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Keep up-to-date on all the nesting news.
Video Highlights
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Rat Tail Is Too Much To Handle For Owlets At Great Horned Owl Nest – April 22, 2025
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Athena Removes Opossum Prey From Great Horned Owl Nest – April 21, 2025
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Clumsy Owlet Flops On Its Back As Athena Scans Territory In Austin, Texas – April 14, 2025
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Athena Feeds Her Adorable Owlets Dinner At Wildflower Center Nest – April 16, 2025
News
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April 15, 2025 Athena Offers Owlets Breakfast At Wildflower Center Nest
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November 8, 2024 Great Horned Owl Cam 2024 Season Highlights
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May 20, 2024 Wildflower Center Great Horned Owl Cam Timeline
About “Athena” and the Wildflower Center Great Horned Owls
For more than a decade, the Wildflower Center has been home to a nesting pair of great horned owls. The female, who they have affectionately named Athena, nests right above the entrance to the courtyard in a sotol planter. When conditions are right and her eggs hatch into owlets, she provides a rare opportunity to view a wild great horned owl rearing her young.
Great Horned Owls are fierce predators that hunt a diverse assortment of prey. They are generally nocturnal hunters, but will also hunt in broad daylight. Throughout the nesting period, the owls may arrive at the nest site with meals of small- to medium-sized mammals, reptiles, fish, and birds of all sizes.
Female Great Horned Owls spend most of the time at the nest caring for eggs and owlets while males hunt for food. After fledging, young may remain with their parents for 3–4 months before dispersing from natal territories.
About the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center is the State Botanic Garden & Arboretum of Texas and welcomes more than 275,000 guests annually to its 284 acres of gardens, trails and exhibitions, thus fulfilling its mission of inspiring the conservation of native plants. As a fully self-funded unit of The University of Texas at Austin, the Wildflower Center’s investments in science, conservation and education include a native seed bank, a comprehensive database of North American native plants, and research programs in collaboration with the university. The Center is the embodiment of Mrs. Johnson’s environmental legacy. “The environment is where we all meet, where we all have a mutual interest,” she said. “It is the one thing all of us share. It is not only a mirror of ourselves, but a focusing lens on what we can become.”

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of birds and funded by donors like you
Pileated Woodpecker by Lin McGrew / Macaulay Library