Instructions
Grab a pair of binoculars for daytime viewing. Binoculars will allow you to get up close and personal without disturbing the owl. For an evening walk, take a flashlight to light your way.
Listen for the hoot when you are out for an evening walk. You may even want to let out a "hoot" yourself and see if an owl responds. Listen intently and try to follow the owl's response.
Watch the crows. Groups of crows squawking madly, and flying wildly up in the treetops, usually means that a bird of prey is in the area. It may just be an owl.
Check the ground if you suspect that an owl is living in a particular location. Owls feed on rabbits, skunks, rodents and some reptiles. What they can't digest, they regurgitate. The result is a pellet-shaped ball of fur and bones lying at the base of any tree that an owl frequents.