Teachers can buy them as classroom supplies for dissecting purposes. I think probably from a catalog. But you can find them under trees where owls roost (nest). But be careful, they can be full of harmful germs. I wouldn't suggest touching them. Just try to find out if your school is going to dissect them in the future.
They come from the owl after it has a meal. After all the soft tissues digest, about 20 hours, the owl regurgitates up the bones of its last meal in a pellet shape that is surrounded by a thick hairy mass. It may sound disgusting to some people, but really cool to others. It's fun to dissect though.
you can buy owl pellets atwww.pelletsinc.com
Owl pellets can be purchased from a number of scientific retailers. Their cost is minimal, especially when purchased in bulk (for instance, for a science class).
Owl pellets are made of bones fur and other things the owl can't digest
Owl Pellets don't feed any owls. Owl pellets are balls of fur and bones from their last meal. That is a common mistake many people have, because pellets usually mean animal food.
The owl's pellets are mainly made out of bones that is if they eat something with bones.
pellets are usually about as big as an thumb
around where owl's live?
the common barn owl
Pellets - as in owl pellets
The owl pellet shows what the owl has eaten.
ppop
at the zoo
owl pellets
what the owl ate