never seen a human before, so when they're caught for banding, they don't really know what to make of us.
Must feel like an alien abduction!
I recently learned that dreaming of/seeing owls is apparently a sign of alien abduction according to some people. So it's kinda funny to think of it the other way.
They're all excited to migrate, then wham!, caught in a net, only to be man handled, tagged, and measured by strange creatures with bright lights, and then just as randomly, be dropped back where you were to carry on like nothing ever happened. Very alien abduction to me!
I keep meaning to rewatch The Fourth Kind, as I remember that movie having owl imagery in it, like all the creepy "the owls aren't what they seem" stuff from Twin Peaks. That's another alien abduction movie.
Some cultures supposedly see owls as bad ones and kill them on sight, so thinking they're aliens and not messing with them seems preferable.
The way they treat human handling and human waste in the movie Happy Feet is quite like that. Very funny.
The photoshops are one thing, but I do not have the patience to learn Blender to animate dancing Saw Whets, no matter how much I may want to right now! π
Edit: This seems to have needed an /s
That was a weird downvote. Have an updoot to balance things out.
Oh, good. I was worried it was you I accidentally offended. I try my best to avoid anything that may prickle someone the wrong way, especially in this group, yet there's always at least 1 or 2 that find something objectionable. As long as it isn't one of you regular guys. I really value all of you that participate here.
Sβall good, man π
Yeyy! Even more owls in towels on Lemmy!!
Toweled owls and ones in cups and cans will always be shared!
Somehow [animal] in [object] is a great combinaison.
Cutest burrito ever.
If only Chipotle sold these!
Wait, a stick of butter of 100 grammes? Where? Is it not 125g everywhere?
Not in my house at least.
Looks like our butter comes by the pound, so we get 4 x 4oz sticks to make 16oz, or 1 pound.
In France, we usually get the butter in bricks of half a pound. A metric pound. So a 250g block. And the half size portion, that would be the closest to the stick is a quater of metric pound, that is a 8th of a kilogramme: 125g.
Very interesting! I've never heard of a metric pound, but it makes sense. It's strange to hear of anything metric in a context where it's not divisible by 10. 125 is still a nice number, but I'd have guessed 100g sticks, but the method you explained feels like it makes perfect sense also.
100 g is nice as well. No need to much better especially when living alone.
French butter brick have little marks so we can cut into 5 pieces of 50g. Very practical to cook with.
I wish ours had marks on the butter itself. The wrapper has the marks, but once you take that off, you're on your own and most people don't use a scale here for cooking.
Well the mark are on the package but if you are a bit careful, you take butter for toast on one side only and your can take your measurement cutting the butter from the other side.
Ah, I thought they molded it in for you and I was jealous. π
I keep cooking butter and regular use butter to avoid uneven chunks.
Superbowl
For owls that are superb.