I always keep my cupboards stocked with goodies just in case I’m up at 2 a.m. watching Bob’s Burgers and suddenly get hit with a serious case of the munchies. Since owls probably don’t have boxes of Teddy Grahams and Cheez-Its readily available in their trees of residence, they usually have to put in the extra effort to satiate their late-night cravings.
One owl in particular went the full mile, flying all the way up into a 10th story apartment in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho to terrorize and snack on two caged canaries. Talk about a hoo-hoo-t birdy buffet.
Sue Sausser said she awakened Sunday to find bird droppings and feathers all over her apartment, the Coeur d’Alene Press reported.
Sausser found the brownish, yellow-eyed owl between the wall and the chest of drawers on which the bird cage sits. It flew out the door and perched on their balcony railing long enough for them to take a few pictures. Don Sausser estimated the owl was 6 to 8 inches tall.
Sue and Don Sausser found one of their canaries dead in the cage. The other seemed jumpy and anxious, they said.
Beth Paragamian, wildlife education specialist with for Idaho Fish and Game and the Bureau of Land Management, said it’s strange that an owl would be flying so high in an area without many tall trees and surprising that it would enter a residence, much less open a bird cage.
“That is very unusual,” she said.
Don Sausser said they’ll likely still leave their sliding glass door open on warm summer evenings, but plan to use twist ties to secure the door on the bird cage.