 That's called a crop. All the food goes into that holding chamber. It's there for the next 12 to 16 hours. The crop will sort out the digestible from the indigestible. The digestible will be turned over into her stomach and then the fur and feather comes up, it rolled up and comes up in a box. The difference with an owl pellet though is that an owl's food goes into its stomach then fur, feather and all of the skeleton comes up. Their crop digest bone, so all the bone is digested and what comes up with an owl, what comes up is a slimy pellet but then comes up with a very clean cast that's not coming in. The enzymes in their crop allow them to just have fur and feather. An owl doesn't actually need to, I mean it's good for them to have it. With, she just fed her lean red beef. She won't be able to turn over her crop. The enzymes, what you call mucus if you like, that is in there will then not get turned over every day. It gets infected, they get a thing called saddle crop and die. So you have to be very careful that they do have roughage. So although it's quite gory to look at, it's what she needs. And now you'll see the crop is enormous. Obviously you're holding the bird on her chest, isn't it? Yeah. If you're a singly and she's coming, you'll just put it between the two, yeah? Yeah, absolutely. She goes straight into the lock into here because there's two things really. One, you want her to associate your fist as the comfortable, successful place to feed for a whole. Okay.