From WXOW
Southeastern Minnesota will again be the perch for the International Festival of Owls.
It happens from March 7 through March 9 in Houston. For more information, click here.
Organizers say the event includes just about everything you can think of related to owls: ambassador owls from the International Owl Center and visiting owls from the Illinois Raptor Center (including a Snowy Owl), owl prowls to call in wild owls, owl nest box building, owl pellet dissection, owl crafts, owl face painting, a kids’ owl calling contest, vendors of all manner of owl products, owl-themed food, and more.
This year’s World Owl Hall of Fame Award winners, selected by a panel of five owl experts from four continents, are Scott Rashid from Colorado and Rudolf Schaaf from Germany.
Scott Rashid is the founder and director of the Colorado Avian Research and Rehabilitation Institute (CARRI). He has spent 27 years working with owls, banding more than 1,400 owls of 10 species, delivering hundreds of educational programs, and live streaming owl nests to the world. Rashid has put up more than 150 owl nest boxes, has published many popular and scientific articles, and rehabilitates wild owls in need of help. To top it off, he has written several books about owls, generously illustrated with his own artwork and photographs. He will be the keynote speaker at this year’s International Festival of Owls.
Rudolf Schaaf from Germany is being honored with a Special Achievement Award for his more than 30 years of dedication to the publication of international owl research, conservation and cultural aspects in KAUZBRIEF, a publication of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Eulenschutz im Landkreis Ludwigsburg (owl protection and research group). One thousand copies of each issue are disseminated to members of owl groups and universities conducting owl research. Schaaf is unable to attend in person but has created a 30-minute presentation that will also be shown at the Festival.
Former World Owl Hall of Fame Award winner Raju Acharya from Nepal will also attend this year’s festival and will give a presentation. Acharya has created a sister festival that takes place in early February: the Nepal Owl Festival.
For more information, click here.
That dude in the bottom left of the picture is loving this. What wonder.
Loving that enthusiasm!