What Is Flying Around At 3am In Below Freeze Temps?

Driving in the middle of no where Wyoming in 85, an owl flew off a fence post by the road at night and was freaking huge. Dirt road 35 mph and I swear the wingspan looked wider than the Bronco we were in.
Probably a Short-eared Owl. They are year-round residents there and have huge wingspans.

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Flying sock? Flying Twinkie?

The how and why aside, that appears to be a supernatural white cheddar vegan cheese puff.

In all seriousness, there is something flying in the video, making turns that no bird makes.

I took one more look, backing the image up, moving forward, backing up, moving forward. You were right, @Andrew Sak … It’s a vegan cheese puff making seemingly impossible maneuvers.
 
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In all seriousness, that frame of the video is probably just blowing snow. It’s the flying thing in the video, making hard turns that not even a bird could make. That’s what I was asking about.
Perhaps I was a little hasty in my investigation of your UFO footage. I will re-examine the evidence and get back to you ASAP. I'm treating this as a cold case. Literally.
 
"Orbs" appearing on a Ring camera are usually caused by small particles of dust or moisture in the air that are illuminated by the camera's infrared light, appearing as floating orbs in the footage; this is typically not a sign of paranormal activity and is a common occurrence with security cameras.
 
"Orbs" appearing on a Ring camera are usually caused by small particles of dust or moisture in the air that are illuminated by the camera's infrared light, appearing as floating orbs in the footage; this is typically not a sign of paranormal activity and is a common occurrence with security cameras.
I’m not suggesting paranormal activity. But, if it’s dust particles, or similar, how do they move so fast and turn so sharp with zero wind?

My honest guess is that bats are flying around at night. I think the reason they appear as blurry orbs is the low light cam technology is unable to focus well on fast moving objects at night.

I have an example of this from a cam on the side of my house. A group of deer run past the cam which is using IR light. The images of the deer running past are very blurry and ghost like images.

Bats fly fast and make quick changes in direction. If it were happening in daylight, there would be a bit more clarity and focus to the images.
 
The video below is better. This ain’t no dust particle nor moisture orb. That must be one of the 18 species of bat that live in Colorado. But, this camera is not likely to catch a more detailed image at night.

 
This frame shows a blurry blob with a winged shape.
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This frame looks like 4 winged blobs stuck together. The camera is not fast enough in low light. It smears fast moving objects. In this frame, it makes one fast moving bat look like 4.
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