
Owls & Raptors
There’s something timeless about a raptor on the wing — scanning the land with eyes sharp enough to spot a mouse from a mile away. They wait, they watch, and when the moment is right, they strike with precision and power. These birds embody focus, tenacity, and wild grace.
And then there are the owls — silent and secretive, yet somehow all-seeing. When I meet the gaze of an owl, it feels like the forest itself is watching me. Their eyes hold mystery, wisdom, and something ancient. Every owl encounter lingers in my memory long after the moment has passed.
“Looking at a hawk, you don't feel you're just looking at a bird. You feel you're being scrutinized by something that’s both more and less than a being like yourself.”
— Helen Macdonald, H is for Hawk
Northern Saw-whet Owl - Bridgeport State Park, WA
Short-eared Owl - Samish Flats, WA
Gyrfalcon - Samish Flats, WA
Merlin - Samish Flats, WA
Burrowing Owl - Sonny Bono NWR, CA
Great Horned Owl - Borrego Springs, CA
Long-eared Owl - Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, CA
Northern Saw-whet Owl - Moses Coulee, WA
Zone-tailed Hawk - Starr County, TX
Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl - Jalisco, Mexico
Short-eared Owl - Samish Flats, WA
Swainson's Hawk - Chambers County, TX