Baby Owls Found on a Soccer Field Revealed a Common Rescue Mistake

What looks like an emergency is often a normal stage of owl childhood. That was the lesson behind two young great horned owls brought in from a soccer field in central California, where open ground and human activity made a risky setting for birds that were not yet able to fly. At the wildlife center, staff used a hands off exam to judge whether the chicks were actually hurt or simply in the awkward stage between nest life and flight. The approach matters because many young owls found on the ground are not abandoned at all.

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Donna Burt of the Stanislaus Wildlife Care Center explained why the situation can be misleading: “Great horned owls often jump out of the nest before the babies can fly. The parents continue to care for them on the ground.” In a wooded or sheltered area, that can work well. A sports field is different. Exposure to people, pets, and maintenance equipment turns a normal developmental stage into a rescue question.

The exam itself relied on observation more than immediate handling. Rehabilitators watched how the birds stood, moved, and reacted. One chick stood upright, while the other sat back on its legs in a posture called hock sitting, which is typical at that age. Both snapped their beaks and spread their wings in threat displays, signs of alertness and strength rather than collapse. Slight eye cloudiness was also noted, something considered normal in young great-horned owls.

This ground phase is widely misunderstood. Young raptors often leave the nest before they can truly fly, a behavior described as branching. During this period, parents usually remain nearby and continue feeding them, sometimes at night and out of sight. Wildlife specialists have long warned that apparently stranded owlets may not need removal at all, especially if they are clean, active, and uninjured. On landscaped lawns, school grounds, and city parks, however, the problem is not always the bird’s condition but the location around it.

That is why the first question is not whether the owl is alone, but whether it is in danger. If the bird is unhurt and the area is safe, the best response is often to leave it alone. If the site is unsafe, experts sometimes recommend moving the chick only a short distance to nearby cover or elevating it on a temporary platrf form close to where it was found, allowing the parents to keep caring for it. One recent rescue in Alabama followed that pattern after a nest tree was removed and neighbors created a replacement perch; adult owls later returned to the young in the new makeshift nest.

The California owls also highlight a second principle in rehabilitation: young raptors do best when raised by other owls whenever possible. Burt said, “When we get tiny baby great-horns, we put them with a non-releasable surrogate owl who cares for and feeds them.” That practice reduces human imprinting, a serious problem that can leave a wild bird unable to behave normally after release.

Great horned owls reach adult size quickly, often by about 10 weeks, but they remain dependent on their parents much longer. For anyone who spots an owlet on the ground, that timeline is the real takeaway: unusual does not always mean injured, and help sometimes begins with distance.

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