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RE: Birdhouse in action - Eurasian blue tit in caught on camera

Hey @apsu. You still trying to get more tits in your garden. I am happy they have come and are using your bird boxes. Who would forget your post when you were putting them up. It is an amazing feeling that something you have done has worked and is being used.

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Well finally the dream has come true and my garden is basically filled with tits. Too bad some of them are too young to be seen.

But now we'll just have to wait.

Now I'm already planning owl-birdhouses for our summer cottage. I might get excited too easily after one successful birdhouse, but who cares!

I love owls and really hope that one works. We had some barn owls in our warehouse and had to get them removed as there was too many poison rat stations in the vicinity. One unfortunately died before the sanctuary came to collect them. They can eat around 12 rats each a day which is quite a bit.

Owls are awesome and it's sad that the barn owls died. I think they have limited the use of rat poison in Finland partially because the predatory animals which eat the rats tend to die, so they're trying to limit the use to professionals.

Also, the owl-birdhouses would be for a small owl species called "Boreal owl":
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal_owl

Have never heard of this species of Owl, but they are all fantastic in my eyes and always stop when I see one. I tried to get the warehouses to remove the rat poison and they wouldn't. One or two families of owls around and there would be no mice or rats.

That's also one of the reasons I want some owls there. Not because of rats, but there's mice and all kinds of rodents running around. Before our neighbor had a cat who kept the situation in the control, but now he's no more and the mice are running in the woods.

Boreal owl
The boreal owl (Aegolius funereus) is a small owl. In Europe, it is typically known as Tengmalm's owl after Swedish naturalist Peter Gustaf Tengmalm or, more rarely, Richardson's owl after Sir John Richardson. The scientific name is from Latin. The genus name Aegolius is a type of screech owl thought to be a bird of ill omen, and funereus means "funereal".This species is a part of the larger grouping of owls known as typical owls, Strigidae, which contains most species of owl.

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