'It was just beautiful': Kelowna family that saved owl watches as it's released back into the wild

It started with a commotion in Norm and May McFarland's yard in Kelowna's Mission neighbourhood one morning in February.

The McFarlands noticed about half a dozen crows dive bombing at something in the backyard.

"I walked outside and I thought it was a raccoon but was actually an owl," said daughter Tracey MacInnis. "I thought it was massive, but apparently it wasn't. It was malnourished and needed a lot of hydration."

Norm scared off the crows and kept the birds away as the owl sat on a ledge near their covered swimming pool.

"It was very confused and hardly could turn its head," he said. "We didn't know if it was a wing or a broken leg."

Three months later, the McFarland family stood together among the towering Ponderosa Pine trees in Kelowna's Woodhaven Regional Park as members of the South Okanagan Rehabilitation Centre for Owls (SORCO) Raptor Rehab Centre opened a small crate and released the great horned owl back into the wild.

"It was really nice to see. It just went flying really nicely up through the trees," said May moments after the owl left the cage and flew off into the forest.

The owl, an adult female named Eve was lethargic and dehydrated, weighing only 700 grams when it arrived at the bird rehabilitation centre — much lighter than its idea weight of 1.1 kilograms, said SORCO manager Dale Belvedere.

"We don't know why she was so underweight, although there was a huge snow impact this year. She might have been having trouble finding her prey," Belvedere said.

Brady Strachan/CBC
Brady Strachan/CBC

Eve was rehydrated for five days and then fed a daily diet of one rat and one chick, until she regained weight.

She is one of about 150 injured or orphaned birds of prey SORCO rehabilitates each year at its centre in Oliver, B.C.

Belvedere said owls mate for life and she hopes this female will be able to find her mate now that she has been released into the park, very near where she was found at the McFarlands' home.

"It was so picturesque and gorgeous to watch this owl fly with its wingspan though the trees, said Tracey. "It was just beautiful."

Brady Strachan/CBC
Brady Strachan/CBC