Out of towner

Seattle has a celebrity visitor, all the way from the Arctic.

Rare snowy owl perches on rooftops in Seattle's Queen Anne neighborhood,  drawing bird watchers

This snowy owl has been wowing residents and birders in Queen Anne.* It is rare for the owls to be seen in this region, and the owls always create a stir in Seattle, where with their striking appearance they can hardly be missed. Their color evokes their usual home in the Arctic. Snowies are the largest of owls, with a wingspan that can reach nearly 5 feet. They also are among the heaviest, weighing in at about 5 pounds. 

I went to see her today. Google actually had the address – apparently she really likes that particular chimney so that’s where she spends the day – which made it easy. No joy on the street side, but I’d seen photos of people watching her in an alley so I went around to the alley and sure enough there were people with their professional cameras…and then there was the owl. Snuggled up to the chimney just as in the photo.

I knew a pair at the zoo long ago, but I’ve never seen a wild one before. Not too shabby.

Photos: A rare snowy owl appears in Queen Anne | Seattle Refined

*Updating to add – I forgot to mention that Queen Anne is my neighborhood (named after the style of architecture, not the monarch). Owl is 5 blocks north and 6 east, in an area I walk around all the time. Talk about lucky.

Comments

14 responses to “Out of towner”

  1. twiliter Avatar

    Beautiful! She looks like Hedwig. :)

  2. Your Name's not Bruce? Avatar
    Your Name’s not Bruce?

    One day, many years ago, my mom and dad came back from one of their backroad drives. They’d seen a Snowy Owl, south of town (London, Ontario). Not unheard of, but not at all common. Dad asked if I wanted to go see it. YES! It was still sitting in the same spot, in the same tree. I took some bad photos of it, and we went home. My first, and so far only, Snowy in the wild. Cool. That was more than thirty years ago.

  3. Loren Russell Avatar
    Loren Russell

    Saw snowys a few times as a little kid in extreme nw WA [eg, present murder-hornet habitat]. First one was when I was 5 or 6 years old, the bird sitting on a fence post in 2 feet of new snow, just about 50 feet from our house. I was afraid to go out and called our dog inside.

    My most recent sighting was over 50 years ago in an Arctic blast in Puget Sound country. The snowy spent several days perched on the tower of the old library at Univ. of Washington Doing its hunchback of Notre Dame impression, the owl intermittently left its perch and stooped into the plaza in search of seagull burger..

  4. KBPlayer Avatar

    Oh totally cool.

  5. guest Avatar

    That is brilliant. I love how she looks like she’s posing for her fans.

  6. guest Avatar

    Oh, posted too soon–question, aren’t owls usually nocturnal? Why is she out during the day?

  7. Bjarte Foshaug Avatar
    Bjarte Foshaug

    Snowies are the largest of owls

    Eagle-Owls are definitely larger. But by all means, the snowies are beautiful birds. I never would have expected to see one in such a densely populated area. “Out of towner” indeed!

  8. latsot Avatar

    Lovely.

    A barn owl visits our garden occasionally. Not nearly so impressive but still a beautiful thing.

  9. What a Maroon Avatar
    What a Maroon

    @guest,

    You made me look. My first thought was that being nocturnal probably isn’t a good strategy in the Arctic summer. Anyway, here’s what Wikipedia says:

    Snowy owls may be active to some extent at both day, from dawn to dusk, and night.[3][106] Snowy owls have been seen to be active even during the very brief winter daytime in the northern winter.[5] During the Arctic summer, snowy owls may tend to peak in activity during the twilight that is the darkest time available given the lack of full nightfall.[5][159][160] Reportedly, the peak time of activity during summer is between 9:00 pm and 3:00 am in Norway.[161] The peak time of activity for those owls that once nested on Fetlar was reported between 10:00 and 11:00 pm.[162] According to one authority, the least active times are at noon and midnight.[92] As days become longer near autumn in Barrow, the snowy owls in the tundra become more active around nightfall and can often be seen resting during the day, especially if it is raining.[163] During winter in Alberta, snowy owls were tracked in the daytime, despite being also active at night (as they were deemed too difficult to track). In the study, they were most active from 8:00–10:00 am and 4:00–6:00 pm and often rested mostly from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. The owls were perched for 98% of observed daylight and seemed to time their activity to peak times for rodents.

    But of course it’s winter now in the Arctic, so a couple more points gleaned from Wikipedia: first, the owls are “irregular” migrants, and in some years they’ve been observed as far south as South Carolina and even Hawaii. Second, they seem to prefer slightly elevated areas that remind them of the Arctic tundra (apparently airports are a favorite). And then there’s this:

    It has been interpreted from the morphology of their skeletal structure (i.e. their short, broad legs) that snowy owls are not well-suited to perching extensively in trees or rocks and prefer a flat surface to sit upon.[4] However, they may perch more so in winter though do so only mainly when hunting, at times on hummocks, Fenceposts, telegraph poles by roads, radio and transmission towers, Haystacks, chimneys and the roofs of houses and large buildings.

    (Random capitalization in original; I don’t think it was written by a native speaker.) I guess the Seattle owl is resting during the day.

  10. guest Avatar

    Haha good point that strict diurnal/nocturnal behaviour may be maladaptive toward the poles. I wonder if that means equatorial species are more likely to be strict daytime/night time animals?

  11. Ophelia Benson Avatar

    I think Barn Owls are VERY impressive.

  12. James Garnett Avatar
    James Garnett

    There is a young nature photographer in Seattle who takes some amazing photos of owls:

    https://www.isabelleedwardsphoto.com/

  13. Ophelia Benson Avatar

    Wow, golly, those are gorgeous.

  14. latsot Avatar

    Barn Owls are impressive, having one in your garden around here is not. Although I still get excited when I see it.