Seabirds & Shorebirds
From the rhythmic dash of a Sanderling chasing foam to the haunting call of a Black-bellied Plover drifting in on the salt air, shorebirds and seabirds transform the edges of land and sea into something sublime.
I never tire of watching them - gulls wheeling in wind, loons calling across quiet bays, or flocks of sandpipers pulsing like a single organism. Their migrations are nothing short of astonishing: some travel from Alaska to New Zealand and back again, navigating entire hemispheres with pinpoint precision.
These birds are the pulse of the tide, the heartbeat of open skies, and reminders of the wild vastness that begins where the beach ends.
“For shorebirds, the world is still a coherent whole, not a scattering of borders and boundaries.”
— Scott Weidensaul, A World on the Wing
Pink-footed Shearwater, Pacific Ocean, WA
Blue-footed Boobies - Galapagos Islands, Ecuador
Black-footed Albatross - Pacific Ocean, WA
Sabine's Gull - Pacific Ocean, Washington
Tufted Puffin - Pacific Ocean, WA
California Gulls - Ft. Flager State Park, WA
Black Oystercatcher - Deception Pass State Park, WA
Harlequin Duck - Deception Pass State Park, WA
Snowy Plovers - Grayland Beach State Park, WA
Great Black-backed Gull - Cape Canaveral, FL
Sanderling - Ft. Flagler State Park, WA
Piping Plover - Bolivar Peninsula, TX
Ring-billed Gulls - Potholes Reservoir, WA
Glaucous-winged Gull - Ediz Hook, WA
Reddish Egret - Bolivar Peninsula, TX
Swallow-tailed Gull - Galápagos Islands, Ecuador
Great Black-backed, Herring, and Laughing Gulls - Cape Canaveral, FL
Marbled Godwits - Tokeland, WA