Intimate owl life stories revealed in Carl Safina’s new book, ‘Alfie & Me”

Meet adorable owl Alfie.

On the surface, “Alfie & Me: What Owls Know, What Humans Believe is about a Long Island couple’s experiences trying to help an abandoned baby screech owl during the COVID-19 pandemic. But it’s really an exhaustively researched book about the myriad ways philosophers and religious folks have looked at humans’ relationships with the rest of nature over millennia.

Author Carl Safina and his wife Patricia named the abandoned owlet Alfie. They guessed Alfie was a she, but only time and behavior would tell. They expected to care for her only briefly. But complications such as failing to develop crucial flight feathers kept Alfie around longer than anticipated. She grew attached to her human family. Even when she could fly and live a normal owl life, she continued hanging around the Safinas’ three-quarter-acre property. This allowed Carl Safina to view her behavior — including courting, mating, and mothering — much more closely than most owl-loving humans could ever dream of.

Book cover reading "Alfie & Me: What Owls Know, What Humans Believe, by Carl Safina" featuring a photo of a brown and white owl.
Photo courtesy of W.W. Norton

The text alternates between Alfie updates and ponderous looks at humans. Carl Safina obviously spent a lot of time researching and thinking about how humans view nature. Some of the conclusions aren’t surprising. The book discusses Indigenous people considering themselves part of nature. Meanwhile, Christianity brings in ideas of a division between the spiritual and corporeal, disgust with the body, and a belief in having rightful dominion over the earth. This is a great read for people who like to contemplate these topics. Those with shorter attention spans may find themselves skipping ahead to see what happens with the owl.

A hand holding a baby owl.
Alfie in pitiful condition when first rescued. / Photo courtesy of W.W. Norton

Carl Safina is a very accomplished writer. Readers can picture tiny Alfie through descriptions like, “From where Alfie’s feet rested on a perch, she stood only about five inches tall. Adding perhaps three inches for her tail, she was roughly the length and color of a sweet potato, but in shape so oval as to be almost cylindrical, a bit like a beverage can.”

Like the pandemic, the book moves slowly. Spliced between philosophical passages, readers get the story of how Alfie begins to explore the world. She meets a male owl, whom Carl Safina dubs Plus One. The author is such a close observer of nature that the book can occasionally veer into owl porn, with a dose of critiquing how Alfie should be having sex. “Alfie was not moving her tail aside to accomplish the good, firm touch that’s necessary,” he writes. But like many of us, Alfie improves with practice. She becomes a mother.

Three owls in a tree.
Photo courtesy of W.W. Norton

“Alfie & Me” continues in the same vein. Deep dives into spirituality and philosophy supplement updates about Alfie and her family. Fans of Carl Safina’s books (“Becoming Wild” and “Beyond Words“) and his articles in Timethe Guardian, and the New York Times will savor this new 300+ page work.

Writer received a free copy of the book for review.

Owl swoops on dog, returns to attack owner in Massachusetts

The dog was uninjured but its owner suffered gash wounds to his head during the harrowing incident.

A Massachusetts man was attacked by an owl Monday night seconds after the raptor had swooped toward his dog.

Boston 25 News reported that Kenneth Wadness of Medfield suffered cuts to his head during the harrowing incident.

“This owl came and swooped right next to Micah and right by my elbow,” Wadness said. “He took off and I couldn’t see him [but] within 10 seconds he whacked me with his talons. He hit me in the back of my head.”

Wadness armed himself with a branch and carried his dog to his vehicle.

Andrew Vitz of the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife said the owl might have been protecting its territory as the birds are entering nesting season.

Vitz advised people to keep small pets inside at night.

Birds-of-prey attacks on pets are rare but sometimes occur.

In June 2022 a doorbell camera captured footage showing a bald eagle attempting to fly off with a pet Yorkie in Prince Rupert, British Columbia.

The footage shows the Yorkie crying out as a shadow appears overhead and the eagle swoops down to grab her from a porch. The eagle grabs but quickly releases the dog after banging into a container while attempting to take flight.

–Generic owl image courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

It’s superb owl Sunday, so please enjoy these cool bird pics

That’s not a typo, we promise.

The superb owl. Is this highly searched keyword a simple typo, or does it show just how much the world appreciates cool birds?

Probably the former, but FTW has room in its heart for football and owls. After all, these avian animals are fascinating creatures. With big round eyes and a neck that can rotate 270 degrees, owls deserve a little attention, even on Super Bowl Sunday.

Of course, year-round owl aficionados can always visit Reddit’s r/Superbowl community, a space “for owl lovers everywhere.” But if all you want is a simple owl-themed halftime show on game day, feel free to peruse this photo gallery of awesome owls.

For more amazing nature posts on everything from the sights at the Grand Canyon to the most gorgeous scuba diving destinations, head over to Outdoors Wire!

Can you spot the hidden owl? ‘Retweet when you find it’

Can you spot the hidden owl on the image accompanying this post?

A U.K.-based photographer on Saturday shared an image showing a gnarled section of tree trunk and asked his followers to look for the camouflaged critter.

“Retweet when you find it,” Carl Bovis, a renowned birder, directed via Twitter.

Bovis authorized the use of his image and FTW Outdoors, likewise, asks viewers if they can spot the main subject.

The number of retweets surpassed 5,000 as of Monday morning. Many followers, obviously, spotted the owl peering from its perch in a hollowed portion of tree.

