Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 48 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Three young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) is rendered in near silhouette as it steps to the top of a rock pile to hunt at dawn in Grant County, Washington
    Owl-Burrowing_Silhouette_Ephrata_181...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) turns rapidly to dry off as rain falls in the Grant County, Washington, field where it was hunting.
    Owl-Burrowing_Drying-Off_Ephrata_106...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts for food from its perch among rocks and shrubs in a large field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Perch_Ephrata_0796.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) is rendered in near silhouette as the sun rises behind its perch on a rock pile in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Silhouette_Ephrata_184...jpg
  • After a heavy rainstorm, a burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) looks out from its perch among the wet rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Wet-Rocks_Ephrata_9187.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) is bathed in the golden light of sunset as it hunts for food from its perch on a rock in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_144...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) rests atop a large rock in a field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_023...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts for food from its perch on a rock in a large field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_082...jpg
  • Three young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts for food from its perch on a rock in a large field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_402...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) is bathed in the golden light of sunset as it rests on a rock in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_154...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts for food from its perch on a rock in a large field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_020...jpg
  • Three young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • Three young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • Against a backdrop of spring wildflowers, a burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) looks for food from its perch in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Wildflowers_Ephrata_17...jpg
  • Against a backdrop of spring wildflowers, a burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) looks for food from its perch in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Wildflowers_Ephrata_17...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) is rendered in near silhouette as the sun rises behind its perch on a rock pile in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Silhouette_Ephrata_182...jpg
  • A weathered cattle hip bone rests among the rocks in a pile on a farm in Grant County, Washington.
    Ranch-Still-Life_Ephrata_0641.jpg
  • Two young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • Three young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) wait at the entrance to their burrow in Grant County, Washington, as their parents hunt for food.
    Owls-Burrowing_Burrow_Juveniles_Ephr...jpg
  • After a rain shower passes, a burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts from its perch atop a rock in Grant County, Washington, against a rainbow backdrop.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rainbow_Ephrata_1388.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) hunts for food from its perch on a rock in a large field in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Rock-Perch_Ephrata_164...jpg
  • A compressed view shows the contrasting water flow patterns of two parts of a curved waterfall located in the Frenchman Hills Wasteway in Potholes State Park, Grant County, Washington.
    WA_Potholes_Waterfall-Patterns_7723.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) blends in with its surroundings as it rests in a rock pile turned golden by the rising sun in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Golden-Rocks_Ephrata_9...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) braves a rainstorm from its perch in a field of rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Raining_Ephrata_9117.jpg
  • Three burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) look in different directions as the sun rises from their perch on a rock pile in Grant County, Washington.
    Owls-Burrowing_Three_Rocks_Sunrise_E...jpg
  • Against a backdrop of fiery clouds illuminated by the rising sun, two burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) look out from their perches among the rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owls-Burrowing_Two_Sunrise_Ephrata_0...jpg
  • Against a backdrop of fiery clouds illuminated by the rising sun, two burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) look out from their perches among the rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owls-Burrowing_Two_Sunrise_Ephrata_0...jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) closes its eyes to shield them from heavy rain in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Wet_Ephrata_9029.jpg
  • A burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) braves a rainstorm from its perch in a field of rocks in Grant County, Washington.
    Owl-Burrowing_Raining_Ephrata_9002.jpg
  • A field of flowering goldenrods color the valley below a towering basalt cliff in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Adams County, Washington.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Goldenrod_Cliffs_758...jpg
  • Several ring-billed and herring gulls fly over Dry Falls in Grant County, Washington, which at one time was believed to be the largest waterfall that ever existed. Geologists believe that during the last ice age, ice dams resulted in giant glacial lakes in eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana. When those dams failed, as they did dozens of times, glacial lakes Columbia and Missoula rapidly drained, creating a cataclysmic flood. During the floods, what is now Dry Falls was a spectacular waterfall, 400 feet high (121 meters), 3.5 miles wide (5.63 kilometers). Water may have raced over its massive cliffs at 65 miles an hour (105 km/hour), a flow that's estimated to be ten times as powerful as all the world's current rivers combined. The cliffs shown here represent a small fraction of the ice age waterfall. Dry Falls Lake is pictured in the foreground; Green Lake is visible in the background.
