Actually Don – remember that during the day they are all out delivering mail for non-Muggles. That’s why they seem to switch around so much. And perhaps the real reason for the invasion J.
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Michael Smith MS GISP
State GIS Manager, Maine Office of GIS
State of Maine, Office of Information Technology
michael.smith _at_ maine.gov 207-215-5530
Board Member, Maine GeoLibrary
Education Chair, Maine GIS Users Group
State Rep, National States Geographic Information Council
State House Station 145
51 Commerce Drive
Augusta, ME 04333-0145
69o 47' 58.9"W 44o 21' 54.8"N
From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Don and Sherry Reimer
Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 10:15 AM
To: Doug Hitchcox
Subject: [Maine-birds] Owls Head airport
I stopped briefly around 9 am to scan the runways areas. A single snowy on the ground on RTE 73 (west) end of airport. This bird has sat in nearly the same spot for a couple days - near the plowed, paved end of the runway on right side and next to a runway light. These owls tend to somewhat blend with the snow, appearing as ivory-colored blobs against the whiter snow fields. I suspect other owls remain in this vicinity, shifting around throughout the day.
Don
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