Final batch from Walt’s bench • 15 left in stock • In 9 active carts
Walt's Hand-Built Owl House
Walt's Hand-Built Owl House
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Walt's Hand-Built Owl House
Hand-Built in Stone Ridge, New York
Walt Hale, 71 — forty-one years rehabilitating owls, and the nest box he builds so the birds he sets free have a door to come home to. Fewer than 100 left. When his eyes end the work, there is no second batch.
“A screech-owl can’t dig its own hole. It takes what the woodpeckers leave behind — so I cut it one.”
— Walt Hale, Stone Ridge, New York
What arrives at your door
Why a real owl uses it — and a garden-center box sits empty
The entrance is bored just under 3.5 inches and set high near the roof line — wide enough for a screech-owl or kestrel, too small for raccoons, too high for a predator working from the ground. The size and height of that one opening decide whether anything moves in.
It is roughly 13 inches from the lip of the hole down to the floor where the brood sits. A raccoon’s arm can’t reach the bottom and a crow can’t lean in far enough. The deep ones raise owls; the shallow ones raise raccoons.
Untreated, unpainted pine — nothing else. Paint smells like a chemical alarm to an owl and bakes like a tin can in summer. Raw wood breathes, weathers to a soft silver-grey, and disappears into the tree.
One side swings open on a single fitted hook. A year of pellets and feathers comes out in about two minutes — no ladder-and-screwdriver fight. An owl passes over a box packed with last year’s mess; a clean one gets a new pair.
The inner wall under the hole is left rough, with low grooves cut across it by hand. Owlets leave the box before they can fly — on fledging day they climb that wall to reach the opening. A smooth interior strands the young at the bottom.
Every box is cut, bored, and grooved by Walt himself on a single band saw — most of a day of work in each one. No crew, no machine stamping them out, and no second batch once the bench is empty.
“Small owls like the Eastern Screech-Owl are secondary cavity nesters — they cannot excavate their own holes, so they depend entirely on old woodpecker cavities and natural rot in dead wood. As standing dead trees are removed from yards and managed woodlots, those cavities vanish, and the birds simply have nowhere to nest or roost. A correctly built nest box is the single most effective way to put that habitat back: the entrance has to be the right diameter and set high above a deep floor, the timber has to be untreated, and it has to open for an annual cleanout. A box that gets those four things right will be found and used. Most retail boxes get at least one of them wrong.”
Dr. Carol Whitfield, Ornithologist — Cavity-Nesting Birds
Northeast Raptor & Songbird Trust
Perfect for
Quality you can check yourself
- Correctly sized entrance — bored just under 3.5 inches and set high, so the right birds fit and predators don’t.
- A deep, predator-safe cavity — about 13 inches from hole to floor keeps raccoons and crows off the brood.
- Untreated, weather-ready pine — no paint or chemicals owls avoid; it breathes and silvers instead of rotting.
- A door that actually opens — flip-up hatch on a single hook for a two-minute yearly cleanout.
- Final batch, built by hand — each box is made by Walt himself. Once the barn is empty, there is no restock.
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Hang it on a tree or wall and live with it for a few weeks. If it arrives not as described, or it simply isn’t right for your spot, send it back within 30 days for a full refund. A simple email is all it takes — and shipping across the US is free.
A note on handmade variance & wild tenants: Every box is cut and finished by hand, so grain, color, and small marks vary from one to the next — that is the sign of real handwork, not a defect. And owls are wild: hung correctly (east/southeast, 6–15 ft up, sheltered), a box is often found within a season or two, but timing is the bird’s, not ours. Put it up in fall or winter so it is weathered and waiting before nesting season.
Product details
| Material | Untreated, weather-resistant pine; iron mounting hook |
| Finish | Bare natural wood — no paint or sealant; weathers to silver-grey |
| Set contents | 1 owl house with built-in flip-up cleaning door, hook & perch · hang-it-right card |
| Dimensions (outer) | Approx. 15.2 × 9.8 × 11 in (38.5 × 25 × 28 cm) |
| Interior | Approx. 13 × 7 × 8 in (33 × 18 × 21 cm) deep cavity |
| Entrance hole | Approx. 3.7 in (9.5 cm) — sized for screech-owls & kestrels |
| Color | Natural pine |
| Mounting | Hangs on a tree trunk or wall — east/southeast, 6–15 ft up, sheltered |
| Care | Open the hatch and clear it out once a year in late summer — hand broom or clear water |
| Made | Hand-built by Walt Hale in Stone Ridge, New York — ships from the US |
| Availability | Final batch — no restock · 4.7 ★ |
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The Last Batch
The Last Batch
Message from the barn:
For forty-one years Walt Hale ran an owl-rehabilitation barn outside Stone Ridge, New York, and built nest boxes so the birds he set free had somewhere to go. Now the macular degeneration in both eyes has ended the fine work — he can no longer drill the entrance true. Only the boxes already finished on his bench remain — fewer than a hundred. When they are gone, there will be no next batch.
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Free US Shipping
Free US Shipping
Free shipping across the United States
- Delivery time: 3–5 business days
- Each box is hand-packed and ships from the US
- Untreated pine — carefully boxed to arrive safe
- 30-day money-back guarantee — just email info@marlowmarketco.com

140+ Verified Buyers
Excellent 4.7
What Walt’s customers are seeing
Hung it on the big maple in October, faced it southeast like the card said. By March a screech-owl was roosting in the hole every afternoon. My whole family checks for her now.
Verified
Daniel Reyes, Kingston, NY
Mounted it off the back deck and faced it southeast. Second spring a pair moved in and raised three owlets. Built solid — no warping after two winters.
