Photo by Faruk Kizil

Habichtskauz auch Uralkauz

Das Bild entstand an einer Futterstelle beim Falkner in den Niederlande.

Ural owl (Strix uralensis)

The picture was taken at a feeding place of a falconer in Netherlands.

One of the given translations called this Habich’s Owl, so I tried to find out who Habich was. Took me way too long to figure out Habich was not a person, it means goshawk in German. The German wiki entry had a lot of info the US one didn’t though.

The species is referred to as Slaguggla, or “attacking owl”, in Swedish, Habichtskauz, or “goshawk-owl”, in German or as the “long-tailed owl” in Russian.

Attempts to re-introduce the owl have been partly successful in the German-Austrian-Czech border region (Bavarian Forest , Bohemian Forest , and Šumava), and most recently in the Vienna Woods.

Austria seems to have a difficult time with the project as people keep shooting them. 🙄

  • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 day ago

    Thank you so much! It’s so interesting to see the other names people have come up with for the same things.

    Ones I like better: Zwergohreule Sperber-Euhle Both of these I think describe them better than the English names.

    Ones I don’t get: Habichtskauz - I did not think it looked like the Goshawk. The Sperber-Euhle I liked because it looked more like a Sparrowhawk than the Red-Tailed Hawk, which is the default hawk for my brain.
    Rauhfußkauz - The legs/feet look pretty typical to me.

    Not sure if I like Steinkauz better than Little Owl. Little Owl sounds cute, but is hard to tell Little Owl vs a little owl, while stone owl is appropriate for size, but does not reflect they are cute, unless Germans have particularly cute rocks over there. 😄

    • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 day ago

      According to German Wikipedia, the Rauhfußkauz has its name from its feathered feet. But it isn’t the only one, as e.g. the Snowy Owl also has this feature.

      • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        16 hours ago

        I would have named him over that big round head. Trying to look up any direct translation to German for “big-headed” all seem to translate to mean arrogant rather than a physical feature. The closest I found is another bird, Brauenbreitschnabel, which says it means “Broad Headed Beak” but I don’t think that looks to have a particularly large head, so I don’t know if that is correct either.

    • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 day ago

      He German Wikipedia of the Habichtskauz says:

      The colouring of the underwings and tail bears a certain resemblance to that of young Eurasian Goshawks (Accipiter gentilis), a fact that is reflected in the German trivial name.

      Young Eurasian Goshawks

      The name Steinkauz refers to the location they use for breeding, which are, beside tree hollows, barns, chapells and wine cellars built of stone.

      • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 day ago

        That was my guess about Habichtskauz, but to me the standout feature of this particular owl is the face. From skimming the German wiki for it, even though it looks gentle, it seems very territorial and aggressive, so that may also factor into the hawk similarities, but I don’t have either bird where I am to make much comparrison.

        Steinkauz makes better sense now, being named after where it is living. Reminds me of the Rock Eagle Owl.

        Thank you for all your insights today! I have really learned a lot from all this!

          • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            2
            ·
            1 day ago

            I like Barn Owl a little less, along the line of the joke that always comes up of “what did they call them before barns were invented.” Plus Barn Owls are basically everywhere, not just relegated to places there are barns. Veiled Owl works in every occasion, though when I ran the translate feature on the German wiki for the Ural Owl, it seemed to translate the word it had for facial disc, so maybe that is a word that refers to too many owls in German. (Just checked, Gesichtsschleier is the word it was translating to “facial veil”)

            Looking at the list again, it’s interesting Barn Owl is an euhle as it has a round head. Many other languages also seem to separate out the barn owl types. That seems to lend support to the “personality traits” explaination of the euhle/kauz differences.

            • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              2
              ·
              edit-2
              20 hours ago

              See it the other way around: A barn isn’t a proper barn without accommodating a Barn Owl.
              However, in German, some birds are called by their current habitat: Feldlerche (Eurasian Skylark), Feldsperling (Eurasian Tree Sparrow), Haussperling (House Sparrow), Hausrotschwanz (Black Redstart), Gartenrotschwanz (Common Redstart), … Yet, one may ask: Where did they live before there were fields, houses, and gardens?

              Linguistic separation of the Barn Owls from the True Owls makes somewhat sense as they are the two separate families of the owls.

              In the German Wikipedia article on owls Strigiformes I also found an explanation of the origin of the two terms Eule and Kauz:

              The two German terms have developed onomatopoeically from the calls of owls. “Eule” refers to the hooting calls, while “Kauz” is a paraphrase of the short and distinctive calls.

              Interestingly, the Eulen you are not supposed to carry to Athens (Eulen nach Athen tragen means doing something useless), are originally Steinkäuze (Athene Noctua) that were a symbol of the godess Athene and were depicted on the reverse side of the old Drachme coins from Athens.

              Drachme from Athens 454 to 404 B.C.

              Today, this Drachme coin is depicted on the reverse side of the Greek 1 Euro coin:

              Geek 1 Euro

              Thank you for the nice conversation.

              • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
                link
                fedilink
                arrow-up
                2
                ·
                15 hours ago

                Animal sound words can be so funny. I imagine our native ones all make sense to us, as it’s what we learned growing up, but hearing some in other languages seem bewildering. Even after listening to the kauz pronunciationg (surprise T sound in there would have tricked me!) I don’t know how that relates to an owl.

                I was familiar with the Little Owl being the Owl of Athena and on the old coin, but I forgot it was on the new one. I like how they keep the ancient design still. That feels like a nice tradition.

                You’ve helped me understand a lot of new things. It’s been much fun!