    WA_DryFalls_Gulls_5825.jpg
  • Dry Falls, located in Grant County, Washington, at one time was believed to be the largest waterfall that ever existed. Geologists believe that during the last ice age, ice dams resulted in giant glacial lakes in eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana. When those dams failed, as they did dozens of times, glacial lakes Columbia and Missoula rapidly drained, creating a cataclysmic flood. During the floods, what is now Dry Falls was a spectacular waterfall, 400 feet high (121 meters), 3.5 miles wide (5.63 kilometers). Water may have raced over its massive cliffs at 65 miles an hour (105 km/hour), a flow that's estimated to be ten times as powerful as all the world's current rivers combined. The cliffs shown here represent a small fraction of the ice age waterfall. Dry Falls Lake is pictured in the foreground; Green Lake is visible in the background.
    WA_DryFalls_DryFallsLake_5898.jpg
  • Bands of high clouds are turned golden by the rising sun and reflected on the waters of the Potholes Canal in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Grant County, Washington.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Potholes-Canal_Sunri...jpg
  • A spotted sandpiper (Actitis macularius) in non-breeding plumage hunts from its rocky perch along a creek in Potholes State Park, Grant County, Washington.
    Sandpiper-Spotted_Potholes_Hunting_8...jpg
  • A variety of summer wildflowers, including goldenrod, wild teasel and purple loosestrife, grow near Crab Creek in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Grant County, Washington.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Wildflowers_Crab-Cre...jpg
  • Ripples spread across Soda Lake after a fish jumped out of the water in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. The sunrise bathes the basalt cliffs on the opposite side of the lake in golden light.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Soda-Lake_Ripples_09...jpg
  • The sun rises over the edge of a basalt cliff that lines the Potholes Canal near Soda Lake in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Basalt-Cliff_Sunrise...jpg
  • A rock wren (Salpinctes obsoletus) rests on a basalt rock in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state. Rock wrens mainly feed on insects and spiders, using their long, curved bills to probe around rocks and other objects on the ground.
    Wren-Rock_Columbia-NWR_8491.jpg
  • A long exposure captures the motion of a ring-billed gull as it flies over the water of the Potholes Canal at sunrise on its way to fish in Soda Lake in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Washington state.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Gull_Flying-Motion_0...jpg
  • A flock of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) flies in formation over the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge near Othello, Washington. Thousands of sandhill cranes stop briefly near Othello on their northward migration each spring.
    SandhillCranes_Othello_FlyingInForma...jpg
  • A fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) digs its claws into the bark as it climbs an oak tree in Potholes State Park in Grant County, Washington. The fox squirrel is the largest tree squirrel native to North America, though its original range consisted of the eastern half of the continent. It was introduced to several western states, including Washington, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia.
    Squirrel-Fox_Climbing_Potholes-SP_86...jpg
  • A fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) poses on an oak tree branch in Potholes State Park in Grant County, Washington. The fox squirrel is the largest tree squirrel native to North America, though its original range consisted of the eastern half of the continent. It was introduced to several western states, including Washington, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia.
    Squirrel-Fox_Potholes-SP_8786.jpg
  • A long exposure captures the motion of an American white pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) flying over the Potholes Canal on its way to hunt in the Columbia National Wildlife Refuge in Grant County, Washington.
    WA_Columbia-NWR_Pelican_Flying-Motio...jpg
  • A fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) feasts on an acorn from its perch in an oak tree in Potholes State Park in Grant County, Washington. The fox squirrel is the largest tree squirrel native to North America, though its original range consisted of the eastern half of the continent. It was introduced to several western states, including Washington, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia.
    Squirrel-Fox_Eating_Potholes-SP_8596.jpg
  • A fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) looks out from its perch high in an oak tree in Potholes State Park in Grant County, Washington. The fox squirrel is the largest tree squirrel native to North America, though its original range consisted of the eastern half of the continent. It was introduced to several western states, including Washington, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia.
    Squirrel-Fox_Potholes-SP_8560.jpg
  • A fox squirrel (Sciurus niger) looks out from its perch high in an oak tree in Potholes State Park in Grant County, Washington. The fox squirrel is the largest tree squirrel native to North America, though its original range consisted of the eastern half of the continent. It was introduced to several western states, including Washington, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia.
    Squirrel-Fox_Potholes-SP_8818.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Living Wilderness Nature Photography

  • Nature Photography Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Portfolio
  • Search Nature Photography
  • Books
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact