From The News Tribune

This Super Bowl season, a certain bird has been dominating headlines. The Seattle Seahawks, of course, who are slated to take on the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8.

At the Point Defiance Zoo, there’s another bird getting extra attention this time of year: Forrest, who is the zoo’s most superb owl, according to zookeepers.

A Eurasian eagle owl, Forrest has lived at the Point Defiance Zoo for almost all 20 years of his life. He stands at over a foot tall (he should be close to 2 ft / 60 cm tall) and weighs four pounds (1.8 kg), but his massive wingspan and the formidable expression that perpetually lives on his face gives him a frightening look.

In reality, Forrest is actually an incredibly charming bird, according to staff biologist Erica Baker. He’s comfortable and confident around people because he was raised around them. He’s also known to be chatty, Baker said. “If we are walking near his habitat that he lives in, you’ll hear him making sounds that are not necessarily a hoot, which is more of a territorial call, he’ll do a lot of other smaller chirps and things that are more friendly chatter to the keepers around,” she told The News Tribune.

The recent surge in Forrest’s popularity comes as some Super Bowl fans engage in the annual tradition of attempting to search “Super Bowl” and end up typing in “Superb Owl” instead. It’s an annual cultural phenomenon that might have started as a typo or as a joke, NPR reported. At Point Defiance Zoo, it’s a chance to talk about Forrest. It’s his charisma and personality that have made him a fixture in the Wild Wonders outdoor theater and the daily “animal encounters” programming the zoo puts on. The event is a chance for zoo visitors to see some of its animals in action, and Forrest often closes out the event with big swooping flights from one end of the auditorium to the other, squawking as he is known to do.

Forrest, a Eurasian eagle owl, takes flight during a daily “animal encounters” program.

His performance often elicits literal oohs and ahhs, Baker said. “Most people are just in awe,” she said. His time at the zoo hasn’t always been straightforward. In 2014 he flew off during a rehearsal for his performance at the outdoor theater. Baker said it was a windy day and a handful of crows mobbed him as he was flying out. His keepers think he got confused and flew out and got lost in Point Defiance Park, she said. It started a three-day search to find the missing owl, which flew straight to his keepers once they found him. When he’s not impressing guests in the Wild Wonders outdoor theater, Forrest likes to eat mice and sometimes rabbits as a treat. He also enjoys what his keepers call “enrichment,” which for Forrest entails shredding heads of cabbage into pulp with his massive talons. This Super Bowl season, zoo staff are trading the cabbage heads for coconuts – to look like footballs. “He doesn’t eat it, he just likes to shred it,” Baker said.

Forrest, a Eurasian eagle owl, swoops in on a piece of mouse meat placed in an enclosure.

On game day, Baker estimates that Forrest will likely be out flying, and if he’s not flying he’ll be shredding something. Forrest isn’t a huge fan of hawks – his neighbor at the zoo is a Harris hawk, and the birds of prey can be competitive with each other. But he’s definitely a Seahawks fan, she said. “I think Forrest would make an excellent wide receiver,” Baker said. Visit Forrest at the Point Defiance Zoo’s Wild Wonders outdoor theater located at 2 North Waterfront Drive in Tacoma. As of Jan. 9, visitors sporting Seahawks gear will get $5 off general admission tickets.

  • pseudo@jlai.lu
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    3 hours ago

    Forrest likes to eat […] rabbits as a treat. He also enjoys […] shredding heads of cabbage into pulp with his massive talons.

    Yeah… That’s my bird. If I one day come to the US, I should try to visit it.

    • anon6789OP
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      3 hours ago

      If the zoo food court offers cole slaw, we know who made it! 😆

  • RizzRustbolt
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    6 hours ago

    It appears there’s a Lemming on either the Tribune staff or at the zoo.

    • anon6789OP
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      6 hours ago

      Should be both!

      I will have to keep trying harder…

        • anon6789OP
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          4 hours ago

          Anyone wishing to unmask me here could have probably done it at least a year ago. I am very bad at hiding details and I get too excited in my storytelling.

          This was supposed to just be a burner while I lurked until I got bored, but nooooo, nobody else was posting and now you guys know everything 😮‍💨

          There’s not much use in me switching names at this point either, as I’d still be the only one posting about owls! anon5432 isn’t really going to fool you now.

          If ya want me… come and get me! 😁 (Edit: don’t do this! 😦)

    • anon6789OP
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      6 hours ago

      I didn’t think it sounded specific enough at “over a foot tall.”

      Since I usually include US and metric units so everyone can picture things, I was already looking up the conversion, so I looked up average Eagle Owl size to include something more specific so you could imagine it more accurately. Eurasian Eagle Owls are 22-30 inches / 56-75 cm, and being male, Forrest would be on the smaller end of the scale, as lady raptors are almost always the larger ones.

      Owls are pretty much full size by the time they get their adult feathers and leave the nest, so he should be in this range.

        • anon6789OP
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          5 hours ago

          Oh, I don’t think he is shorter than average size for his species.

          I didn’t think them saying he’s over a foot was helpful, and that, to my mind, makes him 12.1 to <24 inches tall. If he was closer to 2 feet tall, they should say he’s just under 2 feet, 2 feet, or just over 2 feet tall.

          As a healthy adult EEO, he should absolutely be around 22-25 inches tall, but as I haven’t met him, I can’t verify that, but I feel I attempted to give you all a better estimated size than the original text. I may not have made it as clear as intended.

            • anon6789OP
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              4 hours ago

              Always happy to hear that!

              I try to bring you the best of the best I find, and add context where it’s needed or interesting.

              I return to the clinic in March, and hopefully I’ll get some more owls to care for to share as well.

  • slappyfuck@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    Oh my god! I’m in Tacoma visiting my girlfriend right now! Maybe we should hit up the zoo and aquarium, it’s only about five minutes from here.

    • anon6789OP
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      7 hours ago

      Oh, that would be awesome! An Eagle Owl is always an impressive sight!

      They also have a King Vulture, a Prehensile Tailed Porcupine, and Arctic Fox, which are all great animals as well.

      You can even do a shark dive if you’d like! I always wanted to do that.

  • Optional
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    7 hours ago

    Okay, I will concede Forrest does appear to be quite a superb owl.

    But still. That’s our bit!