I occasionally come on photos and videos of people with “pet” owls or owl cafes.

Owls are beautiful and soft, but they aren’t meant to be around us being cuddled or whatever. What is cuddling to us causes anxiety to them. It isn’t owl behavior. They tolerate it sort of if they are imprinted, but it makes them more underdeveloped and under equipped to be themselves than it does to make them good company.

Handling birds of prey, a person will get nipped or cut, but these hands are seriously grabbed up and cut, yet in the video clip they still have the owl restrained and continue “playing” with it.

If this hand is any sign of how happy the owls are here, I feel bad for them. If they don’t like their handler touching them, I can only imagine how upset they are being touched by strangers all day.

Dogs, cats, and farm type animals have been domesticated and are used to humans to a decent extent. Most animals though will never be domesticated. They want and need to be free.

  • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    3 days ago

    I got all my cats in a similar fashion. I loved all my time with them.

    Both of us are rarely home these days, and I don’t feel we could give proper attention to a mammalian friend. We tried the fish as something that didn’t need our personal time, but even with regular tank maintenance, we had nothing but problems.

    I’m keeping having pets as an incentive to let me retire early and become the pet nanny, but I haven’t quite sold the idea yet. 😁 She just wants to cuddle them, and I get all the work. That’s how it’s been every time we’ve dog sat.

    • Maeve@kbin.earth
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      3 days ago

      Lol! Perhaps yin and yang tasks could be negotiated for more even distribution. I’m sure you’ll find a balance, along the way. Pet nanny sounds great! 😃