The Flyer by Flying Colors

If you were forwarded this from a friend or found us on social media, we invite you to subscribe to our weekly newsletter for bird lovers! It’s free and we’ll never spam you.

Volume 35 • November 4, 2022

Welcome to 
🦜 The Flyer 🦜
by Flying Colors

Every other Friday, we share original content written by the Flying Colors team, fascinating stories & tidbits from the world of birding, curated products, epic bird photos, and more.

If you'd rather view this newsletter in your web browser, click here.

Who would win, your car or this wild turkey?

Who would win, your car or this wild turkey? (via @thedodo)

Bird of the Week: The Great Horned Owl

The Great Horned Owl

Photo by Tim Lumley (Flickr)

Found in North and South America

Listen Hear Their Calls

If you were ever out camping in the woods and decided to play hide and seek, the Great Horned Owl is one animal who’d beat you every time. This master of disguise blends right into the holes of the trees they call home, their brown coloring fading into bark. They have distinctive ear tufts that rise a couple of inches above their head, black, pointed beaks, and yellow, piercing eyes.

These owls are nocturnal and hunt at night for small prey like rodents and scorpions, to prey as large as themselves, like Ospreys, Peregrine Falcons, and even other owls. They use their razor sharp talons to sever the spines of their prey. Their famous hoots (hoo-hoo-HOO, hoo, hoo) echo through the air at night when males and females call to each other.

Fun fact: American Crows sometimes gather to harass Great Horned Owls for hours at a time, trying to scare off or kill the dangerous predator.

Great Horned Owl

Photo by Becky Matsubara (Flickr)

Give a Hoot

Birding bits you should know about this week

I want to fly away

Photo by Ansel.Ma (Flickr)

🦉 Watch
Highlights from the livecam of a nest of Great Horned Owls
Get a glimpse into the lives of nesting Great Horned Owls (and their growing owlet) who took over an Osprey nest in Savannah, Georgia.

📚 Read
8 of the best books about birding
For birders of all ages!

🌍 Travel
Azerbaijan: Eurasia’s most underrated destination for birdwatching
Maybe your next birding spot should be Azerbaijan, where you can see 230 bird species in several different climates and ecosystems within a few hours’ drive.

Need the Perfect Gift for Birders?

Look No Further

Backyard Birds Love Our Organic Bird Food

Flying Colors’ stylish organic wild bird food is made with 100% USDA certified organic ingredients that birds love. Our three custom blends — Pine Plains, Woodstock, and Millbrook — are made with healthy, pesticide-free nuts and seeds like hemp, safflower, and sunflower and peanut hearts. And our products are hand-mixed with love in New York's Hudson Valley. 

We love birds as much as you do, and it shows in our stylish and bird-friendly products.

SHOP NOW

Your Shot

An amazing bird photo taken by one of our community members. Submit yours to hello@flyingcolors.co to be considered for an upcoming edition!

Grey Heron

in the owl's opinion

every day

is long

- Issa

Thank you for being part of our flock! Be sure to follow us on Instagram, and if a friend forwarded you this email, you can subscribe here & view our archive.

Questions? Ideas? Epic bird photos? Reach out at hello@flyingcolors.co

The Flyer by Flying Colors

About Us

Flying Colors makes premium organic wild bird food, offering ethically sourced, toxin-free seeds and nuts of the highest quality to nourish wild birds of all types and inspire birders of all ages. Each specialty blend and single origin creation is rigorously sourced & researched, and every jar is produced with love & packaged by hand in small batches in New York's Hudson Valley and tested in our own backyards.

Email
Instagram
Custom
No longer want to receive these emails? Unsubscribe.
View in Your Browser
Flying Colors 84 Central Ave Tarrytown, New York 10591