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Via Wikipedia.
Wasn’t there a band named the “Whooo ?” and their namesake song
Well, whooo are you? (whooo are you? whooo, whooo, whooo, whooo?)
I really wanna know (whooo are you? whooo, whooo, whooo, whooo?)
Tell me, whooo are you? (whooo are you? whooo, whooo, whooo, whooo?)
?
Mike, how do you make these connections…? Perfect!
Apricot-colored body feathers and cocoa-brown head feathers? I’m flabbergasted at their beauty. Also I want to move to the tri-forest area.
Now I want some chocolate dipped apricots…
I have apricot yogurt…I wonder how it would be if I chopped up a Hershey kiss or two and mixed it in…
Sounds delicious
Mike did you know your story is even funnier in French?
Owls are birds of prey and in French birds of prey are called “rapaces” which is also an adjective you call someone who craves money and doesn’t mind taking advantage of people in order to get it. LOL!!
? how wonderful!
I never knew owls could be so colorful. Or perhaps they’re just owlets and will change as they get older. I thought they were only white and different shades of brown. What Gigi says above about the French word for owls and Mike’s story, what are the odds?
Owlets they are—or were, when the picture was taken. Wikipedia says they’re “Three juvenile Northern Saw-whet Owls in Fossil, Oregon, USA.”