5. "So for them, they don't know that the border is here and they probably met, you know, not like people at a bar or something like that, they met one night and decided to have -- that they fell in love and they started a nest here. The whole concept is that, you know, for them it doesn't matter if it's Jordanian or Israel, they're barn owls. And for us it's a great success story because it shows, because of the Jordanians started thinking differently, started using the barn owls, they succeeded."
6. Beit She'an valley holds the largest population of barn owls in the world, some 25,300 pairs per square kilometre, with each eating between 2,000 to 6,000 rodents a year, Charter added.