Photo 17 Jan 19 notes 
Sandy Milliken proved that wildlife photographers are a hungrier version of the common birdwatcher by going the distance to make pictures of snowy owls.
Failing to find the snowies reported this season within a few miles of her Post Falls home, Milliken filled her vehicle gas tank and redoubled her efforts.
She was determined to seize the opportunity provided by this winter’s stand-out migration of snowy owls….
A tip from a Bellingham photographer steered her toward a seven-hour drive to the driftwood beaches along Boundary Bay in British Columbia just southwest of Vancouver. The last irruption of snowies to congregate there occurred in 2007, birders say.
“My friend was getting great photos of snowy owls and he told me right where to go (south of the Boundary Bay Airport),” she said. “But the wind and rain was horrible there for weeks through the holidays. I waited until there was a break in the weather. Last week I went for it.”
Fog and drizzle greeted her arrival, along with a mother lode of snowy owls.
“I counted 26 snowy owls as I walked a path along one marsh the size of two city blocks,” she said.
She pounced on one big, brief moment to capture 11 snowy owls in a single frame through a 100-400mm zoom lens.
There are 10 mature white snowy owls and one heavily-barred darker snowy owl – likely a female – in the background, she said.

(via Spokesman.com - Jan. 15, 2012)

Sandy Milliken proved that wildlife photographers are a hungrier version of the common birdwatcher by going the distance to make pictures of snowy owls.

Failing to find the snowies reported this season within a few miles of her Post Falls home, Milliken filled her vehicle gas tank and redoubled her efforts.

She was determined to seize the opportunity provided by this winter’s stand-out migration of snowy owls….

A tip from a Bellingham photographer steered her toward a seven-hour drive to the driftwood beaches along Boundary Bay in British Columbia just southwest of Vancouver. The last irruption of snowies to congregate there occurred in 2007, birders say.

“My friend was getting great photos of snowy owls and he told me right where to go (south of the Boundary Bay Airport),” she said. “But the wind and rain was horrible there for weeks through the holidays. I waited until there was a break in the weather. Last week I went for it.”

Fog and drizzle greeted her arrival, along with a mother lode of snowy owls.

“I counted 26 snowy owls as I walked a path along one marsh the size of two city blocks,” she said.

She pounced on one big, brief moment to capture 11 snowy owls in a single frame through a 100-400mm zoom lens.

There are 10 mature white snowy owls and one heavily-barred darker snowy owl – likely a female – in the background, she said.

(via Spokesman.com - Jan. 15, 2012)

  1. thingshmmm reblogged this from dendroica
  2. theflightlessbirds reblogged this from dendroica
  3. rice-krispi-treat reblogged this from alice44
  4. alice44 reblogged this from dendroica
  5. oboyub reblogged this from dendroica
  6. dendroica posted this

Design crafted by Prashanth Kamalakanthan. Powered by Tumblr.