Verified
Tom Albrecht, Stockbridge, MA
We watch her from the kitchen window every evening. Bought it as a ‘maybe’ and it turned into the best part of our yard.
Verified
Karen Whitfield, Rhinebeck, NY
Got it so my kids could learn from it. They check the hole for her little face before the school bus. Worth every penny.
Verified
Megan Tolliver, Brattleboro, VT
Coffee on the porch and an owl in the box twenty feet away. Two boxes I bought online never got touched — this one did, first season.
Verified
Patricia Vance, Keene, NH
Easy to hang, and you can tell a real person who knows owls made it. The cleaning door alone is smarter than anything in the stores.
Verified
Greg Hollis, New Paltz, NY
Bought it for my dad, who swore the owls had left his road. He called the night a pair moved in, whispering so he wouldn’t scare them off.
Verified
Susan Mathers, Lenox, MA
Hung it on the big maple in October, faced it southeast like the card said. By March a screech-owl was roosting in the hole every afternoon. My whole family checks for her now.
Verified
Daniel Reyes, Kingston, NY
Mounted it off the back deck and faced it southeast. Second spring a pair moved in and raised three owlets. Built solid — no warping after two winters.
Verified
Tom Albrecht, Stockbridge, MA
We watch her from the kitchen window every evening. Bought it as a ‘maybe’ and it turned into the best part of our yard.
Verified
Karen Whitfield, Rhinebeck, NY
Got it so my kids could learn from it. They check the hole for her little face before the school bus. Worth every penny.
Verified
Megan Tolliver, Brattleboro, VT
Coffee on the porch and an owl in the box twenty feet away. Two boxes I bought online never got touched — this one did, first season.
Verified
Patricia Vance, Keene, NH
Easy to hang, and you can tell a real person who knows owls made it. The cleaning door alone is smarter than anything in the stores.
Verified
Greg Hollis, New Paltz, NY
Bought it for my dad, who swore the owls had left his road. He called the night a pair moved in, whispering so he wouldn’t scare them off.
Verified
Susan Mathers, Lenox, MA
Hung it on the big maple in October, faced it southeast like the card said. By March a screech-owl was roosting in the hole every afternoon. My whole family checks for her now.
Verified
Daniel Reyes, Kingston, NY
Mounted it off the back deck and faced it southeast. Second spring a pair moved in and raised three owlets. Built solid — no warping after two winters.
Verified
Tom Albrecht, Stockbridge, MA
We watch her from the kitchen window every evening. Bought it as a ‘maybe’ and it turned into the best part of our yard.
Verified
Karen Whitfield, Rhinebeck, NY
Got it so my kids could learn from it. They check the hole for her little face before the school bus. Worth every penny.
Verified
Megan Tolliver, Brattleboro, VT
Coffee on the porch and an owl in the box twenty feet away. Two boxes I bought online never got touched — this one did, first season.
Verified
Patricia Vance, Keene, NH
Easy to hang, and you can tell a real person who knows owls made it. The cleaning door alone is smarter than anything in the stores.
Verified
Greg Hollis, New Paltz, NY
Bought it for my dad, who swore the owls had left his road. He called the night a pair moved in, whispering so he wouldn’t scare them off.
Verified
Susan Mathers, Lenox, MA
Hung it on the big maple in October, faced it southeast like the card said. By March a screech-owl was roosting in the hole every afternoon. My whole family checks for her now.
Verified
Daniel Reyes, Kingston, NY
Mounted it off the back deck and faced it southeast. Second spring a pair moved in and raised three owlets. Built solid — no warping after two winters.
Verified
Tom Albrecht, Stockbridge, MA
We watch her from the kitchen window every evening. Bought it as a ‘maybe’ and it turned into the best part of our yard.
Verified
Karen Whitfield, Rhinebeck, NY
Got it so my kids could learn from it. They check the hole for her little face before the school bus. Worth every penny.
Verified
Megan Tolliver, Brattleboro, VT
Coffee on the porch and an owl in the box twenty feet away. Two boxes I bought online never got touched — this one did, first season.
Verified
Patricia Vance, Keene, NH
Easy to hang, and you can tell a real person who knows owls made it. The cleaning door alone is smarter than anything in the stores.
Verified
Greg Hollis, New Paltz, NY
Bought it for my dad, who swore the owls had left his road. He called the night a pair moved in, whispering so he wouldn’t scare them off.
Verified
Susan Mathers, Lenox, MA
See Walt’s Last Owl Houses
Frequently Asked Questions
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Got a question? Here’s how to reach us.
Got a question? Here’s how to reach us.
Email us anytime at info@marlowmarketco.com. We answer Monday–Friday 9am–5pm and Saturday 10am–3pm (ET). Whether it’s about your order, where to hang the box, or just to say hello — a real person writes back.
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Can I return it if it’s not for me?
Can I return it if it’s not for me?
Of course. 30-day money-back guarantee. Hang it on a tree or wall, and if it arrives not as described — or it simply isn’t right for your spot — email info@marlowmarketco.com within 30 days for a full refund. No questions. US shipping is free.
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How is each box made — and where do I hang it?
How is each box made — and where do I hang it?
Each box is built by hand by Walt Hale in Stone Ridge, New York: untreated weather-resistant pine, a hand-bored ~3.7" entrance set high over a deep cavity, a grooved climb-out interior, and a flip-up door for cleaning. Hang it six to fifteen feet up on a tree trunk or wall, entrance facing east or southeast, sheltered from wind and driving rain. Fall and winter are the ideal time to put it up.
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Hand-Built in Stone Ridge, NY