Our work
The first part is the educational aspect and the second part is the owl release programme. Education is an important pillar of the project. Our teams go out to participating schools to give presentations on owls and their role in an ecosystem. These presentations are also used to address any remnant myths believed by the people in the townships. School children sign up and receive permission from their parents to be involved with the project. The release program takes place over a three-week period. For the first 20 days, the juvenile Barn Owls (Tyto alba) or the Spotted Eagle Owls (Bubo africanus) are placed in an owl release box where they will be fed daily by the school children. After the 20 days, the owls are released onto the school premises. The science behind this is that the owls will remain around the school, where they will hunt for rodents and as adults, use the owl box as breeding site. The school is an ideal place for them as it is quite at night. For the week after the owls have been released, the school children will continue to place food for the juvenile owls to support feed and continue to play the surrogate parent role. All the owls that are released through the project are owls we receive through rehabilitation centres and SPCA branches across Gauteng.
Over the past 20 years, Owlproject.org has made an impact across the world.
Jonathan receiving owl award .jpg
Jonathan in India .jpg
International Footprint v3.png
Pasted Graphic.png
Pasted Graphic 1.png
Nepal Child with painted face .jpeg
Jonathan Haw with member of the World Owl Centre in Nepal .jpeg
20190315_091315 (1).jpg
20190315_092633_HDR (1).jpg
20190315_113458 (1).jpg
20190315_181050 (1).jpg
IMG_4040 (1).jpg
unnamed.jpg
unnamed.jpg
DSC_6665 (1).jpg
IMG-20190319-WA0006 (1).jpg
1.png
2.png