• anon6789OP
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    54 days ago

    It’s been a bit since we talked about Hedwig. For those that didn’t know:

    While Hedwig the character is a lady owl, she was played by 7 different Snowy Owls, most of which were males.

    The adult males have considerably less spots than the females.

    Male owls are typically smaller than females, and the film crew went with the smaller ones to make it easier for the young actors to work with.

    • @DampCanary
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      23 days ago

      Thank You for the info, I appriciate it.
      As a kid/youg adult I read the books which kind of made me want an owl as a pet.
      Later, reading about movies consequences, I was ashamed of younger(harry potter craze era) me.

      As Your link lead sto private group I couldn’t see facebook image, but by Your description and Your previous snow owl images this should be an lady owl.

      • anon6789OP
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        33 days ago

        I was leaning towards male for this one. Makes can still have a modest amount of speckles, but tend to have less as they age. Here is a male and female pair. You can see the male has spots like the post picture, but considerably less than the female.

        They start off all black as babies.

        • @DampCanary
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          23 days ago

          Ooh that is significant difference,
          I saw couple of almost pure white from previous posts, so owl from this seemd to have more specks.

          But this is night & day difference in not only quantity but size also.

          Young ones are like polar explorers in fur coat with snow goggles (like black eye piercing trough tiny holes).

          • anon6789OP
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            33 days ago

            They’re not all quite this different, but it’s much more of a visual clue than we get with most owls.

            The babies are so cute. These and the Saw Whet owls look so different between baby and adult.

            Baby

            Adult