The Hammock Owl perched on the Oviedo water tower at dusk, eyes glowing red

A Legend of Oviedo, Florida

The Mothman of Oviedo

They call it the Hammock Owl — part owl, part moth, all omen. For 150 years it's watched the wild edges of town. Scroll down, if you dare.

Every town worth its salt keeps a legend, and Oviedo's flies on silent wings. Folks describe a seven-foot shape with the face of a great horned owl, two feathery moth antennae, and eyes that glow a dull, ember red. It doesn't hunt. It watches — and, the story goes, it shows up right before the town's hardest turns, and again afterward, like it's keeping an eye on us.

Is it real? Of course not. (Probably.) But here's a century and a half of "sightings," each one hung on something that actually happened in Oviedo.

  1. The Lake Jesup Settlement, Oviedo — 1875

    1875

    The Lake Jesup Settlement

    The first forty families swap stories of a 'moss-winged watcher' over the south shore at dusk. The Black Seminole families already had a name for it: the Hammock Owl.

  2. Aulin's Lantern, Oviedo — 1879

    1879

    Aulin's Lantern

    Postmaster Andrew Aulin — the man who named the town 'Oviedo' — reports two red eyes pacing his lantern along the lake road. He writes it off as a barn owl. He does not sleep well.

  3. The Lake Charm Groves, Oviedo — 1887

    1887

    The Lake Charm Groves

    Citrus pickers for Dr. Henry Foster watch a great pair of wings cross the moon. That year's harvest is the richest on record. The old-timers call it an omen of plenty.

  4. The Warning, Oviedo — 1894

    1894

    The Warning

    For three nights it circles the groves. Then the Great Freeze of 1894–95 kills the citrus to the root. Oviedo never trusts a calm winter the same way again.

  5. The Steamboat, Oviedo — 1902

    1902

    The Steamboat

    A Lake Jesup Steamboat Company crew says it glided alongside the boat for a full mile — silent, level with the deck — before folding into the Black Hammock dark.

  6. The Steeple, Oviedo — 1918

    1918

    The Steeple

    During the flu autumn, the First Methodist congregation finds it perched on the unfinished steeple at dusk. Some are terrified. A few, quietly, are comforted.

  7. The Water Tower, Oviedo — 1926

    1926

    The Water Tower

    The year Oviedo incorporates, kids dare each other to climb the new water tower — and find it already occupied. Red eyes blink once from the tank's shadow. They climb back down faster.

  8. The Celery Muck, Oviedo — 1935

    1935

    The Celery Muck

    Night harvesters in Black Hammock describe antennae against the lantern glow and a smell of 'wet citrus and smoke.' From then on, crews work the muck in pairs.

  9. The Cluster, Oviedo — 1947

    1947

    The Cluster

    A whole summer of sightings during the national flying-saucer craze. The Oviedo paper runs the headline: 'OUR OWL, NOT THEIR SAUCERS.'

  10. The Lawton House, Oviedo — 1962

    1962

    The Lawton House

    A caretaker snaps a blurry photo of a winged shape on the old schoolhouse roof. It becomes the town's first piece of 'evidence,' passed around for decades.

  11. The Last Train, Oviedo — 1979

    1979

    The Last Train

    On the final freight nights at the old depot, a brakeman swears it watched every car roll out, like it was seeing an old friend off.

  12. The Truce, Oviedo — 1985

    1985

    The Truce

    A farmer who helped Oviedo's first free-roaming chickens settle downtown claims the Hammock Owl visited the night before — 'like it approved.' The chickens have ruled the road ever since.

  13. The Fires, Oviedo — 1998

    1998

    The Fires

    During the Central Florida wildfire summer, fishermen on the Econ River watch it fly toward the smoke, not away. No one has ever explained that one.

  14. The Storm Season, Oviedo — 2004

    2004

    The Storm Season

    Before the triple-hurricane fall, it's seen over Center Lake three nights running. The folks who board up early that year do just fine.

  15. Oviedo on the Park, Oviedo — 2016

    2016

    Oviedo on the Park

    Opening week, a parking-lot security camera catches a red-eyed smear above the amphitheater for exactly four frames. The clip goes quietly, locally viral.

  16. The Trail Cam, Oviedo — 2023

    2023

    The Trail Cam

    A UCF student's wildlife camera on the Cross Seminole Trail captures glowing eyes and the edge of a wing at 3:11 a.m. The timestamp is the part nobody can shake.

  17. The Chickens Vanish, Oviedo — 2025

    2025

    The Chickens Vanish

    When Oviedo's famous downtown chickens mysteriously disappear, the old-timers don't laugh. 'The truce is off,' one says. A week later a hen and her chicks turn up unharmed near Black Hammock. Make of it what you will.


Character study of the Hammock Owl: owl-and-moth hybrid with red eyes, antennae, and great feathered wings

What folks say it looks like

  • A broad owl's face with deep, sunken eyes that glow red.
  • Two long, feathery moth antennae curling back from the brow.
  • Enormous, silent owl wings — a span of ten or twelve feet.
  • Soft grey-brown plumage, dusted like a moth's wing, the color of cypress bark.

Want to know where to (not) look? See the old map of Oviedo — the sighting pins are marked.

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