This past Saturday night I saw an owl in a tree branch. The branch was over the entrance to a path in a park near my home. On the branch, clear as the night, was the owl. It was dark, a
bit hazy because of the recent rain, but there was the owl, resting on a branch
about 40-feet overhead. I didn’t see the owl completely. I couldn’t see his body
or wings or even his beak. But I saw his eyes, looking out across the parking
lot and sparkling from the reflections of street lights. He was there, and I would guess, looking for his next meal. Owls hunt at night and I had the good fortune to see one on this night.
To be honest, I wasn’t so sure what I was seeing was really
an owl. I knew there owls in the park because a local community group, Friends
of Sligo Creek Park, posted a picture of the type of owl that lives in the
park. I don't remember the type of owl, but there are owls where I stroll and I was looking at one.But was this one of those owls?
I saw reflections in his eyes, those were clear lights. Little
sparks of green twinkles, sparks, peering out from the branch looking for a
mouse or rabbit for dinner. I walked around the tree, looking for some movement
in his eyes, to see the hunter surveying the land below for prey and food. I thought I
saw the head swivel. Turning even if only slowly. I was skeptical.
If this was really an owl, how could I be sure?
I scanned the other trees and branches for more owls. None
were there. I did not find any other owls, no eyes, no reflections from eyes, and
nothing that looked about the size of an owl. Owls were, I thought, clever at
camouflage and blended into their surroundings. Naturally, I wouldn’t see them,
even when looking for them. Still, what I saw could be a single owl, perched on
the branch.
I was pretty sure it was an owl because I knew they were in
the park, it was night, owls hunt at night, and I was positive I saw
reflections from his eyes. I started to convince myself I saw this bird of prey.
To be honest with myself, I also saw reflections from the lower part of the
owl---some area just below the tree branch where the owl was perched. Could it
be, I wondered, I was seeing reflections from his eyes above the branch and
reflections from his feathers below the branch? Not that feathers reflect light
but maybe so. Maybe they did, how could I know? And if the feathers do reflect light, it only showed this owl was there.
I went home and told my wife I had been looking at an owl in
the park. She was not impressed and dismissed my story with “So, what? Who
cares? You delayed coming home for an owl?!”
Today, while running in the park in the afternoon I visited
the same spot from last night to see if I had seen an owl. I didn’t think the
owl would still be there but I did think I might see some branch or something
in the tree that would disprove my owl siting. I couldn’t prove I had seen an
owl, but I could tell if I was fooling myself.
Here’s what I found:
The owl is perched on the branch. |
The real owl, nothing more than a balloon. |
When I realized what I had seen the night before, I pondered
possible explanations. Maybe I could find a way to keep my owl siting. There are,
to be sure, a few possibilities.
- The owl was there last night for real. He flew away and between the time he left and I looked today a balloon was caught in the branch. That’s certainly possible.
- The owl is a shape-changer; an owl at night and a balloon during the day. This is stretch but so what. It keeps my owl siting real and shape changers, while rare, exist in stories.
- There is a sorcerer in the neighborhood who turned the owl into a balloon today but let the owl be an owl last night. The owl is under a spell and, as others would say of me, so am I.
- Or, perhaps I just saw the balloon and nothing more.
It was great seeing the owl in the tree, my first time
seeing one in the park. I know it was a balloon, but the other explanations
make for a better story.
I write this not say I saw an owl, I didn’t. But sometimes
we think we see things, owls, people, etc. and we didn’t really see what we
thought we saw. It’s probably a good idea to keep an open mind and not be too sure of what we
see.
P.S. I’m still looking for an owl in the park. It would make a good story to see
the real thing.