They will kill you slowly and painfully
Whilst owls have a strong acid in their stomach, it is not strong enough to digest all of the fur, feathers or larger bones, though softer bones are digested.
Bird bones because feathers are very light and the bones just depend on the type of bird.
A brids' bones are hollow They have feathers They have beaks
Owl pellets are pieces of fur, bones, teeth, and any other indigestible parts that the owl is unable to digest, which are then regurgitated. Droppings are what is digested while pellets are what cannot be digested, so they are not the same thing.
Birds are the only things that have feathers and hollow bones.
Penguins cannot fly because their bones are too dense, their overall weight is too great, and they do not really have flight feathers.
most birds
birds!
skeleton bones feathers
Yes, owls regurgitate pellets consisting of undigested parts of their prey like bones, fur, and feathers. They do this because they cannot digest these parts and need to remove them from their stomach.
I've read that some owls do not regurgitate bones in their pellets. Also, if the bones are really fine, rather than dense like the pelvis & many of the long bones of mammals, they may be digested. I just found what appears to be a densely-packed cylindrical owl pellet which is over 4" long which is comprised almost if not entirely of bird feathers - no bones. Birds have very light bones with air pockets in them to promote flight. Perhaps bird bones would be more easily digested & therefore not passed in the pellet. However, since most owls hunt at night, what birds would an owl have access to? I read the Great Horned Owls can have pellets that are 4"+ in length.
Bones and feathers.