Some, however, did not.

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Reads one comment: “A clue to what was being looked for would of helped. The gnarly wood on the far left looked like an ancient mud slide with cow like creature preserved in the earth.”

Bovis told FTW Outdoors: “The species is a Little Owl, and the photo was taken earlier in the year on farmland on the Somerset Levels. Little Owls live in tree holes.”

The little owl (Athene noctuca) is sometimes referred to as the owl of Athena, with the genus name commemorating the Greek goddess.

©Carl Bovis

Also referred to as the owl of Minerva, the little owl was a prominent symbol in Old World civilizations, associated with wisdom and intelligence.

The owls can measure 8 inches and can live about 15 years in the wild. Their habitat includes savannas and grasslands, and prey includes everything from worms to small vertebrates.

Like most owls, little owls are masters of camouflage. The owl’s location on the Bovis image is circled above.

Watch: Great horned owl repels crow ‘mob assault’

A Wisconsin filmmaker has captured rare footage showing a great horned owl deflecting a direct hit to the face by a marauding crow, and standing its ground during a prolonged “crow mob assault.”

A Wisconsin filmmaker has captured rare footage showing a great horned owl absorbing a direct hit to the face by a marauding crow, and standing its ground during a prolonged “crow mob assault.”

Freddy Moyano was observing a great horned owl nest in east Green Bay in late March when crows began to harass the male owl – 10 feet from a nest with mom and owlets – in an attempt to drive the large raptor from the area.

The first video accompanying this post shows the direct assault in slow motion, and viewers will note that the owl turns its head just in time to defend against the incoming threat. The second video, featuring beautiful footage of the owl, captures the overall scene and the dynamics of this type of situation.

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Crows routinely harass owls and other raptors, even though great horned owls consider crows to be prey. But harassment typically involves dive-bombing and incessant cawing, and sometimes pecking, rather than direct bodily strikes.

“This is a very unusual thing to encounter,” Moyano, who posts weekly videos to his Wisconsin wildlife channel, told For The Win Outdoors. “I’ve seen them do this with hawks, but with great horned owls it’s much less frequent.”

As Moyano states in the second video, great horned owls stock their nest with freshly killed prey to prevent hungry chicks from killing each other during competition for food. This attracts crows, which gang up in the hope one or both parents will fly away long enough for crows to nab carrion or young owlets from the nest.

Moyano, who recently captured footage of a short-eared owl clobbering a northern harrier with an in-flight karate-style kick, states in his video that “We have heard testimonies of crows pecking owls to death by attacking in a similar way, confusing the owl.

“This great horned owl stood its ground and did not even fly away, which could have been a sign of evident weakness that could endanger the nest even more.”

Moyano, an award-winning voiceover specialist, also runs MLC Productions.

Watch: Owl sends hawk tumbling with mid-flight ‘super kick’

A filmmaker has captured rare footage showing a short-eared owl attacking a northern harrier from behind and clobbering the hawk with a perfectly executed front kick.

A filmmaker has captured rare footage showing a short-eared owl ambushing a northern harrier and clobbering the hawk with a perfectly executed front kick.

Freddy Moyano was afield late Tuesday in East Wisconsin when the owl pursued the harrier and delivered what Moyano described as a “super-kick,” sending the harrier briefly tumbling.

The video, artistically edited to include sound effects and color enhancement, illustrates the intense territorial rivalry between raptors in rural woodlands, especially during nesting season when competition for food is heightened.

Moyano, a voiceover artist who publishes weekly videos featuring Wisconsin wildlife, told For The Win Outdoors that most confrontations do not involve physical contact and that he was not sure he had captured such a “rare moment” until he reviewed his footage.

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“I was 100-plus feet out,” he explained. “I saw a couple of clashes in the air but I couldn’t tell on the spot until I came home two hours later and I reviewed it. And man, that was like, what the heck? The foot of that owl is there [on the harrier] and the whole deal.”

His footage shows the clash several times, the harrier being chased, and the owl later resting atop a perch.

“I’ve been following these owls for months and there’s quite a rivalry,” Moyano said. “They compete for rodents. You see a lot of owls grabbing them in their talons and flying with them.

“And then I’ve seen harriers trying to snatch the rodents in the air from the owls, and that’s more common. It’s just rivalry over the food. But the impact like that… that’s hugely uncommon.”

Moyano was so impressed that he created an artistic rendering of the clash (posted above), which he says “sums up the video.”

According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, short-eared owls prey mostly on small mammals such as mice and voles, but will attack larger mammals and even fairly large birds, such as gulls, terns, and rails.

The medium-sized owls are extremely agile and they’re active day and night during the breeding season.

Northern harriers, distinctive hawks with broad wings and long tails, typically fly low over open areas and will often hover for extended periods when they sense prey opportunities.

According to the Cornell Lab, northern harriers rely heavily on hearing to  help them locate prey. Prey items are similar to those of owls, although in some areas harriers prey almost exclusively on voles.

–Images and video courtesy of Freddy Moyano/MLC Productions

Florida Atlantic negotiating with Willie Taggart to bring him to the school

Florida Atlantic University is negotiating with Willie Taggart to bring him to the school to lead the Owls, according to multiple reports.

Florida Atlantic University is negotiating with Willie Taggart to bring him to the school to lead the Owls, according to multiple reports.