This happened a week after I got to visit. I wish I had gotten to see them too! 😓

From the National Aviary in Pittsburgh, PA

March 28, 2024 –A second Eurasian Eagle-Owl chick has hatched at the National Aviary! Arriving March 21, just a few days after its sibling, the chick weighed 50.77 grams and is now also residing in the Aviary’s Avian Care Center window in The Charity Randall Foundation Eagle Hall.

The Eurasian Eagle-Owl chick weighed 55 grams when it hatched (roughly the size of a small lime). Eagle-Owl chicks grow rapidly, however, and by eight weeks of age, the chick will be considered fully grown, weighing as much as nine pounds and possessing a wingspan reaching up to six-and-a-half feet. There is no way to visually distinguish between male and female Eurasian Eagle-Owls, so a DNA feather test will be performed to determine the chick’s sex. The owlet’s parents, X (named after X the Owl from Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood) and Dumbledore, have hatched 10 chicks at the National Aviary previously.

“Each hatching is unique, and every chick has its own needs, especially during chick hood, which can be a very delicate time. Our goal is always to provide the optimal conditions for every bird to thrive at the National Aviary, and this adorable chick is doing extremely well in our Avian Care Center, which is visible to guests,” says Cathy Schlott, Director of Animal Programs and Experiences for the National Aviary. “Guests will be able to watch this chick grow and develop and learn about the incredible adaptations of Eurasian Eagle-Owls and the importance of protecting raptors and their habitats.”

Guests are encouraged to drop by and see the new adorable Eurasian Eagle-Owl chick weekdays as it grows!

  • Roflmasterbigpimp
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    162 months ago

    Me when I wake up after a Nap so good I forgot in which Dimension I am:

      • FuglyDuck
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        32 months ago

        Newborns always look like grumpy old men to me.

        These two are no exception.

  • anon6789OP
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    122 months ago

    An Aviary expert delicately assists in feeding the recently hatched chick

    • anon6789OP
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      92 months ago

      Lol it does look like a 4-legged creature in the photo. I’m pretty sure it has the correct number of appendages or it would have mentioned it in the article. 😆

      It seems to be facing us with its body, while turning its head to look at the sibling, though it does look like a fuzzy koopa troopa at first